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Would Tommy play QB in the NFL if ...


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I'm surprised so many people just dismiss this question with a simple "no". Sure, I have my doubts as to whether Tommy could improve his passing skills to equal those of Joey Ganz. (The premise is pretty unlikely.) Ganz was accurate (65%) and didn't throw too many picks over his career (18/585 or a pick out of every 32.5 passes). But if Tommy did improve his passing skills to equal those of Ganz, I can't imagine that he'd go undrafted. Seems like he'd be a shoo in to make a roster somewhere. Especially given the number of athletic QBs in the NFL these days. :dunno:

 

The problem is his mechanics - his footwork in particular - are so poor that he simply can not be a consistent thrower. His completion percentage is low and the NFL is a completion percentage league. The other thing - and it's probably related - is TA isn't a precision passer. That is, even when he completes passes, he's not hitting receivers on the move often enough. The passes are high, low or behind the receivers so they can't catch it on the run. You saw a lot of that in the Michigan State game where he almost got Westy killed a couple times and both Reilly and Carter have saved picks the last two games by taking the ball away from a DB who was in better position than the receiver. Also, the random throw up a punt decision every now and then won't fly for a second.

 

I know the premise of you question is "what if he improves." But TA's problem is the mechanical issues are so ingrained they simply can't be fixed. I could tell from his first start and it's still the same to this day.

 

 

What I see in Tommy is a QB with physical skills for running the ball that are almost unknown in the NFL. I made a comparison to Tim Tebow above and people pooh-poohed it. But think about it. Tommy is a shade smaller than Tebow. But I think he's a step faster too. Both can lower their shoulder and deliver a block or push for that extra yard. I think Tommy could outrun a lot of NFL LBs, not all, but a lot of them. I don't think Tebow could.

 

So I see Tommy lacking two things (maybe three) that would make him an almost ideal NFL quarter back. First, increased accuracy in passing. Second, decision making--that is, not forcing throws that end up as picks, and knowing when to run versus when to take a sack. And third, possibly an inch or two of height. Is Tommy going to gain the passing skills necessary to make it in the NFL? Well, sure it *could* happen. But at this point in his career it's about as likely as him gaining that extra inch or two of height.

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... he becomes as accurate as Joe Ganz, and has as low of an interception percentage? (Ganz: 65% completion. 18 picks out of 585 passes)

 

===================

 

Or maybe I should rephrase the question: What existing (or past) NFL quarterback would Tommy compare to if he becomes as accurate and throws as few picks as Ganz?

Did Ganz play in the NFL? I think Tommy would have to go see the Wizard, take the witches broom with him, and get some kind of magical transformation to have any chance at playing QB in the NFL. Dual-threat QB's usually don't play in the NFL....even our best dual-threats haven't made it. Better to try what Frosty did, learn to be a really good safety.

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... he becomes as accurate as Joe Ganz, and has as low of an interception percentage? (Ganz: 65% completion. 18 picks out of 585 passes)

 

===================

 

Or maybe I should rephrase the question: What existing (or past) NFL quarterback would Tommy compare to if he becomes as accurate and throws as few picks as Ganz?

Did Ganz play in the NFL? I think Tommy would have to go see the Wizard, take the witches broom with him, and get some kind of magical transformation to have any chance at playing QB in the NFL. Dual-threat QB's usually don't play in the NFL....even our best dual-threats haven't made it. Better to try what Frosty did, learn to be a really good safety.

 

Maybe I should start a thread asking whether Ganz would have made the NFL if he had been as big, strong and fast as Tommy. :lol:

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I was honestly surprised Ganz didn't get a shot as an NFL back-up or practice squad QB, maybe play a bit of Canadian ball.

 

Zac Taylor also looked like a lot of guys who come off the bench as NFL caretaker QBs, turning in a couple competent quarters or games before fading into obscurity.

 

And there are the monster QBs who put up incredible passing numbers in college. But you have to dip down the list to find the truly great NFL QBs.

 

(SORRY, IT WAS ORIGINALLY IN A NICE, VERTICAL LIST FORM)

 

Since 1956
Rank Player Yds From To Last School 1. Case Keenum* 19217 2007 2011 Houston 2. Timmy Chang* 17072 2000 2004 Hawaii 3. Landry Jones* 16646 2009 2012 Oklahoma 4. Graham Harrell* 15793 2005 2008 Texas Tech 5. Ty Detmer 15031 1988 1991 Brigham Young 6. Kellen Moore* 14667 2008 2011 Boise State 7. Colt Brennan* 14193 2005 2007 Hawaii 8. Rakeem Cato* 14079 2011 2014 Marshall 9. Sean Mannion* 13600 2011 2014 Oregon State 10. Philip Rivers* 13484 2000 2003 North Carolina State 11. Corey Robinson* 13477 2010 2013 Troy 12. Colt McCoy* 13253 2006 2009 Texas 13. Aaron Murray* 13166 2010 2013 Georgia 14. Kevin Kolb* 12964 2003 2006 Houston 15. Dan Lefevour* 12905 2006 2009 Central Michigan 16. Derek Carr* 12843 2009 2013 Fresno State 17. Tim Rattay 12746 1997 1999 Louisiana Tech 18. Ryan Lindley* 12690 2008 2011 San Diego State 19. Luke McCown* 12666 2000 2003 Louisiana Tech 20. Chris Redman* 12541 1996 1999 Louisville 21. Chase Daniel* 12515 2005 2008 Missouri 22. Trevor Vittatoe* 12439 2007 2010 Texas-El Paso 23. Kliff Kingsbury* 12429 1999 2002 Texas Tech 24. Matt Barkley* 12327 2009 2012 Southern California 25. Zac Dysert* 12013 2009 2012 Miami (OH) 26. Shane Carden* 11991 2012 2014 East Carolina 27. Tajh Boyd* 11904 2010 2013 Clemson 28. Byron Leftwich* 11903 1998 2002 Marshall 29. Chase Holbrook 11846 2006 2008 New Mexico State 30. Carson Palmer* 11818 1998 2002 Southern California 31. Drew Brees* 11792 1997 2000 Purdue 32. Brady Quinn* 11762 2003 2006 Notre Dame 33. Russell Wilson* 11720 2008 2011 Wisconsin 34. Geno Smith* 11662 2009 2012 West Virginia 35. David Greene* 11528 2001 2004 Georgia 36. Gino Guidugli* 11453 2001 2004 Cincinnati 37. Chad Pennington* 11446 1997 1999 Marshall 38. Todd Santos 11425 1984 1987 San Diego State 39. Keith Wenning* 11402 2010 2013 Ball State 40. Brandon Doughty* 11383 2011 2015 Western Kentucky 41. Max Hall* 11365 2007 2009 Brigham Young 42. Tim Hiller* 11329 2005 2009 Western Michigan 43. Connor Halliday* 11308 2011 2014 Washington State 44. Tim Lester 11299 1996 1999 Western Michigan 45. Derek Anderson* 11249 2001 2004 Oregon State 46. Chris Leak* 11213 2003 2006 Florida 47. Peyton Manning 11201 1994 1997 Tennessee 48. Todd Reesing* 11194 2006 2009 Kansas 49. Curtis Painter* 11163 2005 2008 Purdue 50. Eric Zeier 11153 1991 1994 Georgia 51. Jordan Palmer* 11084 2003 2006 Texas-El Paso 52. Charlie Frye 11049 2001 2004 Akron 53. John Beck* 11021 2003 2006 Brigham Young 54. Ryan Schneider 10976 2000 2003 Central Florida 55. Paul Smith* 10936 2003 2007 Tulsa 56. Adam Weber* 10917 2007 2010 Minnesota 57. Alex Brink 10913 2004 2007 Washington State Alex Van Pelt 10913 1989 1992 Pittsburgh 59. David Neill 10903 1998 2001 Nevada 60. Austin Davis* 10892 2008 2011 Southern Mississippi 61. Danny Wuerffel 10875 1993 1996 Florida 62. Ben Roethlisberger* 10829 2001 2003 Miami (OH) 63. Jared Goff 10800 2013 2015 California 64. Marcus Mariota* 10796 2012 2014 Oregon 65. Brian Brohm* 10775 2004 2007 Louisville 66. Doug Flutie* 10759 1981 1984 Boston College 67. Ryan Aplin* 10758 2009 2012 Arkansas State 68. Cade McNown* 10708 1995 1998 UCLA 69. Dan Orlovsky* 10706 2001 2004 Connecticut 70. Steve Stenstrom* 10701 1991 1994 Stanford 71. Matt Leinart* 10693 2003 2005 Southern California 72. Kevin Sweeney* 10623 1982 1986 Fresno State 73. Andrew Walter* 10617 2001 2004 Arizona State 74. Brett Basanez* 10580 2002 2005 Northwestern 75. Trevone Boykin* 10579 2012 2015 Texas Christian 76. Rudy Carpenter* 10491 2005 2008 Arizona State 77. Robert Griffin III* 10366 2008 2011 Baylor 78. Jared Lorenzen 10354 2000 2003 Kentucky 79. Andy Dalton* 10314 2007 2010 Texas Christian 80. Brian McClure 10280 1982 1985 Bowling Green State 81. Kolton Browning* 10263 2010 2013 Louisiana-Monroe 82. Troy Kopp 10258 1989 1992 Pacific 83. Danny Wimprine* 10215 2001 2004 Memphis 84. Bryant Moniz* 10169 2009 2011 Hawaii 85. Paul Pinegar* 10136 2002 2005 Fresno State 86. Eli Manning* 10119 2000 2003 Mississippi 87. Tyler Sheehan* 10117 2006 2009 Bowling Green State 88. Rusty Smith* 10112 2006 2009 Florida Atlantic 89. Colin Kaepernick* 10098 2007 2010 Nevada 90. Nathan Enderle* 10084 2007 2010 Idaho 91. Nick Foles* 10068 2007 2011 Arizona 92. Thaddeus Lewis 10065 2006 2009 Duke 93. Glenn Foley 10039 1990 1993 Boston College 94. Brett Hundley* 9966 2012 2014 UCLA 95. Todd Ellis* 9953 1986 1989 South Carolina 96. Mark Herrmann* 9946 1977 1980 Purdue 97. Ryan Radcliff* 9922 2009 2012 Central Michigan 98. Cody Pickett* 9916 1999 2003 Washington 99. Darrell Hackney* 9886 2002 2005 Alabama-Birmingham 100. Chris Weinke* 9839 1997 2000 Florida State 101. Ryan Dinwiddie* 9819 2000 2003 Boise State 102. Teddy Bridgewater* 9817 2011 2013 Louisville 103. Chase Clement* 9785 2005 2008 Rice 104. Riley Skinner* 9762 2006 2009 Wake Forest 105. Garrett Gilbert* 9761 2009 2013 Southern Methodist 106. Chad Henne* 9715 2004 2007 Michigan 107. Casey Clausen* 9707 2000 2003 Tennessee 108. Casey Bramlet 9684 2000 2003 Wyoming 109. Chuck Long* 9671 1981 1985 Iowa 110. Charlie Whitehurst* 9665 2002 2005 Clemson 111. Cody Fajardo* 9659 2011 2014 Nevada 112. Ben Bennett 9614 1980 1983 Duke 113. Ken Dorsey* 9565 1999 2002 Miami (FL) 114. Jim McMahon 9536 1977 1981 Brigham Young 115. Bo Wallace* 9534 2012 2014 Mississippi 116. Cody Kessler* 9518 2012 2015 Southern California 117. Bret Meyer* 9499 2004 2007 Iowa State 118. G.J. Kinne* 9472 2009 2011 Tulsa 119. Sean Renfree* 9465 2009 2012 Duke 120. Jamie Barnette 9461 1996 1999 North Carolina State 121. Stoney Case 9460 1991 1994 New Mexico 122. David Klingler 9430 1988 1991 Houston Andrew Luck* 9430 2009 2011 Stanford 124. Erik Wilhelm 9393 1985 1988 Oregon State 125. Mike Teel* 9383 2005 2008 Rutgers 126. Jeremy Leach 9382 1988 1991 New Mexico 127. T.J. Yates* 9377 2007 2010 North Carolina 128. Jonathan Smith* 9375 1998 2001 Oregon State 129. Andre Woodson* 9360 2004 2007 Kentucky 130. John Elway 9349 1979 1982 Stanford 131. Daunte Culpepper 9341 1996 1998 Central Florida 132. Kyle Orton* 9337 2001 2004 Purdue 133. T.J. Rubley 9324 1987 1991 Tulsa 134. Matt Ryan* 9313 2004 2007 Boston College 135. Shane Matthews 9287 1990 1992 Florida 136. Tim Tebow* 9285 2006 2009 Florida 137. Brandon Weeden* 9260 2008 2011 Oklahoma State 138. Gary Nova* 9258 2011 2014 Rutgers 139. Nate Davis* 9233 2006 2008 Ball State 140. Bruce Gradkowski* 9225 2002 2005 Toledo 141. Jake Delhomme 9216 1993 1996 Louisiana-Lafayette 142. Willie Tuitama* 9211 2005 2008 Arizona 143. Patrick Ramsey* 9205 1998 2001 Tulane 144. Garrett Grayson* 9190 2011 2014 Colorado State Ryan Nassib* 9190 2009 2012 Syracuse 146. Jose Fuentes 9168 1999 2002 Utah State 147. Rex Grossman* 9164 2000 2002 Florida 148. Walter Church 9142 1996 2000 Eastern Michigan 149. Kirk Cousins* 9131 2008 2011 Michigan State 150. Tyler Tettleton* 9129 2009 2013 Ohio 151. Pete Thomas 9117 2010 2014 Louisiana-Monroe 152. Tommy Hodson 9115 1986 1989 Louisiana State 153. Jason Martin 9066 1993 1996 Louisiana Tech 154. Bart Hendricks* 9030 1997 2000 Boise State 155. David Garrard* 9029 1998 2001 East Carolina 156. Ryan Griffin 9026 2009 2012 Tulane 157. Spence Fischer 9021 1992 1995 Duke 158. A.J. McCarron* 9019 2010 2013 Alabama 159. John Navarre* 9014 2000 2003 Michigan 160. Logan Thomas* 9003 2010 2013 Virginia Tech 161. Steven Jyles 8987 2002 2005 Louisiana-Monroe 162. Scott Mitchell 8981 1987 1989 Utah 163. Chandler Harnish* 8944 2008 2011 Northern Illinois 164. Joe Licata 8936 2012 2015 Buffalo 165. Jeff Smoker* 8932 2000 2003 Michigan State 166. Keith Price* 8921 2010 2013 Washington 167. Tanner Price* 8899 2010 2013 Wake Forest 168. Alex Carder* 8886 2009 2012 Western Michigan 169. Joe Hamilton* 8882 1996 1999 Georgia Tech 170. Brett Smith* 8834 2011 2013 Wyoming 171. Jason Gesser* 8830 1999 2002 Washington State 172. Jacory Harris* 8826 2008 2011 Miami (FL) 173. Taylor Kelly* 8819 2011 2014 Arizona State 174. Darian Durant* 8754 2001 2004 North Carolina 175. Drew Willy* 8748 2005 2008 Buffalo 176. Brad Tayles 8717 1989 1992 Western Michigan 177. Erik Ainge* 8700 2004 2007 Tennessee 178. Jay Cutler 8697 2002 2005 Vanderbilt 179. Shaun King* 8695 1995 1998 Tulane 180. Jason McKinley 8694 1997 2000 Houston 181. Matt Grothe* 8669 2006 2009 South Florida 182. Kevin Hogan* 8653 2012 2015 Stanford 183. Brad Smith* 8644 2002 2005 Missouri 184. Seth Doege* 8636 2009 2012 Texas Tech 185. Jake Plummer 8626 1993 1996 Arizona State 186. Dan Marino* 8597 1979 1982 Pittsburgh 187. Tino Sunseri* 8590 2009 2012 Pittsburgh 188. Nathan Scheelhaase* 8568 2010 2013 Illinois 189. Dave Ragone* 8564 1999 2002 Louisville 190. Steve Taneyhill 8555 1992 1995 South Carolina 191. Connor Cook* 8535 2012 2015 Michigan State 192. Drew Olson* 8532 2002 2005 UCLA 193. Ryan Hart* 8482 2002 2005 Rutgers 194. Cooper Rush* 8478 2013 2015 Central Michigan 195. Rob Johnson* 8472 1991 1994 Southern California 196. Marvin Graves 8466 1990 1993 Syracuse 197. Kurt Kittner* 8460 1998 2001 Illinois 198. Shawn Jones 8441 1989 1992 Georgia Tech 199. Tim Couch 8435 1996 1998 Kentucky 200. B.J. Daniels* 8433 2008 2012 South Florida 201. Sam Bradford* 8403 2007 2009 Oklahoma 202. Robbie Bosco 8400 1983 1985 Brigham Young 203. Chris Rix* 8390 2001 2004 Florida State John Walsh 8390 1991 1994 Brigham Young 205. Donovan McNabb 8389 1995 1998 Syracuse 206. Ryan Mallett* 8385 2007 2010 Arkansas 207. David Fales* 8382 2012 2013 San Jose State 208. Paxton Lynch* 8379 2013 2015 Memphis 209. Major Applewhite* 8353 1998 2001 Texas 210. Bill Musgrave* 8343 1987 1990 Oregon Tyler Palko* 8343 2002 2006 Pittsburgh 212. Zac Robinson* 8317 2006 2009 Oklahoma State 213. Danny O'Neil* 8301 1991 1994 Oregon 214. Drew Tate* 8292 2003 2006 Iowa 215. Randall Cunningham* 8290 1982 1984 Nevada-Las Vegas 216. Jared Zabransky* 8256 2003 2006 Boise State 217. Chase Rettig* 8253 2010 2013 Boston College 218. Dak Prescott* 8234 2012 2015 Mississippi State 219. Rodney Peete* 8225 1985 1988 Southern California 220. Bryn Renner* 8221 2010 2013 North Carolina 221. Terrance Owens* 8203 2010 2013 Toledo 222. Andre Ware 8202 1987 1989 Houston 223. Bryce Petty* 8195 2011 2014 Baylor 224. James Pinkney* 8173 2003 2006 East Carolina 225. Billy Blanton 8165 1993 1996 San Diego State 226. Dan McGwire* 8164 1986 1990 San Diego State 227. Marc Bulger* 8153 1996 1999 West Virginia 228. Jimmy Clausen* 8148 2007 2009 Notre Dame 229. Jack Trudeau 8146 1981 1985 Illinois 230. Matt Johnson* 8129 2012 2015 Bowling Green State 231. Reggie Ball* 8128 2003 2006 Georgia Tech 232. Troy Taylor 8126 1986 1989 California 233. Mark Barsotti* 8093 1988 1991 Fresno State 234. Jeff Graham 8080 1985 1988 Long Beach State 235. Josh Freeman* 8078 2006 2008 Kansas State 236. Kevin Feterik* 8065 1996 1999 Brigham Young 237. Spencer Keith* 8062 2009 2012 Kent State 238. Juice Williams* 8037 2006 2009 Illinois 239. Brian Kuklick 8017 1994 1998 Wake Forest 240. Stan White* 8016 1990 1993 Auburn 241. Matt Schilz* 8012 2010 2013 Bowling Green State 242. Jerrod Johnson* 8011 2007 2010 Texas A&M 243. Steve Slayden 8004 1984 1987 Duke 244. Mike Gundy 7997 1986 1989 Oklahoma State 245. Greg Zolman 7981 1998 2001 Vanderbilt 246. Kyle Boller 7980 1999 2002 California 247. Jameis Winston* 7964 2013 2014 Florida State 248. Tom Corontzos* 7945 1988 1991 Wyoming 249. Christian Hackenberg* 7924 2013 2015 Penn State John Parker Wilson* 7924 2005 2008 Alabama
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So I see Tommy lacking two things (maybe three) that would make him an almost ideal NFL quarter back. First, increased accuracy in passing. Second, decision making--that is, not forcing throws that end up as picks, and knowing when to run versus when to take a sack. And third, possibly an inch or two of height. Is Tommy going to gain the passing skills necessary to make it in the NFL? Well, sure it *could* happen. But at this point in his career it's about as likely as him gaining that extra inch or two of height.

Yes - that is, he's lacking the two traits that are far-and-away the MOST important traits of playing QB in the NFL.

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I was honestly surprised Ganz didn't get a shot as an NFL back-up or practice squad QB, maybe play a bit of Canadian ball.

 

Zac Taylor also looked like a lot of guys who come off the bench as NFL caretaker QBs, turning in a couple competent quarters or games before fading into obscurity.

 

And there are the monster QBs who put up incredible passing numbers in college. But you have to dip down the list to find the truly great NFL QBs.

Just goes to show the NFL is a different beast. Not only great college QB's not making it in the NFL, but the flip side is who would've expected Tom Brady to win four titles when he was drafted out of Michigan?

 

I don't remember a whole hell of a lot about Ganz/Taylor and their draft profiles but I'm assuming arm strength was one of their biggest knocks.

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... he becomes as accurate as Joe Ganz, and has as low of an interception percentage? (Ganz: 65% completion. 18 picks out of 585 passes)

 

===================

 

Or maybe I should rephrase the question: What existing (or past) NFL quarterback would Tommy compare to if he becomes as accurate and throws as few picks as Ganz?

Did Ganz play in the NFL? I think Tommy would have to go see the Wizard, take the witches broom with him, and get some kind of magical transformation to have any chance at playing QB in the NFL. Dual-threat QB's usually don't play in the NFL....even our best dual-threats haven't made it. Better to try what Frosty did, learn to be a really good safety.

 

Maybe I should start a thread asking whether Ganz would have made the NFL if he had been as big, strong and fast as Tommy. :lol:

 

That would make more sense because Joe is a gamer and with more physical skills would be the Favre type that a lot of NFL teams are looking for.

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Not to take this thread off topic, but.....

 

Taking this thread off topic:

 

At what position do you guys think TA has the best shot at an NFL roster?

 

I have read in this thread: WR, RB, HB, LB. Probably not tall enough for a TE. Maybe not fast enough for CB. Safetly? I think J Lord played Safety in the NFL for a few seasons.

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Tommy misses wide open crossing routes with no pressure about 50% of the time. His accuracy is laughably bad, in college, in a system conducive to easy throws, with good wide receivers. I'm not even sure if he is even an above average college quarterback.

 

Tommy's not going to the pros, but he remains a dangerous college quarterback. I mean, he IS the Big 10 Total Offense Leader. I am certain he makes the DC nervous every week.

 

I think we may be a little hard on his accuracy. This system is no more conducive to easy throws than any other. It's about the decisions Tommy makes. He completes a perfectly reasonable number of easy throws, completes a surprising number of dangerous throws, and has plenty of beautiful throws, caught perfectly in stride. But he loses those crucial 10 percentage points on passes that he was in no position to throw, but chucked anyway. Because his receivers have been making miracle catches, and because Tommy has led miracle comebacks, I'm not sure you can talk him out of the habit or convince him his footwork is a problem.

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I could play in the NFL if I improved my arm strength, grew 6 inches and could read NFL defenses.

 

TA will never play QB in the NFL. He may have a shot if he changes positions. He is fast and tough. But there is no way he can read NFL defenses and make good decisions consistently. He also struggles with high percentages passes.

Pretty much agree with this assessment. TA will not be an NFL QB unless something dramatic happens by the end of his tenure @ NU. Don't see it happening. I think he's been a pretty good QB for us, though, albeit the "TMart moments".

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I could play in the NFL if I improved my arm strength, grew 6 inches and could read NFL defenses.

 

TA will never play QB in the NFL. He may have a shot if he changes positions. He is fast and tough. But there is no way he can read NFL defenses and make good decisions consistently. He also struggles with high percentages passes.

 

See that's the thing, I'm not asking about some Joe Blow who is entirely devoid of the physical tools to play in the NFL. Like you. Or me. I'm asking about Tommy. He's clearly athletic enough. And he has a strong enough arm. He just lacks accuracy. That, and he's prone to force throws that sometimes end up in picks.

 

So, back to my question: If Tommy could gain some accuracy--say, Ganzesque accuracy--and throw fewer picks, would he play Sundays?

 

 

One has to almost assume if a player the age of TA isn't accurate now that he probably never will be. There are a lot of strong armed guys out there that are athletic. Accuracy is what separates them from an NFL QB. Heck, there are strong armed athletic accurate players that don't make it as a NFL QB. The QB position is probably by quantity the largest bust in terms of the draft there is.

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Not to take this thread off topic, but.....

 

Taking this thread off topic:

 

At what position do you guys think TA has the best shot at an NFL roster?

 

I have read in this thread: WR, RB, HB, LB. Probably not tall enough for a TE. Maybe not fast enough for CB. Safetly? I think J Lord played Safety in the NFL for a few seasons.

 

Yeah, I'd say safety. That worked out okay for Scott Frost. Jammal Lord played a couple years too, but never saw the field much.

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Not to take this thread off topic, but.....

 

Taking this thread off topic:

 

At what position do you guys think TA has the best shot at an NFL roster?

 

I have read in this thread: WR, RB, HB, LB. Probably not tall enough for a TE. Maybe not fast enough for CB. Safetly? I think J Lord played Safety in the NFL for a few seasons.

 

Yeah, I'd say safety. That worked out okay for Scott Frost. Jammal Lord played a couple years too, but never saw the field much.

 

I don't think TA has near the mobility or speed to play safety, especially in the NFL. I doubt he gets much of a look by the pros, quite frankly.

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Is Tommy's game similar to Tyrod Taylor's in college? Both are athletic QBs who don't have great stature -- around 6'1. As runners, I think they're both more powerful than they are fast. Neither were known I think to be extraordinary or accurate passers in college. Tyrod wasn't relied on to throw very often. Both seem to have an impressive mental, competitive edge.

 

If Tommy has a strong senior season, would GMs look at this as an example of what he could be?

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