Screamin12th
Well-Known Member
Waldrons first season with the Hawks this offense was top 5 in the redzone TD% the last 2 seasons with Geno they been 28th and 30th. Coincidence? I think not.
From SeasideJoe
If Geno was on the Vikings and Cousins was on the Seahawks and they were having the exact seasons they’re having now, would writers be ridiculed if they suggested that Seattle should make a QB swap trade? If Geno wasn’t able to start against the Bengals because of a hip injury and Lock had the exact same performance in Week 6 that Geno had—same stats, same throws, same everything—would there be arguments for Lock to continue starting even when Smith was healthy enough to return?
Would we say, “Not Lock’s fault!” about the red zone problems, the interceptions, the decisions, the missed open receivers, and turning his body directly into sacks?
We’re now up to at least three out of five games that Geno Smith isn’t at fault for not playing well.
make that 4 games now Seasidejoe!
From SeasideJoe
If Geno was on the Vikings and Cousins was on the Seahawks and they were having the exact seasons they’re having now, would writers be ridiculed if they suggested that Seattle should make a QB swap trade? If Geno wasn’t able to start against the Bengals because of a hip injury and Lock had the exact same performance in Week 6 that Geno had—same stats, same throws, same everything—would there be arguments for Lock to continue starting even when Smith was healthy enough to return?
Would we say, “Not Lock’s fault!” about the red zone problems, the interceptions, the decisions, the missed open receivers, and turning his body directly into sacks?
We’re now up to at least three out of five games that Geno Smith isn’t at fault for not playing well.
make that 4 games now Seasidejoe!
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