I am hoping that the little team up north can put another good smack down on the bay boys and send them into a tailspin. Wouldn't that be fun

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/02/2 ... ld-be.html
EntiatHawk wrote:I know this topic was floated earlier here but thought I would post this article from the News Tribune.
I am hoping that the little team up north can put another good smack down on the bay boys and send them into a tailspin. Wouldn't that be fun
http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/02/2 ... ld-be.html
EntiatHawk wrote:http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/02/2 ... ld-be.html
Hawktawk wrote:I wonder if the handling of Smith vs Kaepernic by Hairball is a component of the problem. I realize the entire 9ers FO was involved in the pick of Kap but his premature insertion into the starting lineup coupled with his regression as a player this year is all on Hairball.When a HC benches a guy with the best QBR in the league at mid season for his new toy they will all 3 be forever linked.
As Hawks fan I think I would have been more worried with Smith in the game on that final drive because he is RW lite. He runs only if he has to and he doesn't do dumb stuff with the ball. He was a couple of stupid plays by a kick returner from leading the 9ers to the SB in 2011 and he was unceremoniously dumped after a concussion. Smith showed this year he is capable of being much more than a game managing dink and dunker.
Kap has showed the last year and a half that he is an extremely athletic QB but really poor at reading defenses and extremely turnover prone. He almost singlehandedly cost the 9ers another trip to the SB this year with his 3 turnovers in the 4th quarter of the conference championship, also turning in a couple of stinkers on offense in the regular season to insure the game would be at the Clink instead of the Stick.
I don't know, maybe its just wishful thinking but whatever it is I sure enjoy watching the whiners implode.
Oly wrote:As much as I like seeing the 49ers implode, I LOVE seeing anything bad happen to Harbaugh. I don't think there is a person in sports I hate more than that guy...although if Ken Behring, pox on his house, was still in sports he'd take the honor. But that's it. That's the company Harbaugh keeps in my mind.
All I can think about when reading these stories is how angry Harbaugh must be every day. He hates his GM, but the organization seems to value the GM more than him. He hates Carroll, and Carroll has both the ring and team harmony that has eluded him. And those he can control--the players--are starting to hate him. He sees himself as this god of a coach, but instead of a ring he has the enmity of everyone that can help him get a ring.
Just put yourself in his khakis for a second and imagine how much you'd hate your life (and your wardrobe). How would you feel if you felt that you had the passion and intelligence to succeed as long as all of these idiot administrators and idiot referees and idiot big-jawed coaches and idiot players just got with the program? He has to just be angry and spiteful all the time. And that warms the cockles of my Seahawks-loving heart.
Eaglehawk wrote:Hawktawk wrote:I wonder if the handling of Smith vs Kaepernic by Hairball is a component of the problem. I realize the entire 9ers FO was involved in the pick of Kap but his premature insertion into the starting lineup coupled with his regression as a player this year is all on Hairball.When a HC benches a guy with the best QBR in the league at mid season for his new toy they will all 3 be forever linked.
As Hawks fan I think I would have been more worried with Smith in the game on that final drive because he is RW lite. He runs only if he has to and he doesn't do dumb stuff with the ball. He was a couple of stupid plays by a kick returner from leading the 9ers to the SB in 2011 and he was unceremoniously dumped after a concussion. Smith showed this year he is capable of being much more than a game managing dink and dunker.
Kap has showed the last year and a half that he is an extremely athletic QB but really poor at reading defenses and extremely turnover prone. He almost singlehandedly cost the 9ers another trip to the SB this year with his 3 turnovers in the 4th quarter of the conference championship, also turning in a couple of stinkers on offense in the regular season to insure the game would be at the Clink instead of the Stick.
I don't know, maybe its just wishful thinking but whatever it is I sure enjoy watching the whiners implode.
KARMA. Remember how half the Niner team wanted us to lose the SB?
kalibane wrote:I think this is hilarious but I do have to disagree with the Kaep, Smith, Harbaugh thing.
If you want to know what the NFC championship looks like with Alex Smith at QB just go rewatch the game that took place two weeks later.
Alex Smith can't throw deep just like Peyton Manning can't throw deep. There is zero chance that Smith could have completed the TD pass to Anquan Boldin that barely made it over Earl Thomas. If Alex Smith is in that game the Corners don't have to worry about getting beaten deep and Kam Chanceller just sits on the crossing stuff all night. It ends up looking like the NFC Championship between the Giants and the 49ers where Smith couldn't do anything whatsover, only the 9ers couldn't run the ball against the Hawks. Kaep has a lot of flaws that people like Future don't like to admit to but he kept the 49ers in that game with his legs when they couldn't do anything else on offense and he made 4-5 big plays with his arm in the 2nd half that Alex Smith just flat out doesn't have the ability to make. With Alex Smith at QB that game doesn't even come down to the last possession.
Hawktawk wrote:You are some smart guys but you weren't paying attention very well late in the season to the Chiefs offense last year to be making the comments you are about Smith. The Chiefs finished the season scoring 35 or more points in 5 of their last 7 games, four of them over 40 points. In the playoff loss to the Colts Smith was 30 of 46 for 378 yards, 4 touchdowns, no picks, and a 119 QBR. He also rushed 8 times for 57 yards, a 7.1 average ypc. And that was in spite of losing his top 2 running backs including all world Jamaal Charles early in the game.
Reid is developing Smith and Carl Peterson is wanting to lock him up with a long term deal. And his arm is looking a lot better now that he has a coach who trusts him.
Manning I agree has lost his velocity completely and would be cooked if the officials would call the illegal picks which account for many of his completions. I wont quibble any more about who would have fared better against our defense, probably none of the above as focused as they were. But I think the 9ers will rue the day they handed the keys to the Escalade to a tatted up punk with his hat on backwards and sent the real NFL field general on their roster packing. Maybe some of them already do.................
HumanCockroach wrote:I don't know, what I see is Smith at his absolute best, and an exceedingly young Kaepernik, who still has a ton of room to grow and the time to get there. Smith IMHO is a very good QB, but, that said, he isn't a "great" QB, and I honestly don't believe he ever will be. The jury is still out on Kaepernik IMHO and I'm not sure anyone can accurately decide what his career will look like when everything is said and done.
At this point, if I add in the bonuses of each QB, I guess I would place Smith above Kap at this point, slightly, but I'm not sure if Smith has the ability to win a game on his own, which whether you want to admit it or not, Kap certainly does. If I had to choose between the two, Kaps ceiling would win out for me.
kalibane wrote:People saying that about Wilson were idiots. He's in the top 10 in arm strength as far as Starters in the NFL. Smith is in the bottom 10. Yes you can work around it, especially in the offense he's in currently, but Alex Smith would be a pure game manager (even though I hate the term) in the Seahawks Offense and he'd be completely inneffective in say the Cardinals offense, and it's because of his arm.
Wilson has enough arm for any offense.
I have to say it's kind of funny watching people stick up for Alex Smith like this but totally dismiss Phillip Rivers this last season.
kalibane wrote:Alex Smith can't throw deep just like Peyton Manning can't throw deep. There is zero chance that Smith could have completed the TD pass to Anquan Boldin that barely made it over Earl Thomas. If Alex Smith is in that game the Corners don't have to worry about getting beaten deep and Kam Chanceller just sits on the crossing stuff all
kalibane wrote:Gunslinger is a mentality not a physical trait. Ryan Fitzpatrick is a gunslinger, he still might have the weakest arm among NFL starters. It's a mistake to remember the rainbow deep balls that weak armed QBs throw as evidence that they have a big enough arm.
Technically speaking every NFL QB can get the ball down field. It's the outside the hash throws that really tell the tale and Smith can't drive those throws in against tight coverage. Now props to him for being smart enough to realize his limitations because the afore mentioned Fitzpatrick still tries to make those throws and they get picked.
Being conservative is all on Alex Smith also. He had the same coach as Kaepernick and they never took shots down the field or outside the numbers with Smith. With Kaep it's a big part of their play book. Smith was a big part of why Crabtree never was that productive and then he all of a sudden took off when Kaep took snaps.
The playbook didn't change. Kaep can just work the routes outside the numbers and Smith couldn't.
kalibane wrote:Smith and TJack have two different weakness but the same mindset. Smith's issue is arm strength. He absolutely cannot drive the ball outside the numbers and he's smart enough to know he can't so he doesn't try. TJack has the arm but he can't place the ball accurately and so he turns into a check down machine when there is decent coverage. Same result but different reason.
Smith ain't Ryan Fitzpatrick but he has a weak arm. It's his biggest weakness as a QB.
RiverDog wrote:kalibane wrote:Smith and TJack have two different weakness but the same mindset. Smith's issue is arm strength. He absolutely cannot drive the ball outside the numbers and he's smart enough to know he can't so he doesn't try. TJack has the arm but he can't place the ball accurately and so he turns into a check down machine when there is decent coverage. Same result but different reason.
Smith ain't Ryan Fitzpatrick but he has a weak arm. It's his biggest weakness as a QB.
I just want to interject something into this discussion and I don't mean to divert the thread, but I always felt that TJack's biggest problem was his indecisiveness and refusal to take even the slightest risk of an interception. I think that's why he chose to check the ball down, not a lack of confidence in being able to make a throw except as it relates to taking a risk of having it picked off. I didn't think his accuracy was that much of an issue IMO. And just to defend him for a bit, the guy certainly didn't have much of a receiving corps to work with, either. At least Russell had Rice in 2012 and Tate in 2013.
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