RE: General Vikes Talk (Full Version)

All Forums >> [The Minnesota Vikings] >> Vikes Talk



Message


Guest -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/22/2021 11:12:17 PM)

For those worried about losing 1st round picks as trade capital-
Our last five years of 1st round selections-
Justin Jefferson
Jeff Gladney
Garrett Bradbury
Mike Hughes
Trae Waynes
Laquon Treadwell

With the lone exception of JJ is there any reason you’d miss any/ all of these alsorands in pursuit of a true young cornerstone QB?




bohumm -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/22/2021 11:17:27 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kwheats

Blockbuster Trade Proposal Sends Deshaun Watson to Vikings, Kirk Cousins to 49ers
Peter King's proposal would also give the Texans Jimmy Garoppolo, but it's a major longshot.
WILL RAGATZUPDATED:FEB 22, 2021ORIGINAL:FEB 22, 2021
As of now, the Deshaun Watson situation in Houston remains at a standstill. New Texans GM Nick Caserio isn't listening to offers for his superstar quarterback, but Watson hasn't changed his stance about not wanting to play for an organization led by Cal McNair and Jack Easterby.

So we wait, and the speculation continues. In his latest Football Morning in America column for Pro Football Talk, Peter King addressed Watson's future and came up with several blockbuster trade proposals involving the disgruntled QB. King created hypothetical two-team deals that would send Watson to the Panthers, Jets, and 49ers. But it's the last of four proposals that caught the eyes of Vikings fans.

King's final proposal, which he calls a "wing and a prayer," is a three-team QB swap that sends Watson to the Vikings, Kirk Cousins to the 49ers, and Jimmy Garoppolo to the Texans. It's incredibly unlikely for a number of reasons, but it's notable that someone like King –– one of the most plugged-in, respected NFL writers out there –– would even discuss it as a possibility.

Here's the proposal from King:

This is centered on the premise that San Francisco would not want to rip apart a team and a future, and might be willing to take a lesser deal for a quarterback Shanahan has long admired. And also that Caserio, in the heart of the draft room in 2014 when the Patriots made Garoppolo a second-round pick, would want to try again with Jimmy G. It’s a wing and a prayer, but fascinating to me.

Proposal: The Vikings send quarterback Kirk Cousins to San Francisco. The Niners send Garoppolo to Houston, if, of course, he’d waive his no-trade. The Texans send Watson to Minnesota. In return: the Niners send their first-round pick in 2021 (12th overall) to Houston, and they’re out. (So San Francisco would be trading Garoppolo and a one to Houston and getting Cousins with two years left on his contract.) The Vikings would send linebacker Anthony Barr and running back Alexander Mattison plus their first-round picks in 2021 (14th overall) and 2023, and second-round picks in 2022 and 2023 in exchange for Watson. Houston’s haul: Garoppolo, two ones this year, a one in 2023, and two second-round picks.


There's a lot to unpack here. Let's go team by team.

The Vikings get Watson for the price of the No. 14 overall pick this year, their 2023 first, second-rounders in 2022 and 2023, Cousins, Barr, and Mattison. Is that a big price to pay? Definitely. Is it worth it to land Watson? In my opinion, it absolutely is. Two firsts, two seconds, Cousins, an overpaid (albeit important) linebacker and a backup running back for a young top-five quarterback? When you consider the added bonuses of clearing the Cousins and Barr contracts off of the books, it's a deal that works out in the Vikings' favor. Minnesota hasn't made any calls about trading Cousins, but they would have to at least strongly consider this idea.

But, of course, that's not the biggest issue. The No. 1 roadblock is that there's been no indication Watson would waive his no-trade clause to come to Minnesota and play in a run-first offense. Even if Watson would approve, the 49ers and Texans would also have to be on board...and I'm skeptical of that.

The 49ers get Cousins for Garoppolo and the No. 12 overall pick this year in this proposal. Even if there's truth to the idea that Kyle Shanahan and SF would be interested in adding Cousins, would they really give up the 12th pick in what amounts to a Garoppolo-Cousins swap? I'm not sure the Niners do that (and I'm positive that their fanbase would be upset if they did, not that that matters).

The Texans lose Watson and get a return haul of Garoppolo, the No. 12 and 14 picks this year (which could potentially be packaged to move up for a QB), two players (Barr and Mattison), and three other picks from Minnesota: two seconds and a 2023 first. The Caserio-Garoppolo angle is an interesting one; Jimmy G's contract is a big one for a bridge QB, so maybe this is contingent on the Texans legitimately believing in Garoppolo. Three first-rounders and two seconds is a strong haul of picks.

In the end, there are many reasons why this is a major longshot. The Vikings aren't looking to move Cousins, and even if they're interested in Watson, he would also have to be interested in them. The 49ers may not want to give up the No. 12 pick for Cousins, and the Texans may not have any interest in the contracts of Garoppolo and Barr.

But hey, it's sure fun to talk about. With big names like King and Michael Lombardi continuing to mention the Cousins-49ers connection, that's something that must at least be taken seriously. And if the Vikings could land Watson in the process, they'd have to immediately be viewed as Super Bowl contenders in 2021 and beyond.[sm=whistling.gif]

That is such bullshit. This isn't a "trade proposal"; it is a speculative trade scenario, and a far-fetched fantasy at that. Why do people keep giving this bullshit so much oxygen.

It seems pretty clear to me that the most likely reading of the current situation is that the Vikings hierarchy thinks they're doing great; it's bad luck and the players letting us down that holds us back. They doubled down by extending Spielman and Zimmer for no real reason prior to this year, after they did an extension with Cousins that captured their payroll for the next couple of years. The deal above actually also has a $45 million hit for QBs in 2022. The fantasies for Garoppolo give us a higher cap hit for QB next year.

There is almost no scenario where Kirk Cousins isn't here next year. Accept it; move on.




Guest -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/22/2021 11:25:24 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: kwheats

Blockbuster Trade Proposal Sends Deshaun Watson to Vikings, Kirk Cousins to 49ers
Peter King's proposal would also give the Texans Jimmy Garoppolo, but it's a major longshot.
WILL RAGATZUPDATED:FEB 22, 2021ORIGINAL:FEB 22, 2021
As of now, the Deshaun Watson situation in Houston remains at a standstill. New Texans GM Nick Caserio isn't listening to offers for his superstar quarterback, but Watson hasn't changed his stance about not wanting to play for an organization led by Cal McNair and Jack Easterby.

So we wait, and the speculation continues. In his latest Football Morning in America column for Pro Football Talk, Peter King addressed Watson's future and came up with several blockbuster trade proposals involving the disgruntled QB. King created hypothetical two-team deals that would send Watson to the Panthers, Jets, and 49ers. But it's the last of four proposals that caught the eyes of Vikings fans.

King's final proposal, which he calls a "wing and a prayer," is a three-team QB swap that sends Watson to the Vikings, Kirk Cousins to the 49ers, and Jimmy Garoppolo to the Texans. It's incredibly unlikely for a number of reasons, but it's notable that someone like King –– one of the most plugged-in, respected NFL writers out there –– would even discuss it as a possibility.

Here's the proposal from King:

This is centered on the premise that San Francisco would not want to rip apart a team and a future, and might be willing to take a lesser deal for a quarterback Shanahan has long admired. And also that Caserio, in the heart of the draft room in 2014 when the Patriots made Garoppolo a second-round pick, would want to try again with Jimmy G. It’s a wing and a prayer, but fascinating to me.

Proposal: The Vikings send quarterback Kirk Cousins to San Francisco. The Niners send Garoppolo to Houston, if, of course, he’d waive his no-trade. The Texans send Watson to Minnesota. In return: the Niners send their first-round pick in 2021 (12th overall) to Houston, and they’re out. (So San Francisco would be trading Garoppolo and a one to Houston and getting Cousins with two years left on his contract.) The Vikings would send linebacker Anthony Barr and running back Alexander Mattison plus their first-round picks in 2021 (14th overall) and 2023, and second-round picks in 2022 and 2023 in exchange for Watson. Houston’s haul: Garoppolo, two ones this year, a one in 2023, and two second-round picks.


There's a lot to unpack here. Let's go team by team.

The Vikings get Watson for the price of the No. 14 overall pick this year, their 2023 first, second-rounders in 2022 and 2023, Cousins, Barr, and Mattison. Is that a big price to pay? Definitely. Is it worth it to land Watson? In my opinion, it absolutely is. Two firsts, two seconds, Cousins, an overpaid (albeit important) linebacker and a backup running back for a young top-five quarterback? When you consider the added bonuses of clearing the Cousins and Barr contracts off of the books, it's a deal that works out in the Vikings' favor. Minnesota hasn't made any calls about trading Cousins, but they would have to at least strongly consider this idea.

But, of course, that's not the biggest issue. The No. 1 roadblock is that there's been no indication Watson would waive his no-trade clause to come to Minnesota and play in a run-first offense. Even if Watson would approve, the 49ers and Texans would also have to be on board...and I'm skeptical of that.

The 49ers get Cousins for Garoppolo and the No. 12 overall pick this year in this proposal. Even if there's truth to the idea that Kyle Shanahan and SF would be interested in adding Cousins, would they really give up the 12th pick in what amounts to a Garoppolo-Cousins swap? I'm not sure the Niners do that (and I'm positive that their fanbase would be upset if they did, not that that matters).

The Texans lose Watson and get a return haul of Garoppolo, the No. 12 and 14 picks this year (which could potentially be packaged to move up for a QB), two players (Barr and Mattison), and three other picks from Minnesota: two seconds and a 2023 first. The Caserio-Garoppolo angle is an interesting one; Jimmy G's contract is a big one for a bridge QB, so maybe this is contingent on the Texans legitimately believing in Garoppolo. Three first-rounders and two seconds is a strong haul of picks.

In the end, there are many reasons why this is a major longshot. The Vikings aren't looking to move Cousins, and even if they're interested in Watson, he would also have to be interested in them. The 49ers may not want to give up the No. 12 pick for Cousins, and the Texans may not have any interest in the contracts of Garoppolo and Barr.

But hey, it's sure fun to talk about. With big names like King and Michael Lombardi continuing to mention the Cousins-49ers connection, that's something that must at least be taken seriously. And if the Vikings could land Watson in the process, they'd have to immediately be viewed as Super Bowl contenders in 2021 and beyond.[sm=whistling.gif]

That is such bullshit. This isn't a "trade proposal"; it is a speculative trade scenario, and a far-fetched fantasy at that. Why do people keep giving this bullshit so much oxygen.

It seems pretty clear to me that the most likely reading of the current situation is that the Vikings hierarchy thinks they're doing great; it's bad luck and the players letting us down that holds us back. They doubled down by extending Spielman and Zimmer for no real reason prior to this year, after they did an extension with Cousins that captured their payroll for the next couple of years. The deal above actually also has a $45 million hit for QBs in 2022. The fantasies for Garoppolo give us a higher cap hit for QB next year.

There is almost no scenario where Kirk Cousins isn't here next year. Accept it; move on.



Bob you use to be a lot more fun.....

I’ll get off your lawn now...😉




bohumm -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/23/2021 12:19:47 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kurt bilben

quote:

ORIGINAL: bohumm

quote:

ORIGINAL: kwheats

Blockbuster Trade Proposal Sends Deshaun Watson to Vikings, Kirk Cousins to 49ers
Peter King's proposal would also give the Texans Jimmy Garoppolo, but it's a major longshot.
WILL RAGATZUPDATED:FEB 22, 2021ORIGINAL:FEB 22, 2021
As of now, the Deshaun Watson situation in Houston remains at a standstill. New Texans GM Nick Caserio isn't listening to offers for his superstar quarterback, but Watson hasn't changed his stance about not wanting to play for an organization led by Cal McNair and Jack Easterby.

So we wait, and the speculation continues. In his latest Football Morning in America column for Pro Football Talk, Peter King addressed Watson's future and came up with several blockbuster trade proposals involving the disgruntled QB. King created hypothetical two-team deals that would send Watson to the Panthers, Jets, and 49ers. But it's the last of four proposals that caught the eyes of Vikings fans.

King's final proposal, which he calls a "wing and a prayer," is a three-team QB swap that sends Watson to the Vikings, Kirk Cousins to the 49ers, and Jimmy Garoppolo to the Texans. It's incredibly unlikely for a number of reasons, but it's notable that someone like King –– one of the most plugged-in, respected NFL writers out there –– would even discuss it as a possibility.

Here's the proposal from King:

This is centered on the premise that San Francisco would not want to rip apart a team and a future, and might be willing to take a lesser deal for a quarterback Shanahan has long admired. And also that Caserio, in the heart of the draft room in 2014 when the Patriots made Garoppolo a second-round pick, would want to try again with Jimmy G. It’s a wing and a prayer, but fascinating to me.

Proposal: The Vikings send quarterback Kirk Cousins to San Francisco. The Niners send Garoppolo to Houston, if, of course, he’d waive his no-trade. The Texans send Watson to Minnesota. In return: the Niners send their first-round pick in 2021 (12th overall) to Houston, and they’re out. (So San Francisco would be trading Garoppolo and a one to Houston and getting Cousins with two years left on his contract.) The Vikings would send linebacker Anthony Barr and running back Alexander Mattison plus their first-round picks in 2021 (14th overall) and 2023, and second-round picks in 2022 and 2023 in exchange for Watson. Houston’s haul: Garoppolo, two ones this year, a one in 2023, and two second-round picks.


There's a lot to unpack here. Let's go team by team.

The Vikings get Watson for the price of the No. 14 overall pick this year, their 2023 first, second-rounders in 2022 and 2023, Cousins, Barr, and Mattison. Is that a big price to pay? Definitely. Is it worth it to land Watson? In my opinion, it absolutely is. Two firsts, two seconds, Cousins, an overpaid (albeit important) linebacker and a backup running back for a young top-five quarterback? When you consider the added bonuses of clearing the Cousins and Barr contracts off of the books, it's a deal that works out in the Vikings' favor. Minnesota hasn't made any calls about trading Cousins, but they would have to at least strongly consider this idea.

But, of course, that's not the biggest issue. The No. 1 roadblock is that there's been no indication Watson would waive his no-trade clause to come to Minnesota and play in a run-first offense. Even if Watson would approve, the 49ers and Texans would also have to be on board...and I'm skeptical of that.

The 49ers get Cousins for Garoppolo and the No. 12 overall pick this year in this proposal. Even if there's truth to the idea that Kyle Shanahan and SF would be interested in adding Cousins, would they really give up the 12th pick in what amounts to a Garoppolo-Cousins swap? I'm not sure the Niners do that (and I'm positive that their fanbase would be upset if they did, not that that matters).

The Texans lose Watson and get a return haul of Garoppolo, the No. 12 and 14 picks this year (which could potentially be packaged to move up for a QB), two players (Barr and Mattison), and three other picks from Minnesota: two seconds and a 2023 first. The Caserio-Garoppolo angle is an interesting one; Jimmy G's contract is a big one for a bridge QB, so maybe this is contingent on the Texans legitimately believing in Garoppolo. Three first-rounders and two seconds is a strong haul of picks.

In the end, there are many reasons why this is a major longshot. The Vikings aren't looking to move Cousins, and even if they're interested in Watson, he would also have to be interested in them. The 49ers may not want to give up the No. 12 pick for Cousins, and the Texans may not have any interest in the contracts of Garoppolo and Barr.

But hey, it's sure fun to talk about. With big names like King and Michael Lombardi continuing to mention the Cousins-49ers connection, that's something that must at least be taken seriously. And if the Vikings could land Watson in the process, they'd have to immediately be viewed as Super Bowl contenders in 2021 and beyond.[sm=whistling.gif]

That is such bullshit. This isn't a "trade proposal"; it is a speculative trade scenario, and a far-fetched fantasy at that. Why do people keep giving this bullshit so much oxygen.

It seems pretty clear to me that the most likely reading of the current situation is that the Vikings hierarchy thinks they're doing great; it's bad luck and the players letting us down that holds us back. They doubled down by extending Spielman and Zimmer for no real reason prior to this year, after they did an extension with Cousins that captured their payroll for the next couple of years. The deal above actually also has a $45 million hit for QBs in 2022. The fantasies for Garoppolo give us a higher cap hit for QB next year.

There is almost no scenario where Kirk Cousins isn't here next year. Accept it; move on.



Bob you use to be a lot more fun.....

I’ll get off your lawn now...😉

This has never been a compelling story to me, and it gets more absurd by the day. BTW, King's fantasy is not reporting or even speculation; he lays out a bunch of Watson trade scenarios that interest him for a number of teams. The Vikings are just one.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/23/2021 8:32:12 AM)

There isn't much else to talk about right now. When free agency kicks in things will get more interesting here.




Bill Johanesen -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 8:30:30 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12



COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!




Bill Johanesen -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 8:34:32 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: fmaltes

Also, we have had a QB with a very quick release and a bad offensive line before, Sam Bradford. It lead to very high completion percentage but poor offensive production. The line needs to improve especially in the interior. Interesting that we invested a lot of resources to get Hutchinson as a Guard, yet, the new regime seems to think that guards have to come from the lower rounds. Hutchinson was a first round pick, he also was tall (6'5") and big 310lbs+ which apparently goes against the grain of what the current front office seems to be looking in a guard.


Yeah that was weird with Hutch being the big initial signing of one of the sub-regimes. Then the philosophy was getting UFAs coming off their first contract. I think maybe that led to Shiancoe and Co.




TJSweens -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 9:30:55 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12


COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!

Cousins had better numbers against shitty defenses then he did against good ones. What the hell does that prove? Could it have had anything to do with Jefferson not being in the lineup for the first two games. That was also the stretch when the Vikings were playing musical chairs at RG with Elf and Samia. The second half is also when Smith and Conklin were incorporated into the offense.

Bolding Cousins' first half TD to Int is not the AHA moment you think it is.




David F. -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 9:33:16 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12


COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!

Cousins had better numbers against shitty defenses then he did against good ones. What the hell does that prove? Could it have had anything to do with Jefferson not being in the lineup for the first two games. That was also the stretch when the Vikings were playing musical chairs at RG with Elf and Samia. The second half is also when Smith and Conklin were incorporated into the offense.

Bolding Cousins' first half TD to Int is not the AHA moment you think it is.


First halves of games, not first half of the season.




TJSweens -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 9:48:54 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12


COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!

Cousins had better numbers against shitty defenses then he did against good ones. What the hell does that prove? Could it have had anything to do with Jefferson not being in the lineup for the first two games. That was also the stretch when the Vikings were playing musical chairs at RG with Elf and Samia. The second half is also when Smith and Conklin were incorporated into the offense.

Bolding Cousins' first half TD to Int is not the AHA moment you think it is.


First halves of games, not first half of the season.

Okay. So the fact that Cousins moved the ball and put points on the board when the team is behind is somehow a negative. Cousins and the offense kept the Vikings in a lot of games because they were putting up points almost as fast as the defense could hemorrhage them. Also when you are behind in the second half, teams pin their ears back and go after your QB because they know you have to pass.

Whether it's first and second half of a season or a game, this just isn't the AHA moment you want it to be.

Let's be honest. If Cousins was making $25M a year or less over his contract, the bitching about him would be about 25% of what it is now.




David F. -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 10:55:55 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12


COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!

Cousins had better numbers against shitty defenses then he did against good ones. What the hell does that prove? Could it have had anything to do with Jefferson not being in the lineup for the first two games. That was also the stretch when the Vikings were playing musical chairs at RG with Elf and Samia. The second half is also when Smith and Conklin were incorporated into the offense.

Bolding Cousins' first half TD to Int is not the AHA moment you think it is.


First halves of games, not first half of the season.

Okay. So the fact that Cousins moved the ball and put points on the board when the team is behind is somehow a negative. Cousins and the offense kept the Vikings in a lot of games because they were putting up points almost as fast as the defense could hemorrhage them. Also when you are behind in the second half, teams pin their ears back and go after your QB because they know you have to pass.

Whether it's first and second half of a season or a game, this just isn't the AHA moment you want it to be.

Let's be honest. If Cousins was making $25M a year or less over his contract, the bitching about him would be about 25% of what it is now.


The bolded is true. Also, if my aunt had balls she'd be my uncle.

In regards to moving the ball and putting up points only after we're behind I'd say that's sort of the 'Jameis Winston' effect. That guy had 5000 yards one year. We were (I think) the #4 offense in the NFL in 2020. Did it feel like it? Why were we so ineffective in the first half of games? This has nothing to do with the poor defense.




TJSweens -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 11:12:41 AM)

Piss poor analogy. Talk to bohum about the proper use of it. The Vikings offered what they offered. I'm not going to evaluate Cousins on field performance based on him not being stupid enough to reject it.

BTW, his rank in QB salary is pretty much in line with his QB ranking.




David F. -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 11:20:52 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Piss poor analogy. Talk to bohum about the proper use of it. The Vikings offered what they offered. I'm not going to evaluate Cousins on field performance based on him not being stupid enough to reject it.

BTW, his rank in QB salary is pretty much in line with his QB ranking.


Maybe you misunderstood me. I was agreeing that the bitching would be way less from the 'casual fan crowd' if he were paid less. That notwithstanding, I'm still providing what I believe to be some telling and not very impressive situational stats. A true #4 offense shouldn't be failing to score and take leads in the first half of games.




TJSweens -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 11:32:28 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Piss poor analogy. Talk to bohum about the proper use of it. The Vikings offered what they offered. I'm not going to evaluate Cousins on field performance based on him not being stupid enough to reject it.

BTW, his rank in QB salary is pretty much in line with his QB ranking.


Maybe you misunderstood me. I was agreeing that the bitching would be way less from the 'casual fan crowd' if he were paid less. That notwithstanding, I'm still providing what I believe to be some telling and not very impressive situational stats. A true #4 offense shouldn't be failing to score and take leads in the first half of games.

OK let's factor in that Dalvin Cook has 11 first half TD and 5 second half TD. Looks to me like the offense is still putting points on the board in the first half. They're just scoring them by different means. Also consider the Vikings start out each game by trying to eat as much clock as possible in the process of scoring points. Since the defense invariably puts them in a hole, the offense gets opened up in the second half and Cousins produces points at a higher rate with more emphasis on passing and while operating behind the shittiest pass protection in football.

I repeat. This is not the AHA moment you want us to believe it is. You really aren't making a compelling case by focusing on 1st and 2nd half TD & Int with no context.




David F. -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 11:47:20 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Piss poor analogy. Talk to bohum about the proper use of it. The Vikings offered what they offered. I'm not going to evaluate Cousins on field performance based on him not being stupid enough to reject it.

BTW, his rank in QB salary is pretty much in line with his QB ranking.


Maybe you misunderstood me. I was agreeing that the bitching would be way less from the 'casual fan crowd' if he were paid less. That notwithstanding, I'm still providing what I believe to be some telling and not very impressive situational stats. A true #4 offense shouldn't be failing to score and take leads in the first half of games.

OK let's factor in that Dalvin Cook has 11 first half TD and 5 second half TD. Looks to me like the offense is still putting points on the board in the first half. They're just scoring them by different means. Also consider the Vikings start out each game by trying to eat as much clock as possible in the process of scoring points. Since the defense invariably puts them in a hole, the offense gets opened up in the second half and Cousins produces points at a higher rate with more emphasis on passing and while operating behind the shittiest pass protection in football.

I repeat. This is not the AHA moment you want us to believe it is. You really aren't making a compelling case by focusing on 1st and 2nd half TD & Int with no context.


Did you pick just Dalvin Cook instead of team rushing by mere chance or so that it fit your argument?

MN Vikings offense:

1st half OF GAMES: 220 attempts, 1014 yards, 4.6 average, 12 TDs
2nd half OF GAMES: 240 attempts, 1238 yards, 5.2 average, 8 TDs

We are in no way scoring poorly in first halves because we are focusing on rushing or eating clock. Try again.

EDIT: And technically the 3rd shittiest pass protection in football.




Bill Johanesen -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 12:05:34 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bill Johanesen

quote:

ORIGINAL: David F.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Brad H

Kirk Cousins' passer rating in the last two minutes of a half last season ... 63.7. When it mattered, he wasn't any good. Ranked about 30th among quarterbacks that threw at least 50 passes (+Roethlisberger, 49). Completion percentage dropped to 56.2%. Five TD's and seven interceptions. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Best Rating in Final Two Minutes of Half:

Aaron Rodgers, 134.6
Derek Car, 124.4
Mitch Trubisky, 116.8
Baker Mayfield, 110.4
Drew Brees, 109.8
Josh Allen, 107.3
Russell Wilson, 106.4
Deshaun Watson, 103.5
Patrick Mahomes, 101.1
Matthew Stafford, 100.5

In 2019 ... 73.7 rating. Again, not very good. Somewhere around 23rd in the league.

In 2017 with Case Keenum ... 114.9. Team went 13-3.



It gets worse the more a person digs into the numbers.

Kirk Cousins 1st half stats for 2020: 234 att 161 comp 68.8 % 1859 yards 7.9 avg 40 long 10 TDs 7 INTs

2nd half stats 2020: 278 att 185 comp 66.5 % 2375 yards 8.5 avg 71 long 25 TDs 6 INTs

Garbage time and shootouts with shitty teams like the Bears and the Lions are what puts Cousin's numbers into the realm of top-12


COUSINS IS WHO WE THOUGHT HE WAS!

Cousins had better numbers against shitty defenses then he did against good ones. What the hell does that prove? Could it have had anything to do with Jefferson not being in the lineup for the first two games. That was also the stretch when the Vikings were playing musical chairs at RG with Elf and Samia. The second half is also when Smith and Conklin were incorporated into the offense.

Bolding Cousins' first half TD to Int is not the AHA moment you think it is.


You misunderstood what half means.




Bruce Johnson -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 12:47:36 PM)

The love we lost.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJ8wpmqe9NM&feature=share&fbclid=IwAR1NorF3z7rC-fc86_GsSJFya0Z5V1JQkfE313SAPzdFepFCUXRz6v4wda0




Bruce Johnson -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 4:09:36 PM)

Worth noting that as the NFL gets new TV deals & adds a 17th game, the salary cap will probably skyrocket in the upcoming years. So backloaded contracts can make a lot of sense and allow teams like the Vikings to spend more on players they're comfortable committing to long term.

Nick Olson on Twitter




Bruce Johnson -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 4:13:39 PM)

I'm reading that the cap will probably be negotiated closer to 185 million than the current 180 in the next few days, but that will still be 10-15 million less than last year.




marty -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 10:56:09 PM)

Sorry, Bradford doesn't compare to Brady. I can't recall, has Bradford ever won a playoff game ?

What would the Vikings' 2nd half rushing yards look like if Kurt played well in the 1st half of games, and had some leads against quality opposition, and some large leads against the bottom feeders ?

Also, the Vikings' 2nd half defense would be playing with leads, instead of opponents that are milking the clock, and doing as they please.




marty -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/24/2021 11:01:35 PM)

I would trade for Watson in a heartbeat, as I have given up on Kirk.

Watson offers mobility, money situation is the same, but you have a better QB that is much younger.

The trick would be to put together a good defense and OL, you have the WRs and RB. Improve the pass blocking by getting an OL coach that is known for good pass blocking lines. Then you could plug in a couple of 4th round guards, make Cleveland a pass blocker, or find a mid level FA G that gets coached up to being good.




Bill Jandro -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/25/2021 7:04:11 AM)

https://www.yardbarker.com/nfl/articles/should_the_vikings_replace_offensive_line_coach_rick_dennison/s1_16715_34166249




thebigo -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/25/2021 11:19:11 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: marty

I would trade for Watson in a heartbeat, as I have given up on Kirk.

Watson offers mobility, money situation is the same, but you have a better QB that is much younger.

The trick would be to put together a good defense and OL, you have the WRs and RB. Improve the pass blocking by getting an OL coach that is known for good pass blocking lines. Then you could plug in a couple of 4th round guards, make Cleveland a pass blocker, or find a mid level FA G that gets coached up to being good.


If we have to improve our OL for Watson to be an improvement, then why get him?




ratoppenheimer -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/25/2021 3:11:09 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: thebigo

quote:

ORIGINAL: marty

I would trade for Watson in a heartbeat, as I have given up on Kirk.

Watson offers mobility, money situation is the same, but you have a better QB that is much younger.

The trick would be to put together a good defense and OL, you have the WRs and RB. Improve the pass blocking by getting an OL coach that is known for good pass blocking lines. Then you could plug in a couple of 4th round guards, make Cleveland a pass blocker, or find a mid level FA G that gets coached up to being good.


If we have to improve our OL for Watson to be an improvement, then why get him?



Tom Pelissero@TomPelissero
The #Texans remain unwilling to discuss QB Deshaun Watson with other teams, some of whom have resorted to leaving voicemails with trade offers, per sources.

Watson spoke briefly to coach David Culley recently, but the two still haven’t met in person. Houston not budging.




ronhextall -> RE: General Vikes Talk (2/25/2021 4:20:59 PM)

Houston is completely F'd if they don't trade Watson before the draft and Watson sits at home in 2021.

It's great theater.




Page: <<   < prev  36 37 [38] 39 40   next >   >>



Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.5.5 Unicode