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#1
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Obviously this helps us at the backup position (at least in O'Brien's mind). But a team that ignored the QB position all summer and is expected to be mediocre at best does not make a trade for a better backup. This is at least partially in the hope that having Mallett here for a year unearths a (virtually) no cost long term answer at QB. Even if the chances of that are 1 in 100, I like the chance compared to the cost.
As for Keenum, he was just never that good. Slinging it around against East Carolina in a HS offense is just different than playing NFL QB. I just hope we see enough of Mallett to definitively know what he is, and that we don't give him some kind of idiotic extension before we know (the unnecessary, early extension is a Texans hallmark). |
#2
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One could see the price of Mallet going down when Garoppolo got drafted in the second round. The Texans, waiting for this to hit rock bottom, is the "penalty" that the Texans will pay getting him up to speed..... |
#3
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If a small school guy succeeds in the NFL, it will be because he has the traits an NFL QB needs. Those are not necessarily the same traits that a QB needs to succeed at UH (or any other college). So the reason NFL Keenum doesn't resemble UH Keenum is because he is playing a game that is different on almost every level. Just mentally, the ability to get to the line quick in college and let your OC call a play from the sideline and signal it to your offense after the OC reads the defense is much different than the ability to make a complicated play call in the huddle, go to the line, read the defense yourself, check the protection/audible/check with Me's/etc... and get it all done before the snap while the defense is constantly shifting presnap. So Keenum might have a great mental makeup for the college game but not have it mentally in the pros (probably why he gets buried by the blitz). Being confident and completing %70 in college does not mean you are capable of doing that in the NFL. |
#4
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#5
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I honestly meant Keenum was just never good as an NFL player. I got roasted by about half the board last year for saying he had no chance to be our QB this year.
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#6
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Well he is now gone, good luck to you Case, Houston loves you and always will.
__________________
There is no failure, only feedback. |
#7
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Perhaps someone will give him another chance. There's plenty of examples of NFL QB's, some high draft picks, that look like slugs their first few years and then the light comes on... i.e., Brees was kinda mediocre in his early days, Alex Smith looked like a bust for a while....yada, yada... |
#8
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The more I think about this trade the more I like. I think it improves the team today by giving them a better #2. If Mallett becomes the starter then it has a better QB and #2 QB
As for the the bust talk, the QB coach Godsey has been in NE working with the offense, so he has seen Mallett's progress since he was drafted. At the draft was he worth the rumored 2nd round, not likely. And we replaced NE comp pick in 2016 had they kept him and not played him.
__________________
There is no failure, only feedback. |
#9
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#10
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This move is more significant than it seems, Fitz will start to throw picks and make mistakes as the season begins to wear on him to reveal his true colors. But Also because Mallett will be the "veteran" and a decision will have to be made in the off season to bring him back or let him walk in fa.
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#11
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I really wanted Keenum to succeed but I expected he would be gone after this season anyway. He's not the starter and he's not the project which means he was going to be pushed out soon enough. Got to live the dream of starting in the NFL and a lot of undrafted QBs can never say that.
As for Mallett, really shrewd of the Texans to wait New England out. Think of it this way. Instead of Bortles, Bridgewater or Manziel, we have Clowney and two projects for starting QB who might pan out for the cost of a supplemental 4th and a conditional 7th. Mallett has a really strong arm but, coming out of college, his accuracy was questioned. He almost never got to be tested backing up Brady so I still see him as a project, not a veteran. We better pray Fitz has good health for the first 6-8 weeks of the season because I'd be shocked if the Texans' offense is so similar to the Patriots that Mallett doesn't have to learn new plays although he at least is probably familiar with the nomenclature and possibly the checkdowns. IOW, I don't think Mallett or Savage is going to be ready if Fitz goes down until the second half of the season. But we still have the option of taking a QB high in the draft next year (15th or higher) if neither Mallett nor Savage pans out. Both fit the mold of what O'Brien wants so it is up to him now to develop them. |
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