Tebow has as many playoff wins as Brock Osweiler, another QB who is so bad that the team he got that win for gave the Browns a second round pick in a deal just to take him off their hands.Foo wrote:I don't know. I would prefer to make the moneTebow made while doing what he loved. I would not consider it fruitless. He inspired millions and gave a city and a nation a thrill ride. He can't help it he has to deal with people who think they know what they obviously don't. How many current NFL qbs have more playoff wins than Tebow? Five?Headhunter wrote:That's fine, but the reality is that it was a fruitless quest because he didn't have the ability. He would have been better off walking into the sunset after the 2011 season and fully committing to a new craft. That would have been legendary.Foo wrote:Tebow doesn't seem like the type who wastes any years. He did other things. His desire was to be an NFL qb. Again, with his other opportunities, why get brain damage playing another position? Tebow can make millions doing about a dozen other things.Headhunter wrote:Almost every draft analyst worth a damn with any sense of objectivity knew he was another great college QB who couldn't translate to the pros. What do you think the hit rate for college QBs is, exactly? Do you remember some of the Heisman winners of the 90s and early 2000s?Foo wrote:Tebow was an all time great in college and drafted as a qb. He has a winning record as an NFL qb. He can make a great living as a public speaker among other things, even if he never touched a football again.
Why should a guy with millions in the bank and a secure future due to his mind not do what he wants? If he doesn't want to become brain damaged by playing another position, that is a great decision to me.
He seems to be a special person destined for greatness. He has earned the right to choose how he gets there.
Because he couldn't do it? You will only have a body that can make you money professionally for a certain period of time, he wasted a few of those prime years. Should have been playing rugby or starting baseball by 2012. Everyone knew he couldn't play in the NFL, from players to coaches to executives. Everyone. It is what it is, if he could have played he'd be in the league.
It is the NFLs loss. He would be an amazing asset as a backup qb, at minimum. A winner with unique skills who inspires men.
No he is not an amazing asset as a backup in any way. NFL teams want backups who can absorb the playbook, run the offense without severe limitations in a pinch and be a good practice player, zero of those things Tebow was capable of as proven in just two years in Denver. There is a reason the well ran dry for Tebow, there's nothing you can do with him as a QB, it hurts players around him in practice and wastes a roster spot for someone who has a chance to stick and be molded into something.
The defense gave up 16 points per game in the games Tebow won as starter. When they gave up more than 20 a game, they compensated by forcing more turnovers. The special teams were incredible during that whole stretch. Close game records and Pythagorean win totals are good indicators of flukes and that team was a fluke. The biggest fluke was Tebow as evidenced by the organization's incredible success after him, especially on defense, and his...uh, career change.