Are you aware that teams called Philly needing a starting QB but Philadelphia refused to trade him? They turned down the offers and gave him a pay raise.There was debate inside the Philly organization on who they should trade, and who should start the season after that brillant run by Foles. Ultimately went with Wentz. Philly needed a starter week 1 because Wentz was going to be out in week 1 and 2, anyway. "We feel very confident about what his value is to our football team and really to the rest of the league. There’s obviously interest in Nick Foles because Nick Foles has been tremendously effective in a Philadelphia Eagles uniform".Headhunter wrote:If a team thought he was a starter, he would be on a team needing a starter. Pretty simple. He isn't because that's not how teams view him. Nobody values him more than Philly, and he is their backup.Jason wrote:I am not buying that the entire NFL believes Nick Foles is not starting-QB material, as you suggest. A well-regarded prospect by many scouts, who performed as well as any QB could perform when he got the chance, is no-longer well regarded. Yes, I realize he is currently a backup QB. But you suggest he is not a starter-level QB. Hilariously terrible assessment of evaluating talent. Learn frum meHeadhunter wrote:What are you "not buying"? Actual things that have taken place? Are you suggesting we're living in a matrix and in the real world, Nick Foles is a franchise QB making 25-30 million dollars per year? None of this is up for debate or subjective, he was a well regarded prospect in 2013 and now he is a backup quarterback.Jason wrote:That's the answer I was searching for.Headhunter wrote:Yes, the people who thought he could be a starter do not view him as a starter anymore. Again, all of this is proven by the actions (or inaction) of NFL teams. Because, after six years of NFL experience, he has proven that he isn't a starter. Does it just blow your mind that evaluations would evolve over time with access to new information? That just doesn't make sense to you?
You're saying people went from thinking he had potential to be a starter, to then seeing him excel as a starter and reach the pinnacle of being a starter in the NFL, to then retracting their assessment of him being an NFL caliber starter.
Not buying it.
Meanwhile, in the actual real world, he didn't excel as a starter. He lost his starting job for two teams. That's why he became a journeyman backup who only ever played again because Wentz tore up his knee.
Yeah, he didn't excel as a starter. He only threw for 28 TDs and 2 INTs in his debut (as a starter, not Polk High), and led his NFL team through the NFL playoffs and into the NFL Super Bowl and won the NFL Super Bowl in perhaps the single greatest individual QB performance on the big stage of the NFL Super Bowl (as a starter, not Polk High).
He didn't excel as a starter. Cute.
You only continue to talk about 2013 and a six game stretch in 2017. What happened in between those years? Just briefly tell me his career arc from 2014 through Carson Wentz' injury last year. There's no reason to ignore those seasons, they encompass the majority of his career after all.
So yeah, teams think he is a starter, but he is not on a team needing a starter because Philly is greedy and fear Wentz is injury prone.
Blew the league out the game in 2013.
He performed decently enough in 2014. A fall off every single QB has had in their career.
Poorly in 2015.
Seemed to do alright with the little playing time in K.C. that he got in 2016, but I didn't watch much from him that year.
Blew the league out the game in 2017 again.
Start him.