Very good article with analysis of every 1st round QB in the last 15 years:
CBS Article
Summary stats from CBS article:
Final tally
Over the last 15 years, there have been 46 QBs selected in the first round. Here's the final tally:
GRADE TOTAL PERCENT Home run 7 15% Solid result 3 6% Mixed result 9 19% Incomplete 4 8% Miss 23 50%
I like Penix. He's got potential. My issue is if the Cowboys use their 1st or 2nd round pick to draft Penix, it clearly proves Jerry wanted a costly 4th round pick to trade for Trey Lance last year. Jerry throws so many costly picks away, plus gets rid of talent which goes and performs better elsewhereLikely falls to 24, likely BPA. Taking a QB may be far more important than any other position with the current uncertainty. It gives the front office leverage, and if Dak fails this season, they have a second year blue chipper at the helm, competing with Lance.
Think about when Aikman retired. They were caught with their pants down and were forced to reach in the second for Carter. Right now they at least have Lance to try out if negotiations go bad, but his rookie deal is almost up. You bring in Penix, if he wins the gig, you have 4 years of cheap QB play. It allows you to re-sign Parsons. It gives Lamb an accurate passer, which lessens the wear and tear on his body, as well as opens up the route tree, creating more opportunity to become the best in the league.
Something to consider from Dak's standpoint. If he comes in and performs anywhere close to Dak's level...Longshot, but possible with this player...it would make more sense to go with the young guy. Dak could get Romo'd. How does that affect free agency negotiations the following year? Pretty good incentive to waive that no trade clause, no?
I think Jerry trading for Lance will stop us from drafting a QB this year. I think in Jerry’s mind Trey is the developmental QB so I don’t see us drafting a guy this year because in Jerry’s mind we did “draft” Trey this season with our #4 pick. What sucks is instead of 4 years to develop him we got 2. Last year and this year, unless he signs for backup money. But I like the idea of spending a 4th on a developmental QB.I like Penix. He's got potential. My issue is if the Cowboys use their 1st or 2nd round pick to draft Penix, it clearly proves Jerry wanted a costly 4th round pick to trade for Trey Lance last year. Jerry throws so many costly picks away, plus gets rid of talent which goes and performs better elsewhere
How many of those 'highly drafted' QB's actually won with the team that drafted them? Add to that Mahomes, who was drafted by the Chiefs trading up after a 12-4 play-off season and it seems more relevant the quality of the team that drafts the QB, as it is the abilities of said QB.Could you please provide the details of this "analytics"?
If one examines the Super-Bowl winning QB's in recent history, almost all were very highly drafted, with the exception of Tom Brady.
I've posted the detailed analysis of this on the forum already.
who are the home runs? Mahomes, Allen, Burrows, Luck, Stafford, the rest have up and down years. good, but not home runs.Very good article with analysis of every 1st round QB in the last 15 years:
CBS Article
Summary stats from CBS article:
Final tally
Over the last 15 years, there have been 46 QBs selected in the first round. Here's the final tally:
GRADE TOTAL PERCENT Home run 7 15% Solid result 3 6% Mixed result 9 19% Incomplete 4 8% Miss 23 50%
Ugh!!! I typed "wasted" instead of "wanted" but this stupid spellchecker keeps changing my words!I like Penix. He's got potential. My issue is if the Cowboys use their 1st or 2nd round pick to draft Penix, it clearly proves Jerry wanted a costly 4th round pick to trade for Trey Lance last year. Jerry throws so many costly picks away, plus gets rid of talent which goes and performs better elsewhere
most first-round QB's go to bad teams, that's how they get them. smh.
You are being too kind. Most highly drafted QBs go to dog **** terrible squads run by newly appointed front offices and coaching staffs that are given 2-3 years max to turn vinegar into wine. Then the process begins again with every player drafted in their tenure thrown in the waste bin. People here think it’s because they cannot find the correct QB because that is what the media tells them. It’s because the owners run a dog **** franchise and push the reset button way too often and too soon.
The semantics argument show you aren't serious here.Backs them up in what way? What is the goal of your franchise, to get a pro bowl QB or a successful playoff QB?
Conference Championship game starting QBs based on round drafted since Dak Has been drafted:
2023
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 7th
2022
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 2nd vs 7th
2021
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 2nd
2020
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 6th
2019
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 2nd
2018
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st vs 1st/2nd**
2017
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st/3rd* vs Undrafted
2016
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st vs 1st
The 6ths are of course all Tom Brady. We can go back further and see Ben Roethlisberger, Peyton Manning, Joe Flacco, Aaron Rodgers, Brett Favre, and Donovan Mcnabb each started a slew of CCG’s dating back to 2000. Probability dictates that while it is technically possible to make a conference championship game with a QB taken outside of the first round, it is overwhelmingly more likely get there with a 1st round pick.
The draft isn’t about guarantees, the draft is about probability. Nothing is assured, but you make the best choices possible based on the data of probability. Dallas is fortunate that Dak is as good as he is from the fourth round, but he has spent enough time to prove he is not Tom Brady, and the team is unable to build a team around him in the manner of Brock Purdy.
Arguments in semantics:
(*: 2017 NFCCG was started by third round pick Nick Foles, who is responsible for winning that game and moving on, but the act of participating in that game and getting it at home was by 1st round pick Carson Wentz, who solidified home field advantage and a first round by with his 11-2 record before getting injured. So while yes Foles started the game, the team got to the game due more to the 1st round pick.)
(**: 2018 NFCCG was started by 2nd round pick Drew Brees. Drew, however, was drafted 32nd overall in a season where there were only 31 teams. For intents of this exercise, he would be considered a 1st round pick by today’s draft standards, as is 2023 AFCCG participant Lamar Jackson, who was chosen with the same pick.)
Nice research!Backs them up in what way? What is the goal of your franchise, to get a pro bowl QB or a successful playoff QB?
Conference Championship game starting QBs based on round drafted since Dak Has been drafted:
2023
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 7th
2022
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 2nd vs 7th
2021
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 2nd
2020
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 6th
2019
AFC: 1st vs 1st
NFC: 1st vs 2nd
2018
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st vs 1st/2nd**
2017
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st/3rd* vs Undrafted
2016
AFC: 1st vs 6th
NFC: 1st vs 1st
The 6ths are of course all Tom Brady. We can go back further and see Ben Roethlisberger, Peyton Manning, Joe Flacco, Aaron Rodgers, Brett Favre, and Donovan Mcnabb each started a slew of CCG’s dating back to 2000. Probability dictates that while it is technically possible to make a conference championship game with a QB taken outside of the first round, it is overwhelmingly more likely get there with a 1st round pick.
The draft isn’t about guarantees, the draft is about probability. Nothing is assured, but you make the best choices possible based on the data of probability. Dallas is fortunate that Dak is as good as he is from the fourth round, but he has spent enough time to prove he is not Tom Brady, and the team is unable to build a team around him in the manner of Brock Purdy.
Arguments in semantics:
(*: 2017 NFCCG was started by third round pick Nick Foles, who is responsible for winning that game and moving on, but the act of participating in that game and getting it at home was by 1st round pick Carson Wentz, who solidified home field advantage and a first round by with his 11-2 record before getting injured. So while yes Foles started the game, the team got to the game due more to the 1st round pick.)
(**: 2018 NFCCG was started by 2nd round pick Drew Brees. Drew, however, was drafted 32nd overall in a season where there were only 31 teams. For intents of this exercise, he would be considered a 1st round pick by today’s draft standards, as is 2023 AFCCG participant Lamar Jackson, who was chosen with the same pick.)
Seems like a lot of posters on here wanting Dallas to get off Dak because of costs(or no Super Bowl) are the same ones wanting Dallas to blow a bunch of FRP's looking for a Michael Jordan at QB. Or even use other draft round assets to move up to get one of the highly touted QB's.
Seems like wanting to cut costs in one area to over spend in another to me. Overspend draft assets on a position that very few can meet fan standards/expectations.
The semantics argument show you aren't serious here.
Logic in the dirt.
Brees was taken 32nd by a team that had already chose a non QB in round 1.
He was chosen at 32 because it was the 2nd round.
Wentz is god awful and a bust. He had a good stretch where a very complete Eagles team made the run. He obviously wasn't required for it as Foles finished it off beating Brady.R3 jiourneyman beats Brady??
Was nuts to me too but goes to show it is about complete football teams.
As to history Brett Favre was an R2 QB.
4 of those numbers are Brady, 5 of those are Mahomes.
This just shows you can't find a guy to get there from anywhere without a mini miracle.
Purdy and Hurts have each mad eit twice. Neither are top 5 QBs IMHO. both had/have top 5 teams around them.
If you do not have 1st overall you have a remote chance of landing a regular playoff QB, much less a CCG performer.
If you draft Trevor Lawrence or Justin Herbert, it still doesn't matter if you do not build a very good team around them.
Trevor is a good QB but he has a 20-30 record and a 72 playoff QB Rating.
Justin is a good QB (albeit overrated) but he has a 30-32 record is 0-1 in the playoffs and a 84 QB Rating.
Both of those numbers are WORSE than Dak.
If you move on form Dak you do so because he got too expensive. You do not do so to get better at QB.
Because if as a GM you even pretend to believe that you are complete buffoon.
So you are going to have to a better team with a lesser, cheaper QB and try to win that way.
Yep, Rookie QB's need help: help to settle, help in protection and weapons. Our O-Line in 2016 was immense, oh and we had the rushing champ. We build the O-Line first.You are being too kind. Most highly drafted QBs go to dog **** terrible squads run by newly appointed front offices and coaching staffs that are given 2-3 years max to turn vinegar into wine. Then the process begins again with every player drafted in their tenure thrown in the waste bin. People here think it’s because they cannot find the correct QB because that is what the media tells them. It’s because the owners run a dog **** franchise and push the reset button way too often and too soon.
It will take 3-4 years to figure out if the guy is worth it in many cases. He may not come in and crap the bed right away. Most likely he shows just enough to string you along. Superbowl winning franchise QB's are so extremely rare. Everyone looks at Mahomes and Brady (not a 1st rd guy) and thinks that is what hitting on a QB looks like. The reality is hitting on a 1st round QB looks like Justin Herbert and Josh Allen. Guys who are franchise QB's but haven't won anything more than Dak.Only if you are dumb enough to stay with the experiment and don't actually cut your losses.
So are you you trying to prove that no teams should mathematically ever pick a QB in the first round?Very good article with analysis of every 1st round QB in the last 15 years:
CBS Article
Summary stats from CBS article:
Final tally
Over the last 15 years, there have been 46 QBs selected in the first round. Here's the final tally:
GRADE TOTAL PERCENT Home run 7 15% Solid result 3 6% Mixed result 9 19% Incomplete 4 8% Miss 23 50%