Drew Bledsoe
Re: Drew Bledsoe
I remember a description of Bledsoe. "Very good, excellent at times, but never great." He was probably the 2nd best QB in the AFC in the 2nd half of the 1990's, behind only Elway. Four Pro Bowls, though he really only deserved three. (1994, he led the league in interceptions. I think he was an injury replacement)
I'm still baffled at his decline. If you could go back in time to as late as mid-1999 and tell football people that "In 2018, it's generally accepted that the greatest QB ever was New England's...." then they would naturally assume that it was Drew Bledsoe, that he has taken his game a step higher as he gained several years experience, without losing anything off his rocket arm.
Instead, starting in the 2nd half of 1999, his career faltered. He continued to make baffling mistakes and throws, and he began to hold the ball too long and take sacks. He was never an elite player again, save for the first half of 2002 with Buffalo.
I'm still baffled at his decline. If you could go back in time to as late as mid-1999 and tell football people that "In 2018, it's generally accepted that the greatest QB ever was New England's...." then they would naturally assume that it was Drew Bledsoe, that he has taken his game a step higher as he gained several years experience, without losing anything off his rocket arm.
Instead, starting in the 2nd half of 1999, his career faltered. He continued to make baffling mistakes and throws, and he began to hold the ball too long and take sacks. He was never an elite player again, save for the first half of 2002 with Buffalo.
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
No, not even HoVG. He doesn’t rank well via either Chase Stuart’s approach (141st) or Kiran Rasaretnam’s (best 4/7/10 seasons of 81/61/37). Several QBs such as Joe Theismann, Boomer Esiason, Dave Krieg, Craig Morton, Donovan McNabb, and Phil Simms scored better in both systems.
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
borderline, no74_75_78_79_ wrote:Hall of Very Good?
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
I’d say no as well. But the way he began his career...(starting with that ’94 performance vs Minn albeit in defeat). He had amazing reviews on his throwing technique at the combine. Yes, as the remainder of his time with Pete Carroll wound down 2nd-half of ’99, so did his very time as an ‘elite’ QB for the rest of the way.
Re: Drew Bledsoe
That performance vs Minnesota was actually a win. The Patriots were down 20-0 at the half and won in OT 26-20. Bledsoe set records with 45 completions in 70 attempts, though he threw for "only" 426 yards. That kind of sums up his career. He was a volume thrower, not an efficient one.
Last edited by conace21 on Sun Feb 18, 2018 2:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
My mistake. I thought for sure that was a loss (comeback in vain) in hindsight.conace21 wrote:That performance vs Minnesota was actually a won. The Patriots were down 20-0 at the half and won in OT 26-20. Bledsoe set records with 45 completions in 70 attempts, though he threw for "only" 426 yards. That kind of sums up his career. He was a volume thrower, not an efficient one.
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
If you go strictly by numbers, Bledsoe has better career numbers than McNabb, Krieg, and Morton. BUT I agree Theisman, Esiason, and Simms are ahead of Drew Bledsoe.bachslunch wrote:No, not even HoVG. He doesn’t rank well via either Chase Stuart’s approach (141st) or Kiran Rasaretnam’s (best 4/7/10 seasons of 81/61/37). Several QBs such as Joe Theismann, Boomer Esiason, Dave Krieg, Craig Morton, Donovan McNabb, and Phil Simms scored better in both systems.
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Re: Drew Bledsoe
Is a good HOVG name that should eventually get insluggermatt15 wrote:Theisman