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Bmitch's reasoning is sound imo.
In context......and that's what important here.......context, this makes perfectly good sense. No one is saying to not start Kirk in the next game, but that when he's struggling like a pitcher in baseball does, bring in the relief guy. In this case McCoy for that game.
it would be sound if we were a playoff team or had the chance to be this all goes back to people saying we are a rebuilding team but not really believing it
KC may not be the future here . i get that however we need to see if he can play through this . we arent going anywhere this season
well i guess you could do that but here in DC ? and what does that say to KC ? what if we did that to 3sus ? i feel you have to ride this out
my feelings on KC is he looks to be a 15 year BU guy and spot starter . however i am willing to wait and see how playing time and learning work out
cousin'would be a star in any othe system he sucks in a gruden system because gruden sucks and everybody sucks under a gruden system
cousin'would be a star in any othe system he sucks in a gruden system because gruden sucks and everybody sucks under a gruden system
Here are excerpt from a linked article that shows exactly what I've been talking about. Kirk may figure out the INT problem but I doubt it seeing as he is playing in an easy system designed to eliminate mistakes. But he will never improve his #1 problem, he can't hit an open guy downfield.
Pointing to Cousins' improving interceptable pass rate as potential development would be foolish. Not only is he still throwing the ball to defenders at an outrageous rate, but he is doing so while playing in a cautious, simplistic offense.
Through six games this year, Cousins has thrown 228 passes for 1,420 yards, six touchdowns and eight interceptions. Once again, those numbers flatter him.
View attachment 42297 Credit: NFL.com
In the above chart, all of Cousins' pass attempts this season have been charted except for spikes, intentional throwaways and miscommunications. The chart doesn't track completions and incompletions; it doesn't track catchable or uncatchable passes. It considers ball placement.
Every green tick is an accurate pass, and every red cross is an inaccurate pass.
As the chart shows, Cousins can't throw the ball down the field. He throws an abnormal percentage of his pass attempts within five yards of the line of scrimmage. The offense is unusually based on throwing the ball within five yards of the line of scrimmage and outside of the numbers.
These are typically throws to receivers running curl routes or receivers running out from inside alignments. As such, they are safer throws from the quarterback. Gruden does a good job of creating quick throws for Cousins with his route combinations, but those throws typically gain very few yards.
Jay Gruden's Commitment to Kirk Cousins Will Get Him Fired | Bleacher Report