TouchedTheAxeIn82 said:
okaydo said:
01Bear said:
cal83dls79 said:
01Bear said:
okaydo said:
The result worked out well for him, but he probably should've gone to the outside shoulder, instead.
thanks coach
TBC, I'm happy Jared's doing so well. I am actively rooting for the Lions only because they have him and Marvin Jones, Jr. I want to see him prove Sean McVay (and the Rams front office) a moron(s) for giving up on him. With that comes a hope that he'll recognize his mistakes and learn from them, even when said mistakes don't result in negative outcomes.* I'm sure Jared would also agree that he should've put the ball more on his receiver's outside shoulder since that would've made it all but impossible for the defender to make a play on the ball. With the placement on that pass, the defender almost deflected the pass (it was sheer dumb luck that didn't happen).
But if you disagree, that's your prerogative. I'm sure you're the kind of guy who thinks getting by is good enough. TBF, that's not a bad philosophy in life. But I want to see Jared end up as one of the all-time greats. I really like the young man. He's proven to be a great Cal representative.
*There are times when it's better to be lucky than good, but it's never really a bad idea to be good.
1. One of the front office guys chiefly responsible for drafting Goff is the Lions' GM.
2. Things are working out great for Goff. While I'd like to see McVay humiliated, I'm so glad they gave up on him. It was a toxic situation for Goff. The problem is that McVay was so important to Goff's career that it ended up becoming a bad thing. McVay got nearly all the credit for Goff being good and Goff got the blame for Goff being bad. And everybody close to McVay, which means many people close to Goff, kept getting picked away by other teams so Goff couldn't have stability. Hell, 3 of the 4 head coaches in the NFC North have worked with Goff.
This! It's clear now that McVay didn't know how to get the best out of Goff. Seeing Goff's success now, it's obvious that it was a coaching problem. Whether it was the mental game, technique, game planning, or personnel, the Rams didn't know how to build a winning team around Goff, and they blamed Goff. While the Rams would argue that the trade gave them the Super Bowl win they were looking for, they sacrificed the next few years going forward with all the high draft picks they gave away and with a QB near the end of his career.
Goff got lucky with this trade to a team that appears to have the right management in place and the right coaches to get the best out of Goff.
One thing that I wanted to mention, in relation to the thread about how Goff was perceived in 2013, is that Goff had a huge problem with ball security from the beginning. Remember when they had him wearing gloves in dry conditions because the ball would just fall from his hands for no reason? Well the fumblitis continued into the NFL, but I noticed that since he's been with the Lions, this issue seems to have gone away.
You know how it is: When a new boss gets hired, he wants his own people. But Goff was the reason McVay got hired, so he couldn't get rid of Goff. So when McVay finally did have the clout to get the QB he wanted, he pounced. (And he won the Super Bowl!)
McVay's public media strategy has always been to blame himself for things going wrong. That really endeared him to reporters. But as a guy who was in his early 30s, McVay quietly made it be known that he was doing nearly all the work at the QB job. He wanted and received the glory of the QB job. And of course, the media gave McVay the QB glory because McVay really did make a difference with the Rams. And Goff isn't going to bash the coach who saved his career. (In fact, I recall reporters asking Goff about McVay getting all the credit and Goff basically saying "as long as we're winning, I don't care how I'm perceived.)
When you are media savvy, you can shape the perception of somebody.
And so Goff was perceived as being an idiot with an arm who was controlled like a game of Madden. Few delved into why Goff was highly regarded in the first place: leadership skills, ability to play QB.
Even with the Lions, you can see NFL pundits orgasming over Ben Johnson.
There is still the perception in some circles that Goff was a mediocre QB who keeps getting lucky with the coaches he receives. I believe Dan Orlovsky* said something to the effect of if he had a great coach, he too could've been great. (To be fair, Orlovsky, a former teammate of Goff's, has been praising Goff as a QB.)