The benching them if they sucked mind games?Doesn't really matter. It's like asking if you should invest in an index fund today vs. tomorrow. We'll never know the difference in the long run. My only concern is if Maye starts, will he keep it. The bullshit mind games BB played last year with his QBs was entirely unacceptable.
The benching them in the middle of the game or just before the 2 minute warning when the other wasn't a demonstrably better option, yeah. Regardless of the options at hand, BB's QB management was the final F U of a guy who didn't buy into the groceries he had and didn't want to cook dinner anymore.The benching them if they sucked mind games?
I saw it as "We told you that you couldn't do XYZ. You went and did XY" . BB's job wasn't to keep feelings from being hurt.The benching them in the middle of the game or just before the 2 minute warning when the other wasn't a demonstrably better option, yeah. Regardless of the options at hand, BB's QB management was the final F U of a guy who didn't buy into the groceries he had and didn't want to cook dinner anymore.
I’m not confident in any rookie QB being ready right out of the chute with the mental aspect of the game. The real question for me is how quickly he can learn and I still think you learn best by doing, even if it’s clunky at first.For those who want , how confident are you that he can handle the non physical aspects of the game? Administrative pre-snap, huddle, audibles, post snap processing, etc.
I don’t have a take here but I am curious to hear yours.
While I'm definitely in the give him a few weeks with the clipboard camp, I'd even do it for the barest reason. Let him get a feel like it is for being a Pro. Let him watch a professional QB go about his business during the week, prepping for the game. Being in the NFL is a completely different animal, and I'd rather have him take that in for a few weeks and soak it all in before having QB1 duties. This is a lost season no matter who starts, and while yes out the gate he'd be more fun to watch, we need to be patientFor those who want , how confident are you that he can handle the non physical aspects of the game? Administrative pre-snap, huddle, audibles, post snap processing, etc.
I don’t have a take here but I am curious to hear yours.
As well as anyone with his experience, which is to say it will take some time. But I'd say the same for Daniels, Nix, Williams, etc. (and Mac in 2021). I don't think more college experience matters too much. They all have to go through it. I'd also put a lot on the OC to organize things.For those who want , how confident are you that he can handle the non physical aspects of the game? Administrative pre-snap, huddle, audibles, post snap processing, etc.
I don’t have a take here but I am curious to hear yours.
Not confident at all. I'm a fan. I know far less that most. I just want some fun, entertaining football. I think Maye'd be a lot of fun to watch this year. So I want to see Maye.For those who want , how confident are you that he can handle the non physical aspects of the game? Administrative pre-snap, huddle, audibles, post snap processing, etc.
I don’t have a take here but I am curious to hear yours.
Basically how I feel, I lean slightly towards Brissett from what we know, just because AVP is the person I trust most to make that decision and his comments made it sound like while Maye is improving, JB is well ahead on that front. Now ultimately it's Mayo's decision (with some input from GM and ownership), but I would hope he'd lean heavily on AVP, developing Maye is a huge part of why they hired him.If AVP and the offensive coaching staff thinks Maye is mentally ready (which you can’t assess by watching him play vanilla on vanilla starters vs backups in the preseason) then I want him to start. If AVP and the offensive coaching staff do not think he’s ready he won’t start. My guess is JB starts week the first five to seven weeks and then Maye takes over. My guess means shit.
Edit: what I want is to trust the process. I don’t care where the staff lands as long as they are being smart about it. I also can’t assess if Maye is ready or not. Preseason play (especially this year for them) is not useless but it won’t answer the hard questions well enough for me to have a take on it. I didn’t vote for any of the options not because I’m trying to be difficult or anything but how I feel doesn’t nearly line up with any of the above.
I'm not even confident Maye can regularly play from under center (yet) without turning the ball over or messing up the timing of the offense.For those who want , how confident are you that he can handle the non physical aspects of the game? Administrative pre-snap, huddle, audibles, post snap processing, etc.
I don’t have a take here but I am curious to hear yours.
Yeah, that day may never come. At some point, he's going to have to out there and play. They can't wait until the line is in perfect shape. We'll see what happens over the next few days but given that they've said they'll be looking at the waiver wire and it's a possibility that a starter isn't on the team at the moment that they could give the line 2-3 weeks to settle a bit. Of course injuries can and are happening so it may never really settle.There's a lot of "let the OL stabilize for 4 or 5 weeks". What if it doesn't? What if someone gets hurt?
If the rationale for Maye playing is we have stable OL, what if that simply doesn't happen?
This is easy. Sit Maye for this year.There's a lot of "let the OL stabilize for 4 or 5 weeks". What if it doesn't? What if someone gets hurt?
If the rationale for Maye playing is we have stable OL, what if that simply doesn't happen?
If the line is THAT bad (“historically bad”), then there’s a very high likelihood that less than mobile Jacoby Brissett is going to get killed and then what? Can’t hide Maye all season. Or would you then turn to Milton to preserve Maye?This is easy. Sit Maye for this year.
I'm not sure what everyone else has been watching this preseason but New England may be on the cusp of having a historically bad offensive line.
They definitely are nowhere near historically bad, they haven't even been the worst line I've seen this preseason (hi Steelers). What they might be is 2023-24 Washington Commanders or 2022-23 Giants bad, which would still be a concern.This is easy. Sit Maye for this year.
I'm not sure what everyone else has been watching this preseason but New England may be on the cusp of having a historically bad offensive line.
This is where I am at. Letting them figure out the best OL combination before playing Maye is ideal to me.I guess I'm fine with Brissett starting a few games at first just so we have an idea what the surrounding cast actually looks like in order to evaluate it separately from Maye. If Maye starts week 1, it'd be near impossible to gauge the quality of the OL and receivers separately from how much he's influencing the environment around him. If the OL sucks, I can accept using Brissett as a sacrificial lamb in order to properly ascertain that, and then throwing Maye out there with full knowledge of the protection issues, so we don't pin those on him if he eventually struggles. But I fully believe Maye is already the better player right now and shouldn't sit more than 4-5 games.
There will be no good OL this year. If they have the 20th best OL for pass pro win rate by mid year, I'll consider that a huge win and improvement. I'd be surprised if they're better than 30th now.There's a lot of "let the OL stabilize for 4 or 5 weeks". What if it doesn't? What if someone gets hurt?
If the rationale for Maye playing is we have stable OL, what if that simply doesn't happen?
My gut reaction is that Milton sees little to no game time this season. It would be weird messaging to play Milton over the presumably healthy and ready to go #3 overall pick who is also a rookie. Maye matters, Milton doesn't, let Milton take the punishment is just bad management and yes, I realize they are doing the same thing with Brissett. But at least Brissett "earned" the position by virtue of his vet status. It's about as flimsy as possible, but also reality - just like the Oline.If the line is THAT bad (“historically bad”), then there’s a very high likelihood that less than mobile Jacoby Brissett is going to get killed and then what? Can’t hide Maye all season. Or would you then turn to Milton to preserve Maye?
I haven't watched the Steelers this preseason so I wouldn't know, but I'd have to believe they at least have more than one lineman that can successfully snap a football. Or players who know how to stand at the line properly prior to. I mean that was 4/5 of New England's starting line out there Sunday night and they looked like the Keystone Cops against Washington's 2nd and 3rd stringers. I will grant that Dave Andrews not playing factored into their performance but I mean then you're just holding your breath that he holds up over 17 games.They definitely are nowhere near historically bad, they haven't even been the worst line I've seen this preseason (hi Steelers). What they might be is 2023-24 Washington Commanders or 2022-23 Giants bad, which would still be a concern.
I have watched the Steelers and their problem is a far more concerning one than lining up.... they can't block anyone once the ball is snapped and their QBs are taking a ton of hits.I haven't watched the Steelers this preseason so I wouldn't know, but I'd have to believe they at least have more than one lineman that can successfully snap a football. Or players who know how to stand at the line properly prior to. I mean that was 4/5 of New England's starting line out there Sunday night and they looked like the Keystone Cops against Washington's 2nd and 3rd stringers. I will grant that Dave Andrews not playing factored into their performance but I mean then you're just holding your breath that he holds up over 17 games.
No, it's bad. Like really fucking bad.
Brissett and Maye were only pressured on seven of their 26 drop-backs on Sunday night, or a modest 26.9%, and three of them were on Okorafor.
Seconded!This was a very well designed poll!
And againI voted Brissett/Brissett.
I would kind of guess that ownership being impatient is a good reason to start Jacoby. This team is probably going to lose a lot of games to start the year. If you're losing them with Maye it can get toxic quick. If you go 0-4 with Jacoby then swap to Maye it's a boost, even if the results don't change.I went Maye/Maye. He's the best QB on the roster already and he'll be more exciting to watch. Plus, I'm not sure how patient the Kraft's will be with this coaching staff so it would make sense for Mayo to give Maye reps as early as possible so that he's fully prepared for when the roster rounds into shape.
I don't know. I do think there's value in having Maye get experience in real-game situations on day 1, even if he's going to take some lumps.I would kind of guess that ownership being impatient is a good reason to start Jacoby. This team is probably going to lose a lot of games to start the year. If you're losing them with Maye it can get toxic quick. If you go 0-4 with Jacoby then swap to Maye it's a boost, even if the results don't change.
Oh my comment wasn't about the benefits of playing him, but about how coaches/GMs manage impatient owners.I don't know. I do think there's value in having Maye get experience in real-game situations on day 1, even if he's going to take some lumps.
This is how I lean. And even if I were leaning Maye...This team is probably going to lose a lot of games to start the year. If you're losing them with Maye it can get toxic quick. If you go 0-4 with Jacoby then swap to Maye it's a boost, even if the results don't change.
i get your point, but who’s actually distracted?Mayo makes you understand why Bill wanted to say as little as possible. He's so obsessed with being "open and honest" that he talks himself into circles and none of his comments seem to have a purpose that helps the team, instead often becoming distractions.
Mayo has to understand being honest doesn't mean you have to give granular detail over the decision making process. "We've chosen a starter but that won't be communicated publicly until I have a chance to announce it to the players". Done. Why expand on it?Mayo makes you understand why Bill wanted to say as little as possible. He's so obsessed with being "open and honest" that he talks himself into circles and none of his comments seem to have a purpose that helps the team, instead often becoming distractions.
I mean... we don't know 100%, but as an example, his offseason cash to burn comments were enough of a distraction that his GM and owner had to address it, and he had to come out and walk it back in a press conference. As to QB... sure seems like on that front too he didn;t really think out his comments and then had to tweak them, given how lockerrooms work.. I doubt it was beneficial.i get your point, but who’s actually distracted?