Mikie2times Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 He was still very good in college. I mean that throw he made in his bowl game on the post route. It was one even now, perhaps he’s the only player on earth can make. Wyoming as a program has a poorly developed passing game. They’re certainly run first. Josh still didn’t grow into his form as a runner until later on. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buffaloboyinATL Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) 6 hours ago, C.Biscuit97 said: 1 - seriously? Obviously the talent level he played with is different in Buffalo but the defensive talent level he plays against is better too. As someone who was skeptical of the pick, the idea that the guy who wasn’t that good in the MWC becoming a better player in the nfl melted my brain. 2 - can you think of a player that improved this much from college to the nfl? Brady seems obvious but he actually was better in college than people remember. I can understand how he didn't dominate, because he hadn't quite put it all together yet. What I can't understand, is how he was not more highly recruited by the major colleges. He had all, or most of the tools already, and you would think these coaches would have seen the potential, and want to develop it. There was a great interview with Chris Simms a few weeks ago, where Josh credits his accuracy improvements and consistency, to changing his throwing motion to "rotational", instead of over the top. He said that now, instead of adjusting his release point to throw higher or lower, he only has to adjust his arm angle, and keep a consistent release point. My point being, some Head coach, or QB coach, or, scout or Coordinator, should have seen all that potential, and offered him a scholarship. Of course, I am happy that it turned out the way it did, because if he did dominate at a major college program, we never would have been able to draft him. He would have gone #1 overall. Edited October 20, 2022 by buffaloboyinATL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Motorin' Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 21 minutes ago, Over 29 years of fanhood said: Accuracy is so very critical and it was a total gamble and counter to conventional wisdom that the inaccuracy was repairable to even an NFL level, much less elite nfl level where he is now. The really scary part for the rest of the NFL is he is still getting better. Ever see this? These guys were arguing (and did testing which proved true) that Josh was incredibly accurate prior to his rookie season: 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lieutenant Aldo Raine Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 1 hour ago, Albany,n.y. said: He was basically QBing a 2-14 team, yet his record as a starter was 5-6 and one of those loses was a game Peterman came in & lost for the Bills. And a dropped TD by Charles Clay against Miami in the waning moments. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K-9 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 20 minutes ago, buffaloboyinATL said: I can understand how he didn't dominate, because he hadn't quite put it all together yet. What I can't understand, is how he was not more highly recruited by the major colleges. He had all, or most of the tools already, and you would think these coaches would have seen the potential, and want to develop it. There was a great interview with Chris Simms a few weeks ago, where Josh credits his accuracy improvements and consistency, to changing his throwing motion to "rotational", instead of over the top. He said that now, instead of adjusting his release point to throw higher or lower, he only has to adjust his arm angle, and keep a consistent release point. My point being, some Head coach, or QB coach, or, scout or Coordinator, should have seen all that potential, and offered him a scholarship. Of course, I am happy that it turned out the way it did, because if he did dominate at a major college program, we never would have been able to draft him. He would have gone #1 overall. He was a skinny, 6’3” high school QB from a small school that played lower level competition who didn’t attend elite QB camps since middle school. Those players simply don’t attract much attention. Especially in CA. It’s no surprise he wasn’t recruited by any D-1 school, let alone a power 5 school. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buffalo716 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) 8 minutes ago, K-9 said: He was a skinny, 6’3” high school QB from a small school that played lower level competition who didn’t attend elite QB camps since middle school. Those players simply don’t attract much attention. Especially in CA. It’s no surprise he wasn’t recruited by any D-1 school, let alone a power 5 school. It was definitely not going to the California QB camp circuit and playing low level ball Tons of 6’3 180 pound high school quarterbacks get scholarships it was everything else against him Edited October 20, 2022 by Buffalo716 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buffalo716 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) 30 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said: It was definitely not going to the California QB camp circuit and playing low level ball Tons of 6’3 180 pound high school quarterbacks get scholarships it was everything else against him https://247sports.com/Player/Malachi-Nelson-46086657/ https://247sports.com/Player/Jaden-Rashada-46085708/ https://247sports.com/Player/Avery-Johnson-46111693/ 3 of the top 12 QB recruits in the country are under 185 lbs or less and 6’3 or 6’4 It’s not a super uncommon size for high schoolers What Held Josh back was that there was never a division one football player from firebaugh And he didn’t go to the quarterback camps like you said and i agreed with he was playing super small school ball with not great size yet Edited October 20, 2022 by Buffalo716 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K-9 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 22 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said: It was definitely not going to the California QB camp circuit and playing low level ball Tons of 6’3 180 pound high school quarterbacks get scholarships it was everything else against him Josh himself has alluded to his small stature in high school as well as playing for at a small school as among the reasons he suspects he wasn’t recruited. Yes, lots of 6’3” prospects get recruited, but not from smaller high schools with smaller programs playing lesser competition. Especially in huge football states like CA. 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mango Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 Asking how he didn't DOMINATE is different than asking how did he end up having to recruit himself. The answer is he wasn't all that good. I know some posters here always "knew" he was the guy. But you can't "know" that one guy is going to buck every single historical trend to ever exist. That is just homerism. There were people who thought EJ, Trent, JP, etc. were going to "break all the rules" too. Josh didn't dominate college ball because he wasn't good enough. The Bills gambled on his work ethic and measurables in a sport filled with guys with the elitist work ethic and measurables on the planet. It all worked out because all of the stars aligned. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BearNorth Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 1 hour ago, Albany,n.y. said: Mel Kiper said the same thing on the ESPN broadcast of the 2018 draft, comparing him with Randy Johnson. It starts around the 1:10 mark: Another famous late blooming draft choice that took a few years to develop was Sandy Koufax, he could always throw the heat, but control was not his strong suit. He finally figured it out at age 26 and had five dominating seasons before his arm fell off. His personal catcher, Norm Sherry, did a lot for his development, and I think Diggs is Allen's Norm Sherry. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K-9 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 3 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said: https://247sports.com/Player/Malachi-Nelson-46086657/ https://247sports.com/Player/Jaden-Rashada-46085708/ https://247sports.com/Player/Avery-Johnson-46111693/ 3 of the top 12 QB recruits in the country are under 185 lbs or less and 6’3 or 6’4 It’s not a super uncommon size for high schoolers What Held Josh back was that there was never a division one football player from firebaugh And he didn’t go to the quarterback camps like you said and i agreed with You seem hung up on the stature as the only point in my argument and you’re making an unfair comparison here. For instance, Los Alamitos high school has over 3,000 students compared to just over 600 for Firebaugh. It’s a football powerhouse by comparison. Same with Pittsburg High school in CA. And while Maize high school is smaller, it still has nearly twice as man students as Firebaugh and is a highly ranked program in Kansas. So while all three of your examples are similar in size, none of them play for obscure little high school programs in their state. If any of them played for Firebaugh, would they have garnered the same interest? I doubt it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buffalo716 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) 2 minutes ago, K-9 said: You seem hung up on the stature as the only point in my argument and you’re making an unfair comparison here. For instance, Los Alamitos high school has over 3,000 students compared to just over 600 for Firebaugh. It’s a football powerhouse by comparison. Same with Pittsburg High school in CA. And while Maize high school is smaller, it still has nearly twice as man students as Firebaugh and is a highly ranked program in Kansas. So while all three of your examples are similar in size, none of them play for obscure little high school programs in their state. If any of them played for Firebaugh, would they have garnered the same interest? I doubt it. You emoji disagreed with my post before you explained what you disagreed with And I also agree with the other two points of your post… So I was pretty confused what you were disagreeing with The size was the only thing left Because I basically agreed with you Edited October 20, 2022 by Buffalo716 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K-9 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 12 minutes ago, Buffalo716 said: You emoji disagreed with my post before you explained what you disagreed with And I also agree with the other two points of your post… So I was pretty confused what you were disagreeing with The size was the only thing left Because I basically agreed with you 😄 Thanks for the clarification and apologies for any confusion. Now that we are in agreement, I’ve removed the disagreement emoji. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BigDingus Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) Reality is he just was too raw, didn't have strong coaching, & simply wasn't good enough yet. I know people like to act like he was simply DESTINED to be great no matter what, but I think that's a huge disservice to Josh. The amount of time & effort he dedicated to improving his play cannot be understated. People love to focus on the plays he can make, but remember he also improved dramatically in his ability to identify & dissect defenses, audible out of plays, the pre/post snap reads, his pocket awareness, etc. etc. etc. That stuff wasn't there in college. He's could have all the physical tools in the world, but what's between the ears matters even more (see: Tom Brady). That's why I attribute Allen's success almost entirely on his own shoulders. He put in the work to shore up those issues & maximize his strengths, therefore he deserves the bulk of the credit. Edited October 20, 2022 by BigDingus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Over 29 years of fanhood Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 2 hours ago, Motorin' said: Ever see this? These guys were arguing (and did testing which proved true) that Josh was incredibly accurate prior to his rookie season: and here is Josh himself explaining reworking his entire throwing motion to fix his accuracy.. people can revise whatever they want to, but I know what we saw then and what we see now. https://heavy.com/sports/buffalo-bills/josh-allen-adjusts-his-mechanics/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buffalo716 Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) 1 hour ago, K-9 said: 😄 Thanks for the clarification and apologies for any confusion. Now that we are in agreement, I’ve removed the disagreement emoji. All good man no worries! josh certainly is perhaps the best QB story of All time … it’s TB12 on steroids … Which coincidently Tom Brady may be On Edited October 20, 2022 by Buffalo716 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Over 29 years of fanhood Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 9 hours ago, C.Biscuit97 said: 1 - seriously? Obviously the talent level he played with is different in Buffalo but the defensive talent level he plays against is better too. As someone who was skeptical of the pick, the idea that the guy who wasn’t that good in the MWC becoming a better player in the nfl melted my brain. 2 - can you think of a player that improved this much from college to the nfl? Brady seems obvious but he actually was better in college than people remember. Brady - hands down. His draft slot tells you he projected as a back up to practice squad guy. how about Mahommes and Rodgers? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LanderPoke Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 (edited) Well, as a Wyoming die hard and one who has watched every single snap Josh has taken, I will say that the simplest answer is he wasn't nearly as good in college as he is in the pros. His improvement has surprised even me, maybe the biggest JA homer outside of his family and friends. His rise and improvement in the accuracy department are probably unprecedented. But deep down I knew that Josh would be at least an above average NFL QB if not Pro Bowler because of his freaking size, athleticism, work ethic, character and his world class arm. Those things were always there. I mean, he may have the best arm on planet earth. I have to admit that his ascension to the top two of NFL QBs has taken me by surprise. I knew he'd be good, but not this good. Aside from the fact that he has just gotten a lot better, the other biggest contributing factor of why he didn't dominate in college is the fact that he had to play for one of the most regressive coaching staffs in America from an offensive standpoint. Coach Craig Bohl would constantly talk about "getting rid of his gunslinger mentality" and similar garbage. Wyoming is possibly the most predictable offense in the country at any level. There is no imagination, no creativity, no nothing. Never any in game adjustments. If it works great, if not we're *****. Most of the yards JA passed for was on scrambles, because the original plays never worked. Coach Bohl all but turned JA into a fullback during the Border War against CSU in 2017. If you guys want to watch the grittiest ***** performance ever by a QB, go watch that game. A tertiary factor is talent level. Josh actually had a damn good 2016 season. UW (Wyoming) had a damn good season by our standards. Made the conference championship game and were division champs. Josh had Gentry, Jacob Hollister, a couple other good receivers and Brian Hill. In 2017 gone were Gentry, Hollister, Hill and Mulhardt, his other good receiver. There was no one to throw to. We sucked, plain and simple at the skill positions. It was very, very unfortunate. HOWEVER, if you've got Josh ***** Allen you'd think that you could engineer some sort of competent offense. Bohl is just a ***** offensive head coach. So coaching and talent held him back Edited October 20, 2022 by LanderPoke 3 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
C.Biscuit97 Posted October 20, 2022 Author Share Posted October 20, 2022 3 hours ago, Albany,n.y. said: Mel Kiper said the same thing on the ESPN broadcast of the 2018 draft, comparing him with Randy Johnson. It starts around the 1:10 mark: Mel Kiper is wrong a ton though. I think he said he would retire if Jimmy clausen didn’t become a star qb. 3 hours ago, Over 29 years of fanhood said: Accuracy is so very critical and it was a total gamble and counter to conventional wisdom that the inaccuracy was repairable to even an NFL level, much less elite nfl level where he is now. The really scary part for the rest of the NFL is he is still getting better. That’s the thing. College stats mean nothing but a guy completing under 69% of his passes in college now is kinda crazy. I just can’t believe the Buffalo Bills got this mold of talented clay and turned him into this. I still can’t believe it. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BrownNgold Posted October 20, 2022 Share Posted October 20, 2022 5 minutes ago, LanderPoke said: Well, as a Wyoming die hard and one who has watched every single snap Josh has taken, I will say that the simplest answer is he wasn't nearly as good in college as he is in the pros. His improvement has surprised even me, maybe the biggest JA homer outside of his family and friends. His rise and improvement in the accuracy department are probably unprecedented. But deep down I knew that Josh would be at least an above average NFL QB if not Pro Bowler because of his freaking size, athletics and his world class arm. Those things were always there. I mean, he may have the best are on planet earth. I have to admit that his ascension to the top two of NFL QBs has taken me by surprise. I knew he'd be good, but not this good. Aside from the fact that he has just gotten a lot better, the other biggest contributing factor of why he didn't dominate in college is the fact that he had to play for one of the most regressive coaching staffs in America from an offensive standpoint. Coach Craig Bohl would constantly talk about "getting rid of his gunslinger mentality" and similar garbage. Wyoming is possibly the most predictable offense in the country at any level. There is no imagination, no creativity, no nothing. Never any in game adjustments. If it works great, if not we're *****. Most of the yards JA passed for was on scrambles, because the original plays never worked. Coach Bohl all but turned JA into a fullback during the Border War against CSU in 2017. If you guys want to watch the grittiest ***** performance ever by a QB, go watch that game. A tertiary factor is talent level. Josh actually had a damn good 2016 season. UW (Wyoming) had a damn good season by our standards. Made the conference championship game and were division champs. Josh had Gentry, Jacob Hollister, a couple other good receivers and Brian Hill. In 2017 gone were Gentry, Hollister, Hill and Mulhardt, his other good receiver. There was no one to throw to. We sucked, plain and simple at the skill positions. It was very, very unfortunate. HOWEVER, if you've got Josh ***** Allen you'd think that you could engineer some sort of competent offense. Bohl is just a ***** offensive head coach. So coaching and talent held him back Losing Chase at center didn't help either, but everything you mentioned was spot on 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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