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#1
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Give me Dak Prescott. He is a winner. I like his leadership and how he lead Miss St. Was a bruising runner, but has improved as a passer. Reminds me of Air McNair.
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
#2
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I thought Prescott and the other SEC QB, Brandon Allen, were the two most impressive QBs at yesterdays Senior Bowl. But unlike the 6' 5" wiz kid Wentz who got all of the hype, the SEC QBs are only about 6'2" so maybe O'Brien won't even consider them when he's evaluating prospects.
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#3
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Vernon Adams Jr. Is 5'11" and I wouldn't mind having him on this roster as the "Seneca Wallace - type" backup. I'm a measurables geek as much as the next guy. If I'm looking at a roster of players with heights/weights, I notice Jake Coker and Nate Sudfeld because they are 6"5". But when you see a guy play and you take a second look at the measurables iust to make sure you didn't overlook him the first time, and you realize that he's not your prototype, but you want him on your team anyway....that's how you get a great bargtoain/value at the draft. If Russell Wilson had been 6'4" at the Senior Bowl, he would have been a 1st round pick. Jacoby Brissett looked good too.
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
#4
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And I disagree about Wilson being a 1st rounder if he was 6-4, IMO he would have been a top 5 pick. (You did not have him high enough)
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There is no failure, only feedback. |
#5
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I don't know what "It" is, but I know "It" when I see "It" and Dak Prescott has "It" and I would like to go to battle with him. He reminds me so much of Steve McNair. I hate comparing a Black QB to another Black QB, but that's the initial comparison. The 2nd is Brett Favre, and I'm comparing Mississippi QBs.....so, my 3rd comparison is Russell Wilson and Cam Newton....against my better judgment again African American QBs. To round it out, Ben Roethlisberger. So, mix all those guys up and you see why I'm a Dak Prescott fan.
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
#6
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Prescott has also been compared to Tim Tebow. Both ran Dan Mullen's offense in college, both are physical runners, and both are strong leaders. The big question on Prescott is whether he has the accuracy to be an NFL starter, which Tebow lacked.
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#7
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Donovon McNabb was an effective QB and was not very accurate at all. I think that Prescott is more accurate and made huge strides in his passing game from last year to this season. He's not going to be Joe Montana, but if he's as good as McNabb was for the Eagles, he's going to be the best QB this franchise has ever had.
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
#8
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Prescott’s numbers are among the best in SEC history
By Jake Wimberly on September 29, 2015 Prescott and Mullen The biggest knock on Mississippi State’s Dak Prescott used to be that he was just a runner and not a proficient passer. That criticism has been put to rest and Prescott is poised to finish off his career as one of the state of Mississippi’s most transcendent college football players of the past 40 years. Prescott enjoyed a banner season in 2014, including helping his team to the first No. 1 ranking in school history. He guided the Bulldogs to just the third 10-win season in school history and a berth in the Orange Bowl, and finished eighth in Heisman voting. Prescott finished with 4,485 total yards, the third-highest single-season total in SEC history. Through four games this season, he has Mississippi State in the top 25 again and is on a pace to finish his career in the top five in SEC history in total offense. If Mississippi State were to go to a bowl, Prescott potentially could finish in the top three in the league in that category (behind only Aaron Murray and Tim Tebow). He’s also on a pace to finish his career as the most prolific major-college offensive player in state of Mississippi history. Not bad for a former three-star recruit from Haughton, La. Going into this week’s game at Texas A&M, Prescott has not thrown an interception in 191 consecutive attempts – the sixth-longest streak in SEC history and the longest current streak in the country. He has thrown for 1,069 yards, with seven TDs and no interceptions, and is completing 66.9 percent of his passes. To put Prescott’s Mississippi State career in perspective, consider that there were 14 quarterbacks who started at least one game for the Bulldogs from 2002-08, the seven-season stretch prior to coach Dan Mullen’s arrival in Starkville. Those quarterbacks combined for just over 14,000 total yards, with 79 touchdown passes and 116 interceptions. Prescott is on pace to finish with 11,086 total yards, with 69 touchdown passes and 18 interceptions. His improvement as a passer has NFL teams looking at him as a potential second-day pick in the 2016 draft. He still can make some refinements as a passer, but he also has come a long way. Quarterback guru David Morris — coincidentally an Ole Miss alum who runs a company that develops and trains quarterbacks called “QB Country” — has said Prescott arguably had the best skill set of any quarterback in the country entering the 2015 season and compared him to former first-round pick Donovan McNabb.
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
#9
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Well if the MSU play-by-play guy/blogger who wrote that article and the QB coach getting paid by Prescott say he is awesome, then I take it back, there is no doubt and no roll of the dice, he is a sure thing.
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#10
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- 2015 ALL-SEC FIRST TEAM (COACHES): QB Dak Prescott, Mississippi State...Prescott became the first Bulldog to earn back-to-back first-team honors at quarterback since Billy Stacy in 1956-57. He led the SEC in conference games this fall in completions (226), completion percentage (67.1), passing yards (2,528), touchdown-to-interception ratio (17:4), passing yards per game (316.2) and total offense per game (363.2). The senior also finished second in league games with a 144.3 passing efficiency rating, and tied for fifth in points scored (48). Prescott was the only player in the SEC to lead his team in both passing and rushing on the season and one of only six players in the Power 5 Conferences to do so. The Haughton, Louisiana, native broke his own single-season school records for completion percentage (66.9 in 2015; 61.6 in 2014) and yards per game (284.4 in 2015; 265.3 in 2014). In games against Top-25 opponents, Prescott led the SEC in completions (87), completion percentage (63.5), passing yards (889) and passing yards per game (296.3).
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Originally Posted by chuck I'm just sitting here thinking (pacing, actually) that whatever my issues with Kubiak he is apparently a goddam genius at tutoring quarterbacks. |
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