SkinsJock wrote:When we drafted RG3, I thought that Mike would help him become an NFL QB
when Cousins became the starting QB it looked like he was going to be a turnover machine
Cousins has become a lot better QB than I thought he would be
Re your "turnover machine" comment --- that is where your bias came in. Cousins was a rookie or at least essentially a rookie (based on experience) up and until the second half of last season. MOST pro-style rookie/inexperienced QBs turn the ball over frequently. The fact some didn't take that into account, IMHO was due to just not understanding the game of football in general or, more likely, an inherent biased against Cousins and, in a way, the desire to see him fail --- because if Cousins failed, the RGIII experiment wasn't RGIII's fault, but the coaching, support, etc. And, if RGIII wasn't the source of his failures, then the people supporting RGIII weren't wrong.
For me, Cousins is currently playing exactly as I thought he COULD. Did I think he would get there..... I wasn't sure because football is a team game. We are seeing with Luck in Indy how important support is, even when you are an "elite" QB.
SkinsJock wrote:I am just waiting for someone to explain how we can pay all the other players we need to pay to ensure we continue to get better - there are many examples of franchises paying players a lot of money and having to let other good players go and then they are not as good
the question remains - how do we ensure that does not happen here?
Sign all the players we "need". We can do that. I posted something on this in the "Cousins and the cap" thread. We have room. Scot did a good job at leaning out or roster. He is the ONLY reason I have any optimism after 2 decades behind an IDIOT owner. But IMHO, signing players is FAR FAR FAR less important than drafting well.
When it comes to signing players and then they are not as good --- that typically happens when you sign a FA from another team. And typically that happens because they were in a scheme that was perfect for them, and decided to walk and take a bigger check. Those types of players typically don't have the drive that players who stay do. Personally, I think that Cousins is the type of player that, while he wants to get paid, also loves the game and is a student of the game as well as having a chip on his shoulder. Those types of players tend to continue improving and stay driven.
HOWEVER ---- at the end of the day, the question you posed is one that the FO needs to evaluate and factor into their determination...... although I don't think (at least as it relates to Cousins) is one that is difficult to conclude on.
RIP Sean Taylor. You will be missed.