kennethyamini1989

The Perriman Thread

588 posts in this topic

23 hours ago, Drew P said:

"He's gotten behind very good DBs" What does that mean?

Whom is Bolt?

You said his speed doesnt translate, and then used catching the ball as evidence for this supposed lack of speed.

And getting behind DBs means he's running past them, or you know, running faster than they are. He burned Josh Norman twice. He got deep on DRC twice. He was behind Haden several times and was under thrown. He burned Stephon Gillmore.

His speed is showing up. You dont get behind DBs by running slower than they are. His ability to get behind or overtop of DBs is a way to measure if his speed is showing up. Whether he ends up catching those passes... or even gets targeted has zero, ZERO to do with his speed.

And Bolt is Usain Bolt - the world's fastest man. Since you were trying to measure a player's speed by whether or not they catch the ball, it would only stand to reason that the measured fastest man in the world would also be a great receiver, since being fast and catching the ball are now the same thing apparently.

Perriman drops passes, therefore hes not fast.

Usain Bolt is the fastest. Therefore he catches everything.

See?? Broken logic. I can do it, too.

 

 

Accidentally quoted OU who was responding to you with my original response.

Edited by BOLDnPurPnBlacK
6

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

This is a joke of a post! Seriously!? A bust after 6 games and being out of football for a year and having 1 week of training camp?  People are so quick to label a player a bust.  See me in 2018 and then raise this question.  I don't care if he gets 1 more catch this year I'm not labeling him a bust. Chris Carter sound familiar to anyone?

5

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 minute ago, BOLDnPurPnBlacK said:

You said his speed doesnt translate, and then used catching the ball as evidence for this supposed lack of speed.

And getting behind DBs means he's running past them, or you know, running faster than they are. He burned Josh Norman twice. He got deep on DRC twice. He was behind Haden several times and was under thrown. He burned Stephon Gillmore.

His speed is showing up. You dont get behind DBs by running slower than they are. His ability to get behind or overtop of DBs is a way to measure if his speed is showing up. Whether he ends up catching those passes... or even gets targeted has zero, ZERO to do with his speed.

And Bolt is Usain Bolt - the world's fastest man. Since you were equating speed with catching the ball, it would only stand to reason that the measured fastest man in the world would also be a great receiver, since being fast and catching the ball are the same thing.

 

 

Accidentally quoted OU who was responding to you with my original response.

Sorry, I don't follow. That ramble pretty much makes zero sense.

-3

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I think Perriman will have a Terrell Owens type career...On Field. I think you'll see this guy take over games for the most part but he'll also have a mind blowing frustrating drop nearly every game. This guy has missed 2 full training camps and that's when you see most young guys developing. I can't understand why so many people wanna write him off so quickly. 

Before the Giants game SSS spoke about how he was just starting to round into shape coming off his inury. He's just starting to get that confidence in certain routes and is finally starting to let loose. Well the same exact thing is true for Perriman. He has to get comfortable and confidence pushing that knee to the limit. On top of that he's basically a rookie adjusting to the speed of the game, route running and building chemistry with Flacco. There's been times he's been open deep or should have had better jump ball chance but he and Flacco wasn't on the same page. That 41 yard bomb should've been a TD but Flacco was hit while throwing. Perriman had his man beat to the inside with no Safety help. That's a game changing play that's just not being made right now. 

Perriman needs time and more opportunities. Unfortunately for use fans we are going to have to take the roller coaster ride that is the develop of Perriman in what is basically his rookie season. There are gonna be times during this season where he gets his foot down in the endzone to make a game changing TD on a great catch. There are gonna be times were he catches a simple crossing route and take it the distance, we just gotta take the good with the bad with him right now. 

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
11 minutes ago, Ravensfan23 said:

I think Perriman will have a Terrell Owens type career

That would be quite interesting if it played out that way. Funny, I saw something on TO a couple weeks ago and was thinking about how much I miss that guy.

2

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
15 minutes ago, Ravensfan23 said:

I think Perriman will have a Terrell Owens type career...On Field.

If he had a TO type career, every single fan who called him a bust would be eating major crow. Easily a top 3 WR ever. 

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

“The speed this kid has is incredible,” Hall of Fame wide receiver Michael Irvin said via NFL.com. “He can absolutely fly. Perriman reminds me a lot of Andre Johnson. When you start talking about money downs, no player made more plays on third and fourth downs than Perriman.”

Michael Irvin said.....? Game knows game. Can you hear me? Can you feel me. We gonna' be alright.

4

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
14 minutes ago, BmoreBird22 said:

If he had a TO type career, every single fan who called him a bust would be eating major crow. Easily a top 3 WR ever. 

Most of them won't.  They will hit us with all the "Yeah but.... "  He didn't get THIS stat or he didn't get THAT stat, or he dropped in that one game.
Some people are just determined to be miserable and for whatever reason want everyone to join them in their misery. 

2

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Again I have seen Perriman wide open on several occassions... Problem is he dropped most of those.I think he is probably the most consistent receiver at getting open. All our receivers struggle with drops... They need more work in that department.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
5 hours ago, trevorsteadman said:

Again I have seen Perriman wide open on several occassions... Problem is he dropped most of those.I think he is probably the most consistent receiver at getting open. All our receivers struggle with drops... They need more work in that department.

I don't think you can just fix hands, you're either one of those guys who catches everything or youre not.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
19 hours ago, trevorsteadman said:

Again I have seen Perriman wide open on several occassions... Problem is he dropped most of those.I think he is probably the most consistent receiver at getting open. All our receivers struggle with drops... They need more work in that department.

There are times when Flacco has just flat out missed him as well. Those two have to get on the same page and the oline has to block better. Just before the half Perriman beats Jenkins off the line and blazes by him for a potential TD assuming the catch of course, however Flacco threw the ball to the sidelines instead of up the field where Perriman was running.  

His slants suck lol. He needs to do a better job of pressing the DB. If he gets into the DB quicker the threat of running past him will have to be respected and the moment he opens his hips, Perriman sticks that foot in the ground and is open to the inside. He rounds into his slant routes which is so easy for the DB to read and defend. That's one of those areas where missing camp really hurt because you are getting that specified coaching, whereas during regular season practice it's more gameplan related. I'm sure Engram is always on him about it but it's just something that will come the more and more he plays. It's a technique thing and technique can never be improved in the classroom, he's gonna have to just do it over and over. 

So far early in his career he's shown the ability to separate from some quality DBs and his technique will only get better with time. He's also shown an ability to go up and attack the ball over the defender which is also a area that will get better the more comfortable he gets.

13 hours ago, ALPHA said:

I don't think you can just fix hands, you're either one of those guys who catches everything or youre not.

 

I don't think the drops will ever go away, but he's a guy who will catch 5-7 balls a game and make huge plays so we'll have to live with them. 

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
2 hours ago, Ravensfan23 said:

There are times when Flacco has just flat out missed him as well. Those two have to get on the same page and the oline has to block better. Just before the Perriman beats Jenkins off the line and blazes by him for a potential TD assuming the catch of course, however Flacco threw the ball to the sidelines instead of up the field where Perriman was running.  

His slants suck lol. He needs to do a better job of pressing the DB. If he gets into the DB quicker the threat of running past him will have to be respected and the moment he opens his hips, Perriman sticks that foot in the ground and is open to the inside. He rounds into his slant routes which is so easy for the DB to read and defend. That's one of those areas where missing camp really hurt because you are getting that specified coaching, whereas during regular season practice it's more gameplan related. I'm sure Engram is always on him about it but it's just something that will come the more and more he plays. It's a technique thing and technique can never be improved in the classroom, he's gonna have to just do it over and over. 

So far early in his career he's shown the ability to separate from some quality DBs and his technique will only get better with time. He's also shown an ability to go up and attack the ball over the defender which is also a area that will get better the more comfortable he gets.

 

I don't think the drops will ever go away, but he's a guy who will catch 5-7 balls a game and make huge plays so we'll have to live with them. 

And that is what I am saying... I mean it is like people forget that Perriman missed all of last season and missed most the offseason this season. Who else missed most the offseason this season? Flacco. How much time have they had to get on the same page? Every time Flacco throws to Perriman it is basically back yard football with how much they have played together. Why do you think Flacco would rather check it down 5 yards to Steve Smith or Dennis Pitta? Because he has chemistry with those guys... It is obvious Flacco and Wallace/Perriman are trying to get on the same page. That is why I am not worried. Later in the season I see a huge boost in offense... Plus it doesn't help when your offense was checking down the ball every time for 2 yards the first 5 games with Trestman.. With more of these deep shots expect a connection here after the bye week. I think that game after the bye week we see a completely new team out there. With all the injuries I knew we would lose to the Giants I am actually pleasantly surprised how well the team played with how little they had. I just wanted the team to go 1-1 over the New York stretch so if they can beat the Jets this next week into the bye I would be the happiest fan at 4-3 at the bye week with all the injured players coming back at the beginning of the season. 

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
17 hours ago, Drew P said:

Sorry, I don't follow. That ramble pretty much makes zero sense.

But you saying, Breshad's speed doesnt translate... bc he isnt catching passes - does make sense?

I quote: " That yet has to translate to where it counts with a ball in his hands

Your response to a post sharing anecdotal, and scientific evidence of Perriman's speed. I.E. you saying, basically, that doesn't matter bc for me to acknowledge his speed, or for it to "count" (whatever that means) he has to catch the ball.

If a guy runs past everyone on the field and gets 10 steps on the DB, and then drops the ball, that means he didnt run as fast as a guy who does the exact same thing and catches the ball? Or, sorry, only the 2nd receiver's speed "counts." 

 

You following now? These are your words and ideas. Not mine.

 

 

Edited by BOLDnPurPnBlacK
0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
On 10/18/2016 at 8:34 AM, BOLDnPurPnBlacK said:

It's obvious that a lot of people on these forums don't watch any football outside of the Ravens games.

This. Especially the flacco bashers. Every qb is good for 3 or 4 errant throws, slow reads, holding the ball too long, etc. They all do it. But flacco just isn't allowed to

1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
18 hours ago, Drew P said:

Sorry, I don't follow. That ramble pretty much makes zero sense.

Of course it makes no sense to YOU. you fail to use or comprehend logic 100% Of the time

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
13 hours ago, BmoreBird22 said:

If he had a TO type career, every single fan who called him a bust would be eating major crow. Easily a top 3 WR ever. 

I don't think he was suggesting production wise but more play style. Makes great catches and drops easy ones. It's a pattern you see with the best receivers. Julio, megatron, Andre johnson, Demetrius thomas, they all do it. It's common when the whole passing offense is on your shoulders.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, BOLDnPurPnBlacK said:

You following now? These are your words and ideas. Not mine.

I think he's a troll, but you're really missing the point of what he said.

What his comment should have looked like was, "It has yet to translate to where it counts: with a ball in his hands."

All he's saying, and this is a fair criticism, is that Perriman's speed doesn't mean tons unless he puts it to use by getting behind a defensive back AND catches the ball. It's really great that he is able to get behind guys like Haden, DRC, Norman, but he's gotta come down with those catches on a consistent basis. 

I don't think he ever questioned Perriman's speed or equated speed to the end all be all. I think Drew P realizes that Perriman is fast, but how much does that really mean? I mean, Ted Ginn Jr. is fast. You really missed the mark on this one and left several long tangents that really didn't address the point.

And I should also point out that I love Perriman and think he'll be an excellent receiver for the Ravens.

Edited by BmoreBird22
0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
15 minutes ago, BmoreBird22 said:

I think he's a troll, but you're really missing the point of what he said.

What his comment should have looked like was, "It has yet to translate to where it counts: with a ball in his hands."

All he's saying, and this is a fair criticism, is that Perriman's speed doesn't mean tons unless he puts it to use by getting behind a defensive back AND catches the ball. It's really great that he is able to get behind guys like Haden, DRC, Norman, but he's gotta come down with those catches on a consistent basis. 

I don't think he ever questioned Perriman's speed or equated speed to the end all be all. I think Drew P realizes that Perriman is fast, but how much does that really mean? I mean, Ted Ginn Jr. is fast. You really missed the mark on this one and left several long tangents that really didn't address the point.

And I should also point out that I love Perriman and think he'll be an excellent receiver for the Ravens.

Yes, his previous comment questioned his speed out right. He said flat out, that 4.2 speed doesnt show up in games.

Then when it was pointed out that it has, he followed up with "it doesnt translate where it counts with the ball in his hands." 

That was the follow up, or justification for the previous post which stated the 4.2 doesnt translate. Regardless of what he meant, and your interpretation is fair (and obvious; i didnt miss that possibility or point and actually agree with it) but within the context of the conversation that wasnt the connotation. 

Whether he's catching the ball or not, hes beating defenses deep... so the speed is showing up. Sure, for it to truly be a weapon the catch has to follow - but that has nothing to do with whether or not he plays fast. And honestly, catch or not defenses have to account for it which opens other things up and leads to phantom PI calls which give us a go ahead, what-should-be game winning TD.

But Torrey and Desean were both prone to drops early in their careers. Dont think anyone would question their speed though.

Torrey was terrible at catching the ball. But, would anyone say his speed didnt translate or "count?" Take out that aspect and i completely agree with the fair and obvious point that Perriman would be much more dangerous if he was catching everything, especially the easy ones. And if that is his only point and is trying to tie speed in for some reason - well, no duh. Every receiver would be better if they caught the passes they dropped.

 

Edited by BOLDnPurPnBlacK
0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
28 minutes ago, BmoreBird22 said:

I think he's a troll, but you're really missing the point of what he said.

What his comment should have looked like was, "It has yet to translate to where it counts: with a ball in his hands."

All he's saying, and this is a fair criticism, is that Perriman's speed doesn't mean tons unless he puts it to use by getting behind a defensive back AND catches the ball. It's really great that he is able to get behind guys like Haden, DRC, Norman, but he's gotta come down with those catches on a consistent basis. 

I don't think he ever questioned Perriman's speed or equated speed to the end all be all. I think Drew P realizes that Perriman is fast, but how much does that really mean? I mean, Ted Ginn Jr. is fast. You really missed the mark on this one and left several long tangents that really didn't address the point.

And I should also point out that I love Perriman and think he'll be an excellent receiver for the Ravens.

I'm not sure where the troll comment comes from but I'm not here to label forum members.

The point is the guy was selected due to his speed not his hands. Has he used this speed to make explosive plays like Will Fuller who has questionable hands as well? Nope.

He will be a decent player compared to the rest of the core WR's but his speed and toughness IMO is still a ?

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

There's a lot more to getting behind a defensive backfield then simple speed, especially when the DB is pressing or has the luxury of safety help. However keep in mind, even if all Perriman does is draw an additional safety off coverage, he is doing the job of a #2 WR as long as someone else can beat their man.

Perriman's biggest problem right now is that he is trying to adjust as a rookie and build up his confidence after his confidence from college was trashed by a year of disappointment and injury; plus a preseason that threatened more of the same (I might add the fan base was not helping this process at ALL).

He is pressing and freezing in situations where he has to react quickly (such as short routes and over the shoulder throws where he has to react at the last second to avoid tipping off the DB), but his best moments come when he has the ability to spot the ball early and fight for it.

More then anything that last point is what makes me optimistic about him. The ability to attack the ball with his hands and make contested catches far from your body is what allows a receiver to survive when father time takes your speed away. Steve can do it, Torrey and Mike W. couldn't, and that is what makes him a potential no. 1.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, BOLDnPurPnBlacK said:

Yes, his previous comment questioned his speed out right. He said flat out, that 4.2 speed doesnt show up in games.

Then when it was pointed out that it has, he followed up with "it doesnt translate where it counts with the ball in his hands." 

That was the follow up, or justification for the previous post which stated the 4.2 doesnt translate. Regardless of what he meant, and your interpretation is fair (and obvious; i didnt miss that possibility or point and actually agree with it) but within the context of the conversation that wasnt the connotation. 

Whether he's catching the ball or not, hes beating defenses deep... so the speed is showing up. Sure, for it to truly be a weapon the catch has to follow - but that has nothing to do with whether or not he plays fast. And honestly, catch or not defenses have to account for it which opens other things up and leads to phantom PI calls which give us a go ahead, what-should-be game winning TD.

But Torrey and Desean were both prone to drops early in their careers. Dont think anyone would question their speed though.

Torrey was terrible at catching the ball. But, would anyone say his speed didnt translate or "count?" Take out that aspect and i completely agree with the fair and obvious point that Perriman would be much more dangerous if he was catching everything, especially the easy ones. And if that is his only point and is trying to tie speed in for some reason - well, no duh. Every receiver would be better if they caught the passes they dropped.

 

 

1 hour ago, Drew P said:

I'm not sure where the troll comment comes from but I'm not here to label forum members.

The point is the guy was selected due to his speed not his hands. Has he used this speed to make explosive plays like Will Fuller who has questionable hands as well? Nope.

He will be a decent player compared to the rest of the core WR's but his speed and toughness IMO is still a ?

You're going to find quite a few players will drop the ball at a fairly high rate, including, but not limited to, Thomas, Julio, Megatron, Marshall, etc. 

Will Fuller has the benefit of playing across from DeAndre Hopkins. When the Ravens have a receiver of his caliber, I think we'll find more room to work with for Perriman. Right now, Perriman is really having to make his own space.

I guess BoldNPurp was right and I was wrong in trying to interpret your comments. I thought you were merely saying he needed to be more consistent, but he's provided explosive plays and some absolutely eye popping catches that we aren't going to see out of Will Fuller. 

If your comment was to say he's not providing some explosive plays and not showing up as fast in games, then I rescind my support and attempt to try to understand where you were coming from because I have no idea how you reached this conclusion. 

Also, not a single clue how you can question his toughness. He tears a PCL (the least studied ligament of the knee due to the rarity of the injuries) and we're going to say he's not tough? That's not something you play through... If he were sitting out from a few boo boos, I'd understand, but he took a pretty good shot in NY and got up and kept playing.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, Drew P said:

I'm not sure where the troll comment comes from but I'm not here to label forum members.

The point is the guy was selected due to his speed not his hands. Has he used this speed to make explosive plays like Will Fuller who has questionable hands as well? Nope.

He will be a decent player compared to the rest of the core WR's but his speed and toughness IMO is still a ?

Will Fuller is an interesting comparison and one worth exploring.

Similarities:

  • ~Rookies, burners
  • Low catch rate (50 v. 45%)

Differences:

  • Fuller is a starter in a stable of rookies (except for Hopkins) and pretty much the only deep threat on his team, Breshad is second string on a team with three veterans including another deep threat
  • Fuller has been targeted over 30% more (40 v. 30) on 30% more snaps (300 v. 200)
  • Fuller fell off a cliff in 2/5 games, while Perriman has been flat throughout
  • YAC is a BIG part of Fuller's edge in production (2.5 v. 12.5!!)

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/29255/splits/

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/28414/splits/

The Texan's own pundits admit that a lot of Fuller's production is coming from teams scheming to shut down Hopkins (whose production spike in the same games Fuller's crashes).

http://www.battleredblog.com/2016/9/12/12884066/incompletions-texans-v-bears

Bottom line, is Fuller a better player right now, yes, but a lot of his advantage could be explained by the type of throws and catches he is getting each game. Plus the Texan's are putting up with a TON of drops because they have nowhere else to throw right now.
 

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/5521/splits/

1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
46 minutes ago, BmoreBird22 said:

Also, not a single clue how you can question his toughness.

Against the Raiders he short armed a pass in fear of contact..even the guy in the booth called him out..Ever see SSS at 5' 9", 37 yrs old duck from a DB? He's tough..Perri...TBD.

 

-1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
2 hours ago, Drew P said:

I'm not sure where the troll comment comes from but I'm not here to label forum members.

The point is the guy was selected due to his speed not his hands. Has he used this speed to make explosive plays like Will Fuller who has questionable hands as well? Nope.

He will be a decent player compared to the rest of the core WR's but his speed and toughness IMO is still a ?

As has been pointed out... Fuller happens to have one of the best WRs in the league across the field from him, giving Fuller favorable 1on1 match ups a good majority of the time. He's also had a lot more playing time and targets.

Most of Fullers production has come when teams try to scheme Hopkins out of the game - opening up his opportunity.

When they've tried to take away Fuller, no surprise Hopkins kills it.

The Ravens dont have anyone you need to scheme away. West is coming along, but he doesnt have the reputation of a guy like Lamar Miller (though he may start earning it). 

Not to mention, Fuller has more drops and a higher drop percentage. Plus, Perriman has made explosive plays.

Game 1 - diving sideline catch vs Gillmore for 35+ yds

Giants - drawn PI in end zone, gives us go ahead TD. Long catch over the middle

I forgot the others specifically, but he's had at least one explosive play in every game... and created several other opportunities with his speed where he either wasnt targeted and opened up other options, didnt get his foot in, or flat out dropped it.

Only 1 play can i think of where Perriman was actually thrown the ball in stride when he beat his man deep (Redskins) where he could have actually made the catch and kept running for that explosive TD play... and unfortunately he dropped it. But he has one opportunity, and has already shown he can go up and make the extremely difficult contested catches that guys like Fuller wont be able to.

Fuller is #5 in drops btw. And guys like Brandon Marshall, Thomas, Julio, Dez, are often way up there too. Perrimans already making the circus catches... the time will come when his volume will make the drops an afterthought.

He's 6 games into his career, and has maybe 9-10 weeks of practice under his belt... tops. He's developmentally where most guys are in preseason of their rookie years.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1 hour ago, BOLDnPurPnBlacK said:

As has been pointed out... Fuller happens to have one of the best WRs in the league across the field from him, giving Fuller favorable 1on1 match ups a good majority of the time. He's also had a lot more playing time and targets.

Most of Fullers production has come when teams try to scheme Hopkins out of the game - opening up his opportunity.

When they've tried to take away Fuller, no surprise Hopkins kills it.

The Ravens dont have anyone you need to scheme away. West is coming along, but he doesnt have the reputation of a guy like Lamar Miller (though he may start earning it). 

Not to mention, Fuller has more drops and a higher drop percentage. Plus, Perriman has made explosive plays.

Game 1 - diving sideline catch vs Gillmore for 35+ yds

Giants - drawn PI in end zone, gives us go ahead TD. Long catch over the middle

I forgot the others specifically, but he's had at least one explosive play in every game... and created several other opportunities with his speed where he either wasnt targeted and opened up other options, didnt get his foot in, or flat out dropped it.

Only 1 play can i think of where Perriman was actually thrown the ball in stride when he beat his man deep (Redskins) where he could have actually made the catch and kept running for that explosive TD play... and unfortunately he dropped it. But he has one opportunity, and has already shown he can go up and make the extremely difficult contested catches that guys like Fuller wont be able to.

Fuller is #5 in drops btw. And guys like Brandon Marshall, Thomas, Julio, Dez, are often way up there too. Perrimans already making the circus catches... the time will come when his volume will make the drops an afterthought.

He's 6 games into his career, and has maybe 9-10 weeks of practice under his belt... tops. He's developmentally where most guys are in preseason of their rookie years.

Not sure if you were using me as a source for the above, but I agree with everything except Perriman actually has a SLIGHTLY (5%) higher drop rate, but its pretty negligible considering the huge difference in snap count.

Julio and Amari are bad comparisons because they were day 1 starters, and both were drafted in the top quarter of the first round. Dez is actually a great comparison to Breshad because of their similar snap count (72 v. est 69) and so far Breshad is actually having a better year in terms of yards per game/catch and YAC. Dez does have a small advantage in terms of catch rate (58%) and a BIG advantage in terms of TDs (0 v. 6). Both get spanked by the blue chips.

If you really want to feel better about the pick look at these: Nelson Agholor, Kevin White, Laquon Treadwell, Corey Coleman, Phillip Dorsette and Josh Doctson.

As depressing as this sounds, Breshad is currently outperforming the rookie season of every first round receiver in the past two years not named Amari Cooper and Will Fuller through some combination of availability (several of these haven't played a down), touches, and per touch performance. If Breshad is a bust then every team in the damn league has no idea what they are doing.

Edited by CorvusMagnus
0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
23 hours ago, Drew P said:

Sorry, I don't follow. That ramble pretty much makes zero sense.

He was totally right on the money. I don't see how you can say he doesn't get behind defenses. He absolutely has, those CBs are backing off for a reason. 

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Come to every game with a minimum of 2 dozen new sets of tack gloves and change to a new pair before each possession. Easy fix. lol

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I agree with those who say that it's way too early to judge Perriman's career.  Maybe it's just a case that he's having his sophomore jinx in his first year on the field.

0

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.