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|    co.politics    |    Nice state sadly overrun by libtards    |    50,863 messages    |
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|    Message 50,831 of 50,863    |
|    The Stench to All    |
|    Supercilious Shedeur Sanders won't succe    |
|    30 Apr 25 23:05:49    |
      XPost: alt.sports.football.xfl, pdaxs.sports.football, alt.niggers       XPost: alt.history.abe-lincoln, alt.war.civil.usa       From: the_stench@browns.com              If you're wondering why Shedeur Sanders fell all the way down to the       fifth round in the NFL Draft this year, you might just want to talk to       Merrill Hoge. Before the draft started, the former Steelers running back       broke down why he thought Sanders would eventually end up being an "epic       failure" in the NFL if taken in the first round.              During an April 23 interview with 102.5 WDVE in Pittburgh, Hoge was       asked to give his take on the Colorado quarterback, and he then       explained why he doesn't think Sanders' game will translate very well to       the NFL.              "I think the best way to sum him up is, he's a really good college       quarterback: His accuracy is good, his processing is good," Hoge said.       "And when I say good, I use a scale from 1 to 10, so good is around a       five. So if you're a five in college, okay? Those [accuracy and process]       are the two most important aspects of transitioning to the National       Football League and then you build from there. Anticipation, pocket       awareness and then we start building, but those two things, if you're a       five, you're not a first-rounder. You're not a franchise guy."              If NFL teams felt the same way as Hoge, it's easy to see why Sanders       ended up sliding.              Although Sanders led all FBS quarterbacks with a 74% completion rate,       Hoge said that number is distorted because Sanders threw so many       screens.              "Nobody threw more bubble screens than Shedeur Sanders when it       mattered," Hoge said.              During the 2024 season, Sanders had 168 passing attempts that were at or       behind the line of scrimmage, which were tied for the most in the FBS.       Those 168 passing attempts represented 35% of all his throws. Hoge said       you have to look past the screens to figure out how Sanders' play will       translate to the NFL.              "In the college environment, it can be hard to translate a kid to where       he's going to play, so you have to look deeper into it, you have to find       things that simulate the NFL," Hoge said. "You're not going to throw 50%       of your bubble screens and survive in the NFL, you can do that in       college -- they'll sit there [at Colorado] and say their offensive line       was bad and so that's why we did those type of things -- but if your       quarterback is good, you can run everything. You don't just have to run       a bubble screen."              Hoge felt like the Buffaloes used so many screens in an effort to help       Sanders.              "You're going to protect the kid," Hoge said. "I get that from a       coaching aspect, you would do that."              The former Steelers running back then pointed to several recent       first-round quarterbacks like CJ Stroud, Jayden Daniels and Joe Burrow       and said Sanders is nowhere near those guys in talent.              "That's the skill set you're looking for," Hoge said. "He ain't even       close, he ain't even in the ballpark. ... There's some toughness to him       I like, but how he moves, he ain't going to put fear in anybody."              Hoge also didn't like the fact that Sanders seemed to get worse as the       2024 season went on at Colorado, which included a 36-14 loss to BYU in       the Alamo Bowl where Sanders had arguably his worst game of the season.              "He got worse as the year went on and then went in... the only guy I've       seen have a worse bowl game than he did in my 30 years of doing his is       Mitch Trubisky," Hoge said.              Hoge then issued a warning to any team that might have been thinking       about selecting Sanders in the first round.              "He can't handle the expectations that are coming his way," Hoge said.       "He's going to be an epic failure and he's going set your organization       back another two or three years."              There will be a lot less pressure on Sanders now that he's headed to       Cleveland as a fifth-round pick, but that might not help him win the       starting quarterback job. If his game doesn't translate to the NFL, then       he's going to have a hard time beating out Joe Flacco or Kenny Pickett       or even fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel for the QB job.              If you're wondering why you should listen to Hoge, he predicted back in       2014 that Johnny Manziel would be a bust.              "I see bust written all over him," Hoge said. "Especially if he's       drafted in the first round. ... He has absolutely no instinct or feel              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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