Let’s hear it! Give me your most unpopular opinions so far this season. I know this sub can be a hive mind echo chamber sometimes where people all arrive at certain assumptions and conclusions based on small sample sizes or bias’.

Here’s a few of my unpopular (to this sub) takes:

  1. RBs aren’t a “luxury” pick in the first round of the draft, you just have to accept that the pick won’t be as “long term” as other positions. Drafting guys like CMC, Travis ETN, Bijan, etc. aren’t “wastes” or “luxuries”. Those guys can really aid an offense, especially in the current era where we’re coming back around to ground attacks. The big issue is the second contract, but you’ll still have a stud weapon on the cheap for 4-5 years. More specially, I don’t see anything wrong with the Gibbs pick. People think he’s a bust or a waste bc he hasn’t been a 20-25 touch guy 6 games into his career… I think he can be a huge contributor for them for 4 seasons or so. If he helps them in big playoff games, then the pick is worth it, even if he’s not a guy who’s around for 6-10 seasons.

  2. A QBs ability to process info and remained poised is far more important than athletic ability. Everyone is looking for the shiny athlete like Josh Allen or Lamar, but honestly guys like Brock Purdy, Kirk, Goff, etc. are way more attainable and way safer. They can process info and deliver accurate passes. Obviously the gold standard is a freak athlete who’s an elite processor, but I think some teams try to find the athletes first then try to teach the mental aspect. While it’s true that you can’t teach athletic ability like Fields has, or the arm talent Wilson has, it’s not so easy to teach the mental component either.

What’re your guys’ hot takes and unpopular opinions?

  • CheckYourStatsB
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    11 months ago

    Hard hits on high passes, and passes over the middle should be legal.

    Offenses used to not call plays like this because they were playing against a hard-hitting SOB who owned the middle of the field on D.

    Players getting injured going up for balls, or going across the middle when there’s a known hard-hitting Safety used to be extremely rare – explicitly because they were afraid of getting lambasted and risking injury.

    Call me old school, but as someone who grew up watching Ronnie Lott, Steve Atwater, John Lynch, and even Chuck Cecil…I miss seeing the middle of the field being taken away from an offenses game plan because of a generational defensive player.

    I prefer to see an intensely physical, hard-hitting, 14-13 game over a high-scoring game where yellow flags are just as impactful as the players on the field.