@ScottKacsmar This is correct. The defense actually blew the Super Bowl. The offense getting to the 1 yard line was a bailout. The offense created the lead and controlled the game, not the defense. They were a liability
@HML_Compounder@ExchangiFi@yooo_chip The risk is real but overstated. If I have 10mm 145/45. My 4.5mm L drops by 900m to 3.6. Gains = 0. My 4.5mm S goes to 3.6mm gain = 900m as S gets no step-up. This assumes all S were purchased at 4.5mm. There’s turnover every month. No way you end up with a full gain
@movieswithmex Tell me who he was better than for his career of the guys playing at the same time
Brady
Brees
Rodgers
Big Ben
Manning (2013-14)
Was he better than Luck?
I just don’t buy he’s a HoFer with all those guys ahead of him
They say RW3 needed a run game. His yards were only 30% less than Lynch. He contributed as much to the run game. The threat of him running kept one defender out of the box for ML. The defense benefited as Seattle controlled the clock
Russell Wilson's most dangerous years as a runner meant that opposing defenses had to respect both him and Lynch.
Easy to forget that until about the 2nd half of 2011, Lynch pre-Wilson in Seattle was not particularly effective. Beastquake just made it seem like he was.
Definitely a HOF. Dual threat. Clutch. Even more incredible when you considered he was handicapped by the disability of being too short and not being able to throw over the middle.
@ScottKacsmar@jtheaps9 Exactly. The chart is dumb.
If you’re going to do it. Have RW3 from 2012-2021. What were the wins needed. What was his average. What were the other 8 divisions during that same period. What if the NFC west was harder or softer from 00-12? It would skew the wins needed
@ScottKacsmar@jtheaps9 The point of the chart says RW3 had the toughest division & took more wins. But your chart has time periods included that he didn’t play in. It’s not the same