Hujan
Starter
A QB doesn't need to have both, but he cannot succeed by being only a "great running QB." In order to succeed, an offense needs to carry the threat of the deep play (downfield passing) as well as the run. A QB that is a great runner but a deficient passer does the offense a disservice because now there is no real downfield threat. In a sense, it becomes redundant because there are already players who can run (we call them "Running Backs"), so having a QB who can run but not pass makes the offense too one-dimensional. Defenses respond by crowding the box, and you have what we saw as the season wore on.Hujan, your argument seems to boil down to the fact that Taylor will never be Andrew Luck in the passing game. Wouldn't you also concede that Andrew Luck will never be Taylor in the running game? Wouldn't you also concede that there's a place for both a great running QB and a great passing QB in college football, and that a player does not have to be both to win?
Having a pure passer with limited running ability does not diminish the offense's ability to be two-dimensional because, again, you will have running backs to keep the defense from overplaying the pass, and the quarterback will keep the defenses from overplaying the run.
This, of course, is why you will see successful teams led by pure pocket passers far more frequently than successful teams led by pure scrambling QBs with little or no passing skills. Regardless of how fast and agile he is, at some point a QB who cannot pass effectively will be about as useful as an ejection seat on a helicopter.
In any event, I was not condemning Martinez for failing to be the passer that Andrew Luck is. I was simply using Andrew Luck as an example of how truly great QBs do not go from being "above average" to "great" in the span of several seasons. They go from "almost great" to "great" in that span. Thus, anyone expecting Martinez to suddenly blossom into an amazing all-around QB in a year or two should probably think twice.
Taylor will get marginally better in a few key areas. He will eventually learn to throw the ball away, take sacks without getting thrown around, being content with smaller but more regular gains, etc. All of that is maturity. But to truly succeed with Taylor we are going to have to recognize him for what he is: A great running QB who is a passing liability. As such, we are going to have to simplify the passing game for him as much as possible. This means shorter routes, throwing screens, throwing off the bootleg, and throwing off of I-form play actions to a hot route receiver. (The playaction pass to a hot route receiver---for example, a Kyler Reed streaking down the field---is excellent because the play is either there or its not. If it's there, we get a big downfield play; if not, Martinez can throw it away or check down.)
My opinion is that the less heroic throws we expect from Taylor in the passing game, the happier we will be with him as our QB. The play book should come to Taylor, not the other way around.