Before the season I made a prediction about RGIII's stats and LPJ replied. Here it that exchange:
DarthMonk wrote:Under Kyle we have thrown 591 and then 605 passes. Yardage numbers are 3931 and 3773. TDs are 21 and 19.
My Predictions:
Griff will throw 600 times for 4,000 yards and 24 TDs. He will run for 400 yards and another 4 TDs.
He is an upgrade, isn't he?
Darthmonk
langleyparkjoe wrote:DarthMonk wrote:He will run for 400 yards
I hope to the good lord you're wrong about that. He definitely shouldn't be running that much or even close to that.
So now the season is over. We had many discussions where many of us said, in a nutshell, he is not a running QB, he is a pass-first QB who can run. I still believe that when I see him drop back to pass. I saw him tweak his knee in the 1st quarter trying to stop and throw right before he helped put us up 14-0. But Kyle and Mike used him as a runner this year. They asked him to be a running QB. Many might say they over did it. I would.
Call it 20-20 hindsight. Call is blindsight. Call it being emotional if you want. I'll call it evaluating how they used him this year and against the Seahawks.
I think this is a good kickoff quote with some rlevant points highlighted by me.
RayNAustin wrote:The Hogster wrote:Stop whining. What's done is done. We aren't playing this weekend because we lost. Should we, could we, and would we have won with a healthy RGIII?? Yes.
But, that wasn't the case, and it does nothing to cry over spilled milk. Let's hope that he can put this knee issue behind him now that it's been repaired. The positive aspect of this is that structurally his knee will be stronger than ever. And, at age 22, he should regain his strength, speed, and explosiveness a lot quicker than he would if he were 29 or so.
That's nonsense. The outcome of that game is the most inconsequential of the issues here. This franchise made a huge investment in this Kid ... and by the way ... the pain and suffering and rehab he'll have to endure over the next several months also happens to be more important than this one "precious game", considering he was dealt for to play these types of games for the next dozen or more years. That's the point!
RELATIVE TO THAT POINT, comes the very simple and logical, time tested philosophy of assessing the factors that contributed to this disastrous result, for the equally important effort to avoid repeating the same mistakes. It's not an exercise that can change the damage already done, but preventing it from happening again is a worthy cause.
This C'est la vie attitude really chaps my rear end, as it totally dismisses the need for doing just that .. assessing how this happened, and how the risk of it happening again can be minimized. Of course injuries cannot be prevented, but the decisions that lead to "unnecessary risk" of injury is what we're dealing with, particularly if that involves carelessness or negligence in the way this situation was handled by people who should KNOW BETTER, and not allow the outcome of a single game, or the wants and desires of a 22 year old player overrule those who are in charge that should exercise better judgement. To heck with Andrews and Shanahan's obvious self serving CYA exercises after the fact .... that is to be expected, and I predicted that too.
There is no big mystery why ... out of the top rookie QB's that had came out this year ... that it was only RG3 who finished in a fetal position in the freaking dirt, and facing major reconstructive knee surgery. This result was a fear voiced all year by many around the league who suggested that he'd not last very long with the way he was being used, including yours truly. That is an undeniable fact, and a situation that needs further scrutiny given those warnings have become reality.
The situation is only exacerbated by the fact that RG3 was allowed to hobble around for 3 quarters, virtually incapacitated, when anyone with a marginal grasp of common sense would have pulled him from the game after it was clear he was not capable of even protecting himself. Race Horses are treated with better care and caution than was offered this kid, who didn't know better, and shouldn't be expected to take himself out of the game.
His Coach has that responsibility, but even now, after the fact, he won't own it, and neither will his Son who's reckless abandon in the way he utilized this kids skills ALL YEAR ... including such bone headed decisions like sending him out as a freaking wide receiver, may have been successful in producing exciting results, but at what cost?
If you ask me, there should be some shared costs for this disaster ... rather than the entire bill be paid by RG3 in his pain and suffering ... particularly when what he might have to look forward to is just more of the same, from the same "blameless", when he eventually returns.
So, what is your opinion of how the coaches used RGIII this year and vs Seattle?
I say we called too many designed running plays for him. We featured the pistol instead of sprinkling it in. This may have helped bring about excessive "head hunting" by defenses. I think using him in a way that would have resulted in 600 passes and 400 yards rushing may not have won us 10 games (though it may) but I also believe it would have been more likely to leave us with a currently much healthier RGIII who would also be further along in his development with regards to understanding defenses and going through progressions and such. In other words, he'd be a better QB.
In the final game we had guys running free and Griff was missing them consistently - and remember - he had been extremely accurate. Oh, and he was limping like the big dog. It was obvious to me he needed to be pulled, at the latest, at halftime.
I think we misused him in general during the year and then made some horrible non-decisions in the last game. Of course, when you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice.

DarthMonk