- Oct 8, 2003
- 17,326
- 9,041
You know what fellas. I tried to accept losing in order for the greater good of the team but I just can't. I will be rooting for a win every game regardless of the situation.
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That **** is WILD to me how the OL finally sees legit changes once kaep goes to the bench.
Im happy they trying to get tank to his natural position dude is too good not to be out there.
Warner leans on the table and watches video of a play from Week 4. Fourth quarter, 49ers down 17-3 to Green Bay, trying to rally. On second-and-5 from the Packers' 15-yard line, Kaepernick takes the shotgun snap, sees running back Reggie Bush wide open over the middle for what should be a walk-in touchdown. "A layup," Warner says. Kap fires it in the dirt. Warner rewinds the clip, then freezes the frame as Kap is throwing. "The biggest thing that I see with Kap quite often -- and it's frustrating -- are his feet." As Kap releases the ball, his feet are parallel to the line of scrimmage, rather than perpendicular. He's throwing with all arm, rather than with his body. The result is a pass both late -- Bush was open by three steps before Kap even noticed -- and inaccurate. "Normally good quarterbacks don't throw like that," Warner says.
Warner leans back, disheartened. They had focused on footwork in the offseason. He was even more disheartened when Kap told reporters that he was "not huge" on mechanics. "That tells a big story right there," Warner says. He isn't faulting Kap's work ethic. "He worked his butt off" in their time together, Warner says. He is saying that Kap isn't really a fifth-year quarterback. He's a fifth-year player, 28 years old, but developmentally behind the curve. Warner faults the way football is trending, with youth and college coaches putting their best athletes at quarterback and deploying them in the spread, exactly what happened to Kap at the University of Nevada. "So now," Warner says, "we're saying -- at the highest level, against the best talent -- you have to learn how to play quarterback. To me, it sounds impossible."
Warner moves on to another play, one that, on its surface, shows Kap summoning his old magic. It's against the Ravens, two weeks after the Packers game. He takes the shotgun snap and looks right, darts left as if to run, spins back right, resets and fires a 21-yard touchdown to receiver Quinton Patton, a combination of arm strength and elusiveness that only a few quarterbacks can match. But no. Warner rewinds to the beginning. Kap sees that his first read is covered. Warner points out that his second read, Anquan Boldin, is wide open on a slant. But Kap doesn't even look his way. Instead, he panics, in a clean pocket. "His feet go haywire," Warner says. "There was no pressure." And when Kap throws, his feet are in the same position as they were on the misfire to Bush. It raises more questions than it answers.
What's even more baffling is week 1 week 2 this year he was climbing the pocket and looking off safeties. Throughly going through his progressions and displayed poise.I would tend to agree if he had demonstrated consistent poise throughout his career, but he simply hasn't. He's always had happy feet in the pocket, and he's always been unable to see the field. He simply isn't poised when the bullets are flying. The guy is literally the football embodiment of the idiom "deer in the headlights".
The good QBs find a way to remain poised. It is an essential attribute to being a good QB in the NFL. Russell Wilson has been sacked 31 times this year and is on pace for 70+ sacks. That didn't stop him from dropping that dime on us when he went to Lockett for that deep TD. Aaron Rodgers was sacked 51 times 2012 and 50 in 2009. Didn't phase him.
Hell, Derek Carr is in his SECOND year, and he has surpassed Kaepernick by light years in his pocket passing development. He stood in the pocket to make a throw and took a shot from Muhammad Wilkerson a couple two weeks ago that had me shaking my head because I know that ***** boy Kap would've bailed out long before the throw.
We've talked about this **** ad nauseum. Poise and vision are just the tip of the iceberg. Every week it's the same **** on the all-22 and has been for the last 4 years. This guy has so many fundamental flaws it's exhausting repeatedly going over them.
$200 we dont get Goff or Smith. Even if they are still on the board,
although his snaps have been limited, Arik Armstead is the #1 pass rushing 3-4 DE in the NFL according to PFF
yup, i'll take that crow now.
@PFF_Jeff 6 minutes ago
Andrew Tiller played 49 of 68 snaps at right guard vs. ATL and earned a +3.1 grade. Good shot he gets the full-time gig vs. Seattle. #49ers