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Interchangeable Parts
Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 12:07 am
by Skinsfan55
How was Joe Gibbs able to be so successful with different quarterbacks?
It seems very rare for a QB to just switch teams and find instant success does it not?
Maybe I'm just missing something but it seems like all the great QB's are guys who were drafted, played with one team and were an expert at one system, or who had the new systems tailored perfectly to their game.
What examples are there are big QB's who switched teams and were equally as effective?
Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2006 12:17 am
by JansenFan
Joe Gibbs has historically changed his offense by 30% in each and every off-season to account for new personnel, to keep opponents off balance, and to take advantage of tendencies in existing personnel. This is why he has typically been successful year after year. This is why we stunk in 04 and made the playoffs in 05.
In most cases, "franchise quarterbacks" typically stay with one team until they should retire, but aren't ready. I'm sure there is a player that is slipping my mind, but I can't think of too many examples. What about Sonny? How effective was he in Philadelphia?
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:16 pm
by Steve Spurrier III
JansenFan wrote:In most cases, "franchise quarterbacks" typically stay with one team until they should retire, but aren't ready. I'm sure there is a player that is slipping my mind, but I can't think of too many examples. What about Sonny? How effective was he in Philadelphia?
Sonny's statistics with Philadelphia:
Code: Select all
YEAR GM ATT CMP YRDS TD IN QBRTG
1957 10 70 33 470 5 8 53.6
1958 12 22 12 259 0 1 77.7
1959 12 5 3 27 1 0 114.2
1960 12 44 24 486 5 1 122.0
1961 14 416 235 3723 32 24 88.1
1962 14 366 196 3261 22 26 74.3
1963 9 184 99 1413 11 13 69.4
He didn't play a whole lot but had a pretty good season in there. Certainly nothing to suggest he'd be in the Hall of Fame one day.
I didn't really understand your question. Are you looking for "franchise quarterbacks" who were effective with one team, then switched to another, and continued to be effective (eliminating guys like Favre, who wasn't effective with the Falcons in his first season, and Unitas, who wasn't effective with the Chargers in his last)?
Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2006 11:48 pm
by Skinsfan55
What I mean is... it doesn't seem like you see a lot of great quarterbacks who can just easily hop from team to team...
The guys you see go from one team to another and do very well are guys who are selected because the system perfectly fits them either by chance or design.
Posted: Fri Nov 10, 2006 11:29 pm
by welch
JF said
In most cases, "franchise quarterbacks" typically stay with one team until they should retire, but aren't ready. I'm sure there is a player that is slipping my mind, but I can't think of too many examples. What about Sonny? How effective was he in Philadelphia?
- the '61 season showed what Sonny could do. It was astounding to through 32 TD passes. Remember (OK, I'm one of the few old enough to remember, but anyway...) that Sonny was expected to be the future starter when the Eagles got Norm Van Brocklin from the Rams. (As a matter of fact, Van B was a "franchise QB" and future Hall of Famer.) Van B started for about three years, led the Eagles to the NFL championship, and retired. Sonny was spectacular, and the Eagles were foolish to give him up.
- In addition to Van Brocklin, there was Y.A. Tittle. The '49ers traded Tittle to the Giants, and "YAT" took the Giants to a pair of NFL championship games. They lost, but he got them there, and he went to the Hall of Fame, too.
So...teams have traded known-star QB's, but it's unusual. More typical: Jurgenson (withe the Redskins), Unitas, Brodie, Starr playing almost their entire careers with one team.