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No amount of work is going to fix his arm strength, which will always place a ceiling on his draft stock. He also needs to improve a lot as a passer if he's going to be considered as a distributor despite those limitations. The latter is certainly a possibility.
44 yd TD pass, threw the ball 50 yards.
Another 43 yard pass, thew the ball about 50 yards.
Snapped on the 20, released on the 13, caught on the 40 yard line for a 40 yard pass complete, heaved the ball 47 yards, for an 80 yard TD.
I think he probably caps out throwing the ball 50 yards while maintaining accuracy. Looks like on the last one Smith had to slow a half a step to catch the ball, so yes I would say that's his range. Plenty of NFL teams can work with that.
Meanwhile this is the Cardale pass that got the ball rolling against Wisconsin. 39 yd TD, threw the ball about 52-53 yards.
Cardale tossing the ball about 55 yards (hard to tell exactly)
So I think Cardale has the arm to throw it 60 and probably still be accurate. Even more teams can work with that. But frankly watching an NFL game I see 90% of the passes are under 30 yards, 97% are under 50 yards.
I'm not talking about moonshots. I'm talking about how quickly regular passes get there and how much time the defender has to recover. In the NFL, he needs to be able to throw it from the far hash to the opposite sideline. If his diagnosis, decision and release are ideal, but his arm strength is just average, it gives the opposing defender time to recover and make a play on the ball. If it is weak by NFL standards like Barrett's, now the ball is arriving even slower and risking an interception.So I think Cardale has the arm to throw it 60 and probably still be accurate. Even more teams can work with that. But frankly watching an NFL game I see 90% of the passes are under 30 yards, 97% are under 50 yards.
Yes. I love JTB, and what he does for us was and will be outstanding. But his throws are quite a bit softer than Jones, that won't cut it in the NFL.I'm not talking about moonshots. I'm talking about how quickly regular passes get there and how much time the defender has to recover. In the NFL, he needs to be able to throw it from the far hash to the opposite sideline. If his diagnosis, decision and release are ideal, but his arm strength is just average, it gives the opposing defender time to recover and make a play on the ball. If it is weak by NFL standards like Barrett's, now the ball is arriving even slower and risking an interception.
I was going to post in the other QB thread tonight before the Braxton news that the "3rd string" quarterback would see just as much time as the first 2 in a lot of games.With Braxton moving to H-back, I still think JT and Cardale will rotate situationally.
Then again, if JT is the starter Cardale will still get plenty of time to boost his draft stock in mop up duty for most games.
It seems unlikely the "starter" would need to go more than a half if things go well in quite a few games.
Clearly we can't have the starter showing up the backup that much, so if we've got 50 points by the half, then we better be scoring 100 for the game.I was going to post in the other QB thread tonight before the Braxton news that the "3rd string" quarterback would see just as much time as the first 2 in a lot of games.
This team will average over 50ppg. There's going to be a number of opponents that could have half a hundred laid on them by halftime (Hawaii, Northern Illinois, Western Michigan). Mop duty was definitely going to lend itself to helping share the snaps.
But now it's down to 2.
I'm not talking about moonshots. I'm talking about how quickly regular passes get there and how much time the defender has to recover. In the NFL, he needs to be able to throw it from the far hash to the opposite sideline. If his diagnosis, decision and release are ideal, but his arm strength is just average, it gives the opposing defender time to recover and make a play on the ball. If it is weak by NFL standards like Barrett's, now the ball is arriving even slower and risking an interception.
Now his intelligence, continued development (a safe assumption) and mobility should get him a shot in the NFL. But the above will keep his draft stock lower before he has a chance to prove them wrong in training camp.
How would you compare him to Seattle's Wilson since I see them as similarly skilled?I'm not talking about moonshots. I'm talking about how quickly regular passes get there and how much time the defender has to recover. In the NFL, he needs to be able to throw it from the far hash to the opposite sideline. If his diagnosis, decision and release are ideal, but his arm strength is just average, it gives the opposing defender time to recover and make a play on the ball. If it is weak by NFL standards like Barrett's, now the ball is arriving even slower and risking an interception.
Now his intelligence, continued development (a safe assumption) and mobility should get him a shot in the NFL. But the above will keep his draft stock lower before he has a chance to prove them wrong in training camp.