And we had a better defense than the Patriots as well as less competitive schedule to compete against.
Cassel > Cutler > Rodgers. Definitely.
I believe Cutler and Cassel are both heads an shoulders better than Rodgers when it comes to the red zone.
"Zero2Cool" wrote:
I'm using stats from ESPN and adding up totals from the 19 yard line and in, so it probably is missing the plays directly on the 20....but I don't think it will skew any of the numbers that much.
I believe you are wrong my friend:
Matt Cassel's red zone last year:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/splits?playerId=8644
46/100 for 358 yards, 46% complete, 21 TDs, 2 INTs, 14 sacks, 47 yds rushing, 3 TDs (24 total TDs)
Jay Cutler's red zone last year:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/splits?playerId=9597
51/115 for 322 yards, 44% complete, 26 TDs, 5 INTs, 3 sacks, 47 yds rushing, 3 TDs (29 total TDs)
Aaron Rodgers's red zone last year:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/splits?playerId=8439
52/86 for 281 yards, 60% complete, 26 TDs, 0 INTs, 8 sacks, 37 yds rushing, 7 TDs (33 total TDs)
Take it for what it's worth. It actually says ARodge is a little better than the other two, not heads and shoulders behind them.
Add in Red Zone efficiency as a whole:
http://www.profootballweekly.com/PFW/NFL+Statistics/Inside+the+Red+Zone/2008/finalredzn.htm
Packers:
48 Possessions
29 TDs
16 FGs
.938 scoring percentage
.604 TD percentage (6th in the league)
Patriots:
65 Possessions
33 TDs
25 FGs
.892 scoring percentage
.508 TD percentage (19th in the league)
Broncos:
55 Possessions
30 TDs
14 FGs
.800 scoring percentage (Penalties/Prater??)
.545 TD percentage (16th in the league)
Like i said i would be happy with any of the 3. Oh and aboout that great line just think Rodgers was sacked 34 times which is alot right? Well how do you think Cassell felt sitting behind that great line seeing he was sacked a league high of 47 times. Research my son helps you prove some points.
"dhazer" wrote:
I hate it when people use sack totals as an indication of pass blocking work of the O-line. Cassel was a first year starting QB, as was Rodgers. Both players were put in the QB position after two excellent veteran QBs were removed. Both Brady and Favre had amazing pocket awareness and ability to escape pocket pressure or throw quickly to escape. Did both o-lines apparently just lose their overall effectiveness in one year? Or did the starting QB hold on to the ball longer than his predecessor? I'm guessing the latter is basically the main reason for the high sack totals. In fact, I know Cassel held on to the ball long on many plays when watching Patriots games, which is normal for a young first year starting QB. Watching the Packers every week showed me Rodgers had the same problem, albeit not as bad as Cassel. It's possible the O-line lost some effectiveness (or had a few injuries, which I know they did), but not to drop them that far down the list of good pass blocking O-lines.
We should agree that the Packers O-line strength is their pass blocking. Same with the Patriots.
Here you go im so sick of this stuff.
Jennings had 1292 yds and 9 tds, Welker had 1165 yds and 3 tds.
Driver had 1012 yds and 5 tds and Moss had 1008 yds and 11 tds.
So our totals are:
Green Bay 2314 yards and 14 tds
Patriots 2173 yards and 14 tds
So who is the better of the group looks pretty even to me.
dhazer wrote:
So you look at two receiver totals and automatically assume that both QBs have the same type of talent to work with? Seriously? I know you guys are talking only about WRs, but the argument should be about the entire unit.
Just talking about WRs, no WR in the game changes defenses more than Randy Moss. There's no comparison.
Also, the Patriots basically brought back every player on offense that shattered the NFL scoring record last year. They have talent top to bottom better than the Packers on the offensive side of the ball.
I don't think you could say that about Rodgers and Cassell because they had far better wrs than Cutler had......Cutler is stuck with the same garbage
dhazer wrote:
Cutler had Brandon Marshall and Eddie Royal, one of the top WR of this year's draft class. Brandon Marshall is a top 6-7 WR. Brandon Stokley is a great slot WR. I have no idea how you call them "garbage". They aren't on par with GB or NE, but they are definitely in the top of the league in terms of WR talent.
Using your WR total method, this group had 2245 yards and 11 TDs. That's not "garbage" at all.
Oh for my answer,
I'd take Rodgers first followed by Cutler as a close 2nd. Cassel is definitely way down on the list for me. I watched him play quite a lot with my NFL Sunday Ticket and a few things really made me uncomfortable about him:
1) His deep ball was not very good. His accuracy really lagged in that department. I saw him overthrow Moss twice on one drive when he was open by 5 yards down the field both times.
2) Again, surrounded by unbelievably good talent/system that scored an NFL record number points last year.
3) He held on to the ball a little more than other young QBs. You remember when Brady used to sit all day behind that line and just easily find the open man last year? Cassel would hold it even longer and take multiple sacks without reading the entire field. He would lock on too much on one guy (I'm guessing Moss or Welker).
He still had some solid games and showed a thing or two on the field this year. One thing I really liked about him was his scrambling ability. He's very quick and pretty athletic and fast for a QB. Those are definite pluses. We'll just have to see how he does on the talent starved offense of the Chiefs. I do not see him being successful next year.