Wait, what?
He didn't do anything to prove it? How about having the third best season by a rookie QB in NFL history, on a team that won ONE game the year before he arrived? He was not outplayed by Charlie Whitehurst. I was at that game, and he wasn't. Statistically, they were close. Whitehurst was able to manage the game a little more efficiently, but that was it. The Rams' group of practice squad receivers dropped at least six or seven passes that I counted. You said he couldn't "muster up a TD" but you fail to mention the 55-yard strike that he threw to Danario Alexander who let the ball go right through his hands. On that day, Bradford was not the problem. I wonder if some of you guys even watched that game, or just looked at the box score and called it good.
Bradford nearly got his team to the playoffs. Let the NFC West jokes commence, but the bottom line is that he gave that team life. A six-win turnaround in one year attests to that.
And uh, I'd be willing to bet my house that all 32 GM's, if given the choice, would choose Sam Bradford over Tim Tebow. I like Tebow more than Bradford on a "fan" level, and fully believe that he will succeed, but I'm kind of at a loss on how the two could even be compared at this point in their respective careers...
I hate sticking up for a player on a team that I despise, and I'll concede that an 85 overall for Bradford is generous, but it's not over-the-top generous. I'd put him anywhere from an 81 to 85 overall.


That's why I preface my posts with that simple acknowledgement. Our division was dog crap last year; but bro, we're going to have to disagree with the Rams beating awful teams. A rookie QB winning games in the NFL is impressive. It's not like he came to a team that was set in other areas and he just had to manage games. In their wins, Bradford played pretty well. I don't care who you're playing, on any given Sunday you better work your *** off if you want a win.
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