- Nov 20, 2007
- 8,859
- 577
im just happy we had someone under center that kept his eyes down field and plant his feet when he threw
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Dude was actually always dealing with injuries there in Jacksonville. But in the NFL 27 games is a big enough sample size for a team to conclude your not the guy.i know BG was only 5-22 at the jags..but then again, any rookie QB would have done just as poorly. outside of MJD, who was on the downside of his career, that team was talent deficient as ever.
nevertheless, why did he develop such a poor reputation early on? i figure, if alex smith could turn around his career after 4 or 5 seasons, I don't see why blaine gabbert couldn't. and he only played 2.
eh. let's see how he does against a defense outside of the falcons.We went from let's get Goff to let's go with Gabbert! in the matter of hours.
one more thing that will fly under the radar: gabbert was calling out and adjusting the line protections today. i heard a couple "ringos" out there before the snap, which means slide the protection to the right.
something kap can't do.
Kap is barely 28Its crazy how he is only 26. Kap like 30 already and cant read a defense to save his life.
Did the crowd boo Kap when he came into the game? I couldn't hear because my daughter was sleeping lol.
Kaepernick done in San Francisco, virtually certain not to return in 2016
The benching of 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick this week has only heightened the frayed relationship between him and the upper management of the team and created a climate in which it is virtually certain he is not back in San Francisco in 2016, according to team and league sources.
Trust between the player -- viewed as a franchise quarterback and potential superstar when leading the team to the Super Bowl just three years ago -- and the organization has eroded to the point where any cosmetic attempts to rebuild bridges are essentially a lost cause, and the prospect of Kaepernick actually playing there next season are viewed as a non-starter.
Kaepernick has not asked for a trade, though the 49ers were among the clubs who were open to dealing pretty much anyone on their roster before Tuesday's deadline, including their quarterback, according to league sources. His benching this week, for Blaine Gabbert, has further polarized the locker room, sources said, and several of Kaepernick's teammates believe he would ask for a trade or his release rather than stay with the 49ers next year.
Short of Gabbert getting hurt, Kaepernick rallying the 49ers on an improbable playoff run and him hitting key salary triggers in his contract -- a scenario beyond remote -- those close to the situation cannot fathom him being back there next season, when he would make upwards of $15 million in 2016, and even that end result would far from assure the sides would want to proceed together.
Kaepernick's 2016 salary becomes fully guaranteed if he is on the roster come April 1, and many close to this situation anticipate a resolution coming at the February scouting combine, where many major trades are finalized (including the 49ers deal that sent former starter Alex Smith, who lost his job to Kaepernick, to Kansas City for draft picks in 2013).
Several teams said privately they had interest in Kaepernick prior to Tuesday's deadline, though the intricacies of his contract and $20-million cap hit in 2015 made any deal at that time tricky to execute. Trading the quarterback in 2016 triggers just a $7-million cap hit for the 49ers, who have abundant space in rebuilding mode.
Kaepernick's tenure with the team has become so divisive -- he's viewed as a favorite of former coach Jim Harbaugh, who had a very public falling out with owner Jed York -- and issues between player and club have become so personal that any long-term resolution is basically a moot point, with the situation essentially beyond repair.