- Joined
- Apr 7, 2013
- Messages
- 62,557
Conley is a decent gamble. Better than Nahshon.
Yeah I mean it's worth a look. Probably not much there.
Conley is a decent gamble. Better than Nahshon.
Yea but they could've just resigned Gilmore, but of course that would have been too...cost prohibitive.
You clearly do not see the talent oozing from every pore of this roster.Yep that's the issue with all of these "signings". I don't mind taking flyers on guys with potential, but it feels hollow when they did nothing in NFL free agency which obviously would have been much more impactful.
Hey, we saved up them roster spots for these strategic moves.See I'm ok with the signing but I have zero intrigue. He is a body. We had an open roster spot and we filled it. Not much more to it than that.
Stephen’s way.Dumpster diving
All these guys producing against practice squad competition do not impress me.
But Turpin and Aubrey!!1!All these guys producing against practice squad competition do not impress me.
and yet, theyre talking about a salary cap specifically for QB's.This is basically the same for every QB who gets a new deal that hasn't won a Superbowl yet. It's not the salary cap stopping us. Wish these people would stop using that as the crutch.
This doesn’t seem like it would be helpful. Each teams QB situation is different and fluid, so how could you set the same cap number for each team?and yet, theyre talking about a salary cap specifically for QB's.
This doesn’t seem like it would be helpful. Each teams QB situation is different and fluid, so how could you set the same cap number for each team?
If the unused QB cap dollars just get funneled back into the regular cap anyways I don’t see the benefit
So it sounds like the NFL needs help policing itself and want to use this baby cap to keep from being held hostage by their QB’sIt would be tricky but they could slot QBs sort of like they do in the NBA, where how much money the player makes partially depends on accolades like all pro and pro bowl and MVPs. So then at least their ceilings individually are tied into performance.