Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Quick Hits on "The Book of Tebow"

By now, any Tebow fan has read the Sports Illustrated longform article The Book of Tebow.  Overall I thought it was a well crafted and thoughtful article.  Here are some aspects of the article that I liked or disliked:

Monday, November 11, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Final Update

This will be the last update.  I don't see any more predictable scenarios emerging for Tim Tebow to get signed during this season.  If something happens, it will be from somewhere out of the blue.

Time is the fundamental problem.  It would take at least two or three weeks for a team to integrate Tim into their system and get any kind of payoff on his skills.  That applies for any QB, as the Vikings demonstrated with Josh Freeman, but especially for someone with an unconventional skillset like Tim.  But there are only 6 or 7 games left for most teams.  That's not enough time to invest 2 or 3 games on a solution that may or may not work.  In that situation, most teams will go with a QB that has been practicing with them and knows their system, regardless of how bad he is.   

Sunday, November 3, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Week 9 Update

The NFL has reached the midpoint of the season.  Every team has played at least 8 games.   What possible opportunities does Tebow have?

On the List

  • Jaguars: as I wrote last week, the Jaguars have run out of football reasons not to sign Tebow.  Unfortunately the time to sign him was last week, before their bye.  It's probably not going to happen, mainly because GM Dave Caldwell doesn't seem like the guy who will voluntarily eat his words.
  • Rams: Kellen Clemens wasn't that bad in either game he played, but he is not going to win games for the team.  Coach Fisher must realize his season is gone unless he does something drastic.  The Rams won't beat the Colts next week regardless of who plays, but after that they have a bye week.  If it doesn't happen then, it's probably not going to.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Post Trade Deadline

So much for the power of wishful thinking.  My furtive hopes of a Mallett trade have been dashed.  With that said, here's my analysis on opportunities for Tebow right now:

On the List

  • Jaguars:  As I wrote yesterday, Jacksonville has run out of football reasons to avoid Tebow.  If they genuinely want to win games, they will sign him, even if only as a red zone battering ram.  Unfortunately, I am increasingly convinced that GM Dave Caldwell believes his job is to understand the value of losing.  If that is the case, signing Tebow is the worst thing he could do, because Tim may win just enough games to lose the number one draft pick.  If it is going to happen, this is the week.
  • Rams:  Did you watch the last 4 seconds of Monday Night Football last night?  Enough said.  Give Jimbo Fisher two more games to confim that Kellen Clemens ain't got it, then see what he does on bye week.

Monday, October 28, 2013

The Jaguars have run out of football reasons to not sign Tim Tebow

Florida Times-Union sportswriter Gene Frenette wrote a column last December titled Marketing Not Good Reason to Sign Tebow. He argued that Tebow's popularity in Jacksonville was a bad reason to bring him to the Jaguars:
The Jaguars should only go after (Tebow) if they have a specific role in mind and believe he can help them win.  Nothing else matters.
Frenette is right.  Successful NFL franchises make personnel decisions based on football reasons.  Signing Tebow for ticket and jersey sales would do a disservice to the Jaguars, the fans, and Tebow.  If the Jaguars do not have a good football reason to bring him to Jacksonville, they should not bring him here.

However, the flip side of this premise is equally true.  The decision not to sign Tebow should also be based solely on football reasons.  If Tebow can help the Jaguars win, then nothing else matters.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Why has Tim Tebow not been hired yet?

A while ago I proposed The Nuclear Option: that Tim Tebow should start the 2013 season not on a roster rather than accepting a backup position.  My theory: several starting quarterbacks would be be injured or benched during the first half of the season.  Their backups would prove to be inadequate, creating openings for new starters.  If Tim were on a roster as a backup, he would be unavailable to fill those positions.

So far, everything is proceeding as I have foreseen (bonus points if you can name that movie).  The season is not even half over, and 9 teams do not have the same starting QB they began the season with:
  • Rams: lost Sam Bradford to season-ending knee injury. Backup Kellen Clemens starting.
  • Browns: benched Brandon Weeden, then lost Brian Hoyer to season-ending knee injury. 3rd stringer Jason Campbell starting.
  • Bucs: benched and released Josh Freeman. Rookie backup Mike Glennon starting.
  • Jaguars:  Blaine Gabbert out for several weeks with injury; backup Chad Henne starting.  
  • Vikings: benched Christian Ponder for Josh Freeman.  Freman out with concussion so Ponder starts again.
  • Bills: EJ Manuel out for 6 to 8 weeks with knee injury.  Backup Thad Lewis starting.
  • Texans: Matt Schaub out with ankle injury.  Undrafted rookie backup Case Keenum starting.
  • Bears: Jay Cutler out for 4 weeks with groin tear.  Backup Josh McCown starting.
  • Eagles: Vick out for several weeks for injury.  Backup Nick Foles is out with a concussion.  Third stringer Matt Barkley starts if both are out.
But one event has not unfolded as I had foreseen:  nobody has hired Tim Tebow yet.  WTF?

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Week 7 update

The trade deadline in 9 days effectively closes the door on major roster improvements. The odds of obtaining a starting-caliber player diminish greatly after then.  For the rest of the season, coaches are stuck with the players they have now, plus any left-over free agents they can scrounge up.

With that in mind, let's take a look at potential opportunities for Tebow:

Monday, October 14, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Week 6 update

Some development since last week. No need to wait for Monday night's game, as neither Luck nor Rivers is going anywhere. Let's take a look at potential opportunities for Tebow:

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Nuclear Option - Tuesday Morning Update

Wow, lots of changes since I last wrote about The Nuclear Option just a few days ago.  Most of the immediate opportunities have dried up for now.   The Jets, Raiders, Browns, Bucs, and Titans are going to go with what they have.  The Bills are going with chewing gum, duct tape, and unknown free agents.  The Jags are still in a state of denial.  Mallett is still a trade prospect at the deadline.  Details:

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The Nuclear Option plays out

Last spring, in a blog post titled The Nuclear Option, I argued that Tim Tebow would be better to start this season not on an NFL roster.  I based my premise on the following assumptions:
  1. No team would offer Tim a fair shot at competing for a starting position.
  2. As a backup, he risked a repeat of the Jets debacle.
  3. Several teams would lose their starting QB to injuries in the first half of the season.
  4. Several more teams would discover their hoped-for starting QB stunk.
  5. By midseason, several teams would be looking for a QB to salvage their season.
  6. A desperate coach trying to save his job might be willing to take the risk with Tim.
  7. If Tim was on another roster, he would be unavailable to take that opportunity to play.
So now we are 1/4 of the way through the season, and  the nuclear scenario has played out even faster than expected.  Below is a list of NFL teams whose franchise QB plans have already self destructed:

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Patriots roster moves this week

Watching the Patriots roster moves over the last week.  There have been a lot of players subject to multiple moves, such as being released and then brought back, or signed for a few days and then released.  It is clear the last few roster spots are intentionally kept open this week to allow flexibility to bring players in for tryouts or to claim them before another team does.  The table below can help visualize this process.  Players subject to more than one roster move are highlighted in red.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Why did Bill Bilichick cut Tim Tebow?

It is hard for Tebow fans to take an objective view of why the Patriots cut him.  Tim's future has become more of an emotional issue than a rational one for us.  To get through the noise, we must learn to see the decision from Bill Belichick's point of view.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Sprinting

Lately I have been sprinting a lot.  If you are an older athlete, you should be too.

Sprinting, and by sprinting I mean really hard running at 100% of your capacity for short distances, is a great exercise.  Sprinting is an explosive movement that demands max effort; you are generating every ounce of power you can for every step. Sprinting recruits the fast twitch muscle fibers you may not have used since high school sports.  As a maximal effort movement, it stimulates the production of natural hormones that build muscle and burn fat. Just take a look at how olympic sprinters are built.  They do a little weight lifting, but most of that is from sprinting.

In my opinion, sprinting is far superior to distance running for older athletes.  The biggest loss of physical capability due to age after 40 is loss of muscle mass.  Sprinting builds leg muscle, while distance running breaks it down.  Look at world class marathon runners: skinny legs, spindly calves.  Now look at world class sprinters:  legs like bullfrogs.  I rest my case.

Monday, September 2, 2013

All Hail the ruthless brilliance of Bill Belichick!

Bill Belichick is an open book.  He will do whatever is in the best interest of his team, without regard to sentiment or appearance.  That's why he is one of the great coaches of his generation and will probably make the NFL Hall of Fame one day.  When Belichick does something, you do not analyze his actions in the context of appearances, agendas, or narratives.  You interpret and predict Bill Belichick solely in terms of how his decisions may benefit the Patriots.

Yet when Tim Tebow was cut on Sunday, some in national sports media immediately interpreted that action in the lens of their own narrative, namely that Tebow stinks so bad he could never be an NFL QB.  According to them, not even Bill Belichick could fix Tebow, and the Patriots had closed the door on him for good.  The media leaped to the conclusion that Tebow might be done in the NFL forever.

Right away I had my suspicions that there might be more to the story.  There were just too many things that didn't add up.  Why would they bring him in for long term development, and then cut him loose before he had the chance to develop?  Why would they install a package of plays for him during training camp if they didn't think they would get return on the time invested?  It just did not make sense for the door to be permanently closed as the media narrative would have it.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Tebow may not be done in New England

All the media have assumed that Tebow getting cut means he is done forever in New England.  I'm not 100% convinced yet.  Possible evidence to the contrary:

1.  Tedy Bruschi said so:
"I could envision a scenario where he [Tebow] is initially cut and not on the 53-man roster, but he comes back at another point down the line. Maybe multiple times ..."

Sunday, August 18, 2013

A Play-by-Play Analysis of Tebow Against the Bucs

This week was another awfully tough week to be a Tim Tebow fan.  His stats from the game were awful, and honestly he looked awful.  However, as Bill Belichick himself pointed out, sometimes what happened is not so obvious unless you understand what was supposed to happen.  With that in mind, I taped the NFL network rebroadcast of the game and watched all of Tim's plays multiple times in slow motion, looking for any glimmer of hope.  Here's what I saw.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

What is Belichick up to with Tebow?

There has been a lot of speculation and consternation about why Bill Belichick signed Tim Tebow.  Fans and detractors of Tebow alike have wondered why he was signed and whether he would make the team.

The answer is simple.  Belichick wants to force opponents to spend time preparing for the Read Option instead of preparing for Tom Brady.

What happened to Tebow on Friday?

Authors caveat: this blog post is written for Tebow fans, by a Tebow fan.  If you don't like Tebow and don't think he belongs in the NFL, then do not bother reading further because it will just annoy you.  If you do find yourself annoyed, please do not contact me to tell me how wrong I am. Neither of us is going to change the other's mind, so best to just save yourself the annoyance. You have been warned. 

The past year has been incredibly frustrating for Tebow fans. If there could be anything worse than being forced to watch a full season of the Jets, it was watching the Jets and not seeing Tebow play. Add to that having to follow the odious New York media, then listening to humiliating pronouncements last spring that Tebow was finished in the NFL. Yeah, it has been a tough 12 months in the wilderness.

Tebow fans were elated when he was picked up by the Patriots. Here was the golden opportunity he never had: to develop in an established system, under a highly respected coaching staff, studying under maybe the greatest QB ever. More than anything, it was the simple knowledge that we could turn on the TV and see him play again, even if only for a few quarters in preseason games. After 12 months of waiting, it would be hard to overstate how primed we were to see him play and how hopeful we were that he would excel.

Our hopefulness made his 2013 debut on Friday night doubly difficult to watch.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Why no team claimed Tebow on waivers

If you are a dedicated Tim Tebow fan, the past few days may have seemed like a never-ending pile of indignities. First, the Jets drafted Geno Smith. Then the Jets released Tebow. Finally, today at 4pm EST Tebow cleared waivers, with no NFL team claiming him.
Tebow clearing waivers seems especially perplexing. Why did this happen? Does it really mean that no NFL team wants him at all? Ever?
No. His price on waivers was simply too high.

Monday, April 29, 2013

A quick primer on Tebow and the waiver system

If you are a Tim Tebow fan like me, you are scouring the internet for signs of his next destination. If you want to fully understand the process as it unfolds, you need to know how the NFL's rules for released players apply to him.
Because Tebow has less than 4 years in the NFL, he is not classified as a veteran under the NFL Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). Therefore, he did not become a free agent immediately when released by the Jets. First, he must go through the waivers process. Here's how that works:

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Cutting Tebow before the Draft would be stupid

The latest Tebow-hater theme is how dumb the Jets are for hoping to trade him. Obviously no team would ever give up anything of value for Tebow, so the Jets should just cut him now and be done with it. So the thinking goes.
I'm not sure how many of these people actually believe that, and how many are just taking another cheap and easy shot at Tebow. Heaping scorn and derision on various targets is apparently a major pastime of the Twitterverse and Blogosphere. For example, there are apparently whole online communities devoted to hating Anne Hathaway. Go figure.
However, in the case of Tebow, even national sportswriters have picked up this theme. For that reason, it is worth demonstrating exactly how facile their argument is.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Seahawks to join the "Nuclear Option"

Previously I wrote about The Nuclear Option.  To recap, that rather than accepting a backup job, Tebow should sit out the pre-season and wait for a team's QB depth chart to collapse during the season.  At that point, desperation to save their jobs might override a GM and HC's aversion to the "distraction" that Tebow allegedly brings with him. Several teams are in danger of finding themselves in that situation, mostly due to inaction during the off-season.
However, I did not expect a team to voluntarily move themselves into that category, and certainly not a team that got within one game of the Superbowl. But that is exactly what the Seahawks have chosen to do by trading away Matt Flynn and failing to obtain a suitable replacement.

Monday, April 1, 2013

The power of sleep

Last week I played three soccer games in 24 hours.  On Saturday night, I played a game of 8v8 on an over-20 league.  On Sunday afternoon, I played two regulation games in a row of 11v11 on a full sized soccer field in an over-25 league.  While both leagues are coed recreational leagues, both are also fairly competitive, with many players having played at the college level.  Everyone plays hard, especially in the 11v11 league.

I am 48 years old.  I have only been playing soccer for 3 years.  After the last game, I was physically exhausted, barely able to drive home, sore everywhere but especially in my lower body.

Yet the next day I felt fine.  I had plenty of energy and little soreness anywhere.  I even went to the gym for a squat workout.

So what happened?  Sleep happened.  I went to bed and slept for 10 hours.  I slept until I woke up and could not go back to sleep.

The Nuclear Option revisited


Last month I proposed that Tim Tebow consider the "Nuclear Option".  The premise of that option is that if Tebow cannot get on a team where he has a fair shot to compete for a starting position, he should decline to sign a contact and start the 2013 regular season as a free agent.  While a wildly risky approach, the reward would be the potential for Tebow to take a starting position once one or more teams' QB depth charts collapse during the regular season.  As a free agent he would be available when desperate teams start looking around for a lifeline, and he could pick where he goes, while he would not be able to take the opportunity if he was entrenched as a backup on another team.

Now that the major roster moves are firming up, let's look and see which teams are most likely to discover their plans suck.  Below are the Top 10 teams in draft order for the upcoming draft, and their likely starting and backup QBs.  All of them are there because of mediocre or poor QB play last year, and all of them hope to improve that play this year.

  1. Kansas City: Smith / Quinn
  2. Jacksonville: Gabbert / Henne
  3. Oakland:  Flynn / Pryor
  4. Philadelphia: Vick / Foles
  5. Detroit: Stafford / Hill
  6. Cleveland: Weeden / Hasselbeck
  7. Arizona: Palmer / Stanton
  8. Buffalo: Kolb / Jackson
  9. New York Jets: Sanchez / Garrard
  10. Tennessee: Locker / Fitzpatrick

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Buying Tebow

Everyone is focusing on whether Tim Tebow will be traded.  But there are several ways for a team to acquire him:

  1. Trade - Starting on March 12, any team can trade with the Jets to obtain Tebow.  They will have to give something of value in return, such as draft picks, other players, or cash.  Tebow keeps his existing contract, unless he later agrees to restructure. Most likely the Jets would take the most lucrative offer and not give Tim any say in where he goes.
  2. Waivers - Because he has less than 4 years in the league, Tebow is not classified as a veteran by  NFL rules.  Therefore, if he is released by the Jets this year, he goes on the NFL waiver wire system. Each team has 48 hours to decide whether to claim him. The claiming team with the lowest standing last year gets him. Tim has no say in which team he goes to. They pay nothing to the Jets, and Tebow keeps his existing contract.  They can release him at any time, at which time he goes back into waivers. 
  3. Free Agency - If nobody claims Tebow on waivers, he becomes a free agent.  Any team can make an offer, and Tim can sign with any team, at any time.  As part of the process the team will negotiate a new contract with Tebow.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Tebow and the Nuclear Option

As NFL teams start to show their hands on their QB plans for 2013, viable paths to a starting job for Tebow are narrowing. The Eagles are keeping Vick, and KC is rumored to have a deal in place for Alex Smith. AZ head coach Bruce Arians recently disparaged the read option and running QBs. The Jags have ruled out Tebow by name. Buffalo appears to be leaning towards a competition between Fitzpatrick and Tarvaris Jackson. Of teams considered to be in need of a new starter, only the Browns are still on the table.
The consensus fallback position for Tebow is backup for an established starter, preferably in a spread option system. While this keeps Tebow in the league as a QB, it may not be the approach most conducive to his goal to be a starting QB.
There are many QBs who can be happy and productive sitting the bench and holding a clipboard for a few million bucks a year. Tebow is not one of them. It will drive him crazy, and history shows it will drive those around him crazy. A year as backup on the Jets nearly wrecked Tebow's career and image. The last thing he needs is another year in a similar situation. Tebow is a warrior and a natural leader, and those qualities do not lend themselves to being a good backup. Competition is like air to Tim, and he will suffocate without it.
Tim's status as a non-veteran constrains his control over where he winds up. Under the terms of the CBA, players with less than 4 seasons in the league do not become free agents when released. They go to the waiver wire instead. The difference is that they do not pick a team; the teams pick them. If more than one team claims a player on waivers, he goes to the team with the lowest standing from the previous season. Only if all teams decline to claim a player does he become a free agent.
There is considerable risk in the waiver process for Tim. He could easily go to a team with no intention of letting him compete at QB. He could go to a team that only wants him as a gadget player, or in the worst case a team could grab him with the intention of forcing him to change positions and become an FB or TE.
Some have suggested the CFL as an option. That would be a terrible mistake. While a few QBs have resurrected their careers in Canada over the years, many more have not. The CFL is not seen as a viable feeder league for the NFL, and even the most successful QBs there usually do not return to the NFL. It would be a step backwards for Tebow, with an uphill battle to return. Were he to struggle at all as a passer in the CFL, it would be fatal to his NFL prospects.
There is one more path Tebow should consider. It carries great risk, but the reward is potentially great as well. In recognition of the danger of blowing up Tim's career if it fails, let's call it the Nuclear Option: Tim Tebow should decline to sign with any team where he cannot compete to start at QB.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Opening Post

The purpose of this blog is to explore and discuss the life of the over-40 competitive athlete. It is dedicated to the spirit of those who refuse to accept the inevitable and age gracefully. If you defiantly force your body to compete with younger athletes when you ought to be watching from the sidelines, this blog is for you. We will cover all topics of interest to the over-40 athlete: training, competition, nutrition, rest and recovery, injuries, psychology, drugs, equipment, and anything else that seems relevant. If you have something you would like to discuss, let me know and I'll write something about it. Even better, send me an article and I'll post it.