Tuesday, August 02, 2016

AFC EAST Position by Position Preview: Quarterbacks



    In this series of articles, I will compare the four AFC East teams at each position/group.  At the end of the series, I will publish each team's grades and predict the finishing records for each team.  We begin today with quarterback.

1.)  New England (Brady/Garopollo)  
    Although the Patriots will be without Brady for the first four games of the season as he serves, in my view, a long overdue suspension, this quarterback group is still the best in division.  There can be little to say here.  A superstar with four chips, even nearing the end of his career, is still the class of the division- however smug and irritating he might be.  Garoppolo, however, will likely struggle in his four starts. The Patriots will try to get by on the short passing game (though they will take a few deep shots early in games as a way of masking their insecurity in Garopollo's abilities.) Next year they will be forced to try to draft Brady's successor after previewing the limitations of their current clipboard holder and the horrors of life without Brady.  Still, 12 games with Brady makes this the top passing unit in division- for now.

2.)  Miami  (Tannehill/Moore) Tannehill has posted impressive statistics in every category except one.  His career completion percentage of 62% splits the difference between that of Andrew Luck (58) and Matt Ryan (64).  In the last three seasons, his average touchdowns (25) and interceptions (14), are also all positives in comparison to the above quarterbacks, with Ryan at 25/13 per year and Luck at 26/17 if you project his injury-shortened numbers over a full season last year.  The one category in which Tannehill lags: wins.  This is, of course, the most important single category any quarterback can be judged by, but it isn't a personal statistic in the way that W/L might be for a starting pitcher in baseball.  Consider the number of RT's passing attempts erased by sacks and rushes in the past three years, to say nothing of the number of dropped passes.  My point is that Tannehill is doing his part in what should be an 11 man unit and a 54 man team.  Better protection and surer hands might really make him shine, and they will certainly raise the win ratio, as would a more competitive defense. In short, Tannehill has the passing game in solid shape.  Add in that Matt Moore is a serviceable backup, and The Dolphins have the second ranked passers in the division.

3.)  Jets (Fitzpatrick/Smith) When Geno Smith's jaw fractured, anyone listening closely could hear the sound of a blind squirrel finding a nut.  The Jets were idiotically going to trot a perilously foolish, low performance player out as their leader.  Instead, in a lucky (sorry) "break", they got a leader of men with a beard and an Ivy League pedigree.  I will make no secret of my admiration for Fitzpatrick.  It is the affection inspired by one limited tool, big heart athlete looking at a better version of his own skill set.  Fitz efforts, every game, every down, and his teammates love him.  Think Jay Fiedler with a better education and the same average arm.  If Fitzpatrick's backup were anyone other than Interception Smurf, I would rate the Jets even with Miami at passer.  But the Jets are one hit away from starting a man who stays in bounds in two minute drills, makes Rex Ryan look genteel, and preens and struts as though he were Cam Newton.  Geno is closer to a fig newton's consistency than Cam's.  And I'm being gentle here.

4.)  Bills (Taylor/Manuel)  The Dolphins were so close to two inept opponents making the wrong choices and fielding quarterbacks who simply can't win through mental ineptitude.  Unfortunately, Buffalo and New Jersey both got off of losing players and into considerable upgrades.  Taylor is good.  He's smart, crafty, and a genuine leader.  Too bad he plays for a man who is only one of the above (Rex Ryan is a leader; he just lacks intellect and awareness.)  Taylor will be limited by his coach's leadership.  Mark Sanchez couldn't develop under Ryan.  There is little chance for Taylor, who is a far less gifted passer than Sanchez.  In still more bad news for the Bills, it is hard to hide limitations in a passing scheme against press defenses like the one the Dolphins now employ.  A final nail in the coffin: the Bills start a running quarterback with Manuel one hit away.  This is, without question, the weakest passing group in our division.  

I'll be back soon with receivers!

Jay Lopez
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18 comments

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Good job Jay. I love the Dolphins analysis.

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Thanks MADPHINS! Always look forward to your pieces.

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Is this a Tannehill blog? How is # 17 ranked 2nd to Friz? I'm not a Jets fan but Friz out-played Tannehill all season, CLEARLY!

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I hate the fact that we continue to "baby" Ryan, as if he is still new into this league. I see where Coach Gase has begun to do the same thing that Philman, Ross and Cambell had all done in the past...protect Ryan's feelings. Come on guys....The only way he can reach the franchise level is when 50% of you fans stop cuddling him and allow him to become a beast!! He also need leadership skills, too.

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Rough and Tough: What do the fans have to do with coddling Tannehill???

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Rough and Tough: What do the fans have to do with coddling Tannehill???

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Rough and Tough: In a career year, Fitz put up a 59.6% completion percentage, 3905 yards and 31 td's, 15 picks. The completion percentage and picks were typical of his career averages, but his TD totals were a-typical. His average (projected for 16 starts) is 24. Last year Tannehill went 62%, 4208 yards, and 24 TD's. Those numbers are pretty close, and considering RT's are in line with his career averages and Fitz's were a one off, I think Tannehill is a better bet to have a stronger season. My rankings also take into account the quality of the backup. For the record, Fitz has only played 16 games three times in a 10 year career.

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Gary Grimes: Agreed. I don't know how fans can toughen up a quarterback.

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Sorry, Jay Fiedler's did NOT have an average arm in fact I would put his arm strength and accuracy near the bottom all time in the NFL. He could not throw a simple out pattern without it being intercepted. Jay is a prime example how teams can win with a less than average quarterback when you have a good running game and good corners.

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Kendra- You are correct. I was being to gentle to Fiedler. I only wanted to make the point that moxie and charisma can go a long way towards making up for a shortage of athletic prowess, and I was using Fiedler as an analogy to what Fitz brings. But you are right- his arm was pretty weak. I stand corrected.

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Please stop the Tannyhating. It was coaching - plain and simple. His skills will be on full display this year, I have no doubt. He is a smart guy, hot reads and play calling by Gase will make him the toast of of the AFC East. I predict over 28 points per game which equates to 11 wins by almost all metrics.

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I am inclined to agree. The audible issue alone handcuffed him in a way that was inappropriate in a professional offense. Poor protection, no audibles, a lack of willingness to run on early downs even when the Oline was having its way (see third quarter of Washington game last year- or many others) all contributed. Throwing in second and four off of a credible play-action fake is hugely different from being in second and 10 all game!

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No "Tanney-hating." I'm just sick of the excuses. QB's are gaged by their winning record, not garbage stats. Be honest with yourselves, wouldn't you like to see tannehill slug it out with Brady? Head-to-head? In a close game? It's just that when T-Hill has the ball on 3rd down, I JUST DON'T HAVE THE FAITH IN HIM LIKE YOU GUYS DO, I'm sorry. I want to, but I just haven't seen it in the last 4 years. Don't kill me for being honest.

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New Improved O-Line, RB's, more Wide Receivers, Quarterback whispers, more Offensive geniuses, all just to improve Tannehill. The Quarterback! No CB's..no additional LB's..just more help for Tanney. Our strength is the defense, the strength is not our QB. We need a stub RB and a solid defense. I want to have faith like you guys, I really do.

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Give me some predictions, come on. Let's hear em. 6-10, 7-9 or 8-8?(Best case scenario).

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Rough, you are still living in the past. It will be 28 points a game which equals 11 wins. So, 11-5.

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Rough and Tough- I won't beat you up AT ALL for having a hunch on 3rd down that it just isn't happening. I get it. And I think gut intuition is a powerful barometer of truth sometimes. I'm not ready to predict a record- honestly that's why I'm breaking down each position in all 4 teams- to see where we lie. My other articles have had a lot more readers- these are more for me and other "junkies-" to think out loud. I promise- when I am done reckoning each team as fairly as I can I'll try to reach an objective conclusion, 1-2-3-4 about standings in our division. In the interim, you are right about not drafting enough corners/Lb's/etc. I sometimes feel alone in not liking the Tunsil pick- though i understand it, I hate that he fell and therefore obligated us to go O-line. I hate that we didn't draft an LB last year. And that we only took one corner. The O may have to carry the team to justify the huge and continuing investment in draft picks. Then again, we did land a CB, LB, S and some DL help in free agency, so there is some balance... you make good points.