ProFootballTalk this morning, 8-6:
With the two of the three remaining first-round holdouts being the only two quarterbacks drafted in round one, a rare semi-original thought occurred to yours truly during a Monday morning spot with Scott Clark and Dave Ragone on 1570 The Zone in Louisville.
Could it be that the Raiders and the Browns want these holdouts to linger deep into the preseason and/or into the regular season in order to counter pressure from the fans and the media to play their rookie first-rounders right away?
Though it might not have been intentional in either city, the hidden benefit is that these guys will now most likely be able to sit for their entire initial seasons and watch and learn.
I don't know if this is intentional or not in the Browns FO, but I've been advocating this since Quinn was drafted. I don't want him to fall behind, but I definitely want him to watch and learn for the 2007 season. And that means not being prematurely named the starting QB. If it takes a holdout to do that, then so be it. It's better than sticking him in there and never letting him develop.
The model to emulate here is Carson Palmer. He sat behind Kitna, and when he played he played well. In his second year as a started he was a very good QB. Does anyone doubt that he couldn't have started as a rookie? No. Does anyone look back and think, gee, he would have developed faster if he'd started as a rookie? No. It's exactly the opposite -- his year on the bench is often the first reason given for his impressive development. Given the fact that the Browns will not be playoff contenders with Quinn behind center in 2007, there is just no significant benefit to starting him this season.
Holdouts are bad... but unecessarily starting a prized rookie QB is worse.
I loved this quote from Ted Washington in Peter King's
MMQB article: "I'd be doing the same thing if I was commissioner. I think (Roger Goodell's) done a hell of a job. I'd clean up the game too. I'd tell those young guys: 'All right, you want to play the fool? Fine. I'm taking your money.'"
You know, none of what Goodell is doing would have happened under Paul Tagliabue. And if Goodell successfully cleans up the NFL it will have some widespread effects. Namely,
- The NFL will have proven itself the best sports league in the world, again. Let' see, we have relative labor peace, huge popularity, wildly exciting games, a sensible steroid policy, and finally sane disciplinary policies. We'll see about that last one.
- A tarnishing of Tagliabue's legacy. The more this goes on the more obviously it was overdue. Why did it take a new commish to address this problem?
- A trend will start among the rest of the major sports leagues, where it will be much easier to start doing the same thing.
BTW, Peter King is high if the Browns are really the 32nd ranked team in the NFL. I know we're down in the weeds here and we're clearly in the bottom third, but c'mon we're not the absolute worst team are we? Really? Gosh I hope not.
Romeo: Can we just stop pretending like Braylon Edwards might not be a starter? Everyone knows the offense needs him to play and to play well. And if you don't play Braylon without first giving him a chance, then it will count heavily against you when your job is on the line.
LeCharles Bentley says his knee is at 70%. Fair enough. He also mentioned that he didn't ever think it'd be more than 90 or so percent. Translation -- it's gonna be very hard for Bentley to be the player he was. No impossible though. It could be that his future lies at the guard position.
I have to admit -- I am entertained when I hear Tony Rizzo describe the 2007 Browns with, "This is the season of dreams!"
WKNR seems to have woken up and realized that Cleveland sports fans enjoy listening to hosts who are themselves Cleveland sports fans. We don't want unbiased commentary... that's the job of the guests.