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Broncos select Siemian at #250!
Probably a combination of both of the above. But congratulations to Trevor, he was a solid player at NU and hopefully can contribute to the Broncos!this is pretty incriminating of the northwestern coaching or the surrounding talent. 7th qb in the draft was arguably not among top 7 college qbs in his own conference
Congratulations to Trevor! Very happy that that pile up @ Purdue didn't end his dreams. Will be fun to track his career.Broncos select Siemian at #250!
I'll be interested to see what Trevor can do with a decent offensive line and receivers who can catch. (What went wrong last year had very little to do with him.) John Elway just tweeted, "Trevor Siemian had a productive career as a quarterback at Northwestern. He has raw talent and we think he will develop nicely." One of only seven QBs drafted this year.
this is pretty incriminating of the northwestern coaching or the surrounding talent. 7th qb in the draft was arguably not among top 7 college qbs in his own conference
So is the characterization of a three-year starter as "raw".
Trevor played in a spread offense his entire college career. My guess is that Elway was referring to his need of refining the drop back passing techniques and learning the pro schemes. Obviously after extensive analysis the Broncs felt his raw ability and mental constitution were worth investing a draft pick.
All this has to say McCall is not a bad qb tutor
This - always stated that TS probably would have put up some big nos. if he had an O-line and receiving corps like what Cook has had w/ MSU, and he probably would have put up bigger nos. at NU if he hadn't been playing on a bum leg for much of the past 2 seasons (which would have allowed him to buy some time for the receivers to get open).
If TS can remain healthy (those ankle/leg injuries seem like fluke injuries but you never know), don't see why he can't be a decent back-up QB in the NFL.
Think TS is just as good, if not better than Orton, Painter, Hoyer and Cousins (with Cook almost all but guaranteed to be drafted, that would be 3 QBs in a row that Dantonio sends to the NFL).
While TS doesn't have a cannon for an arm, he has good enough arm-strength and above-avg. accuracy (despite his completion %) and can make throws that a no. of NFL Qbs can't make consistently (like the back-shoulder pass).
But whether TS sticks as a back-up or gets a shot as a starter (longer odds there) will depend most of all on his ability to read defenses.
TS is definitely going to the right place - having an opportunity to learn from one of the best thinking QBs ever in Manning (and unlike Manning or Brady, TS has a bit more mobility when healthy).
With the amount of interest the Broncos were showing in TS, seemed likely that they would draft him with one of the 3 compensatory picks they had in the 7th rnd.
Can't but help but think that if TS hadn't gotten injured against PU, that he would have improved his draft stock (finally was showing what he could do w/ the offense by buying time w/ his feet) w/ a W against PU and presumably against UI and then a bowl game, or if he hadn't played w/ a bum ankle for much of the past 2 seasons.
There were those here who placed an unfair amount of blame on the O's woes on Siemian or simply didn't think he was a talented QB, but that was just a way too simplistic way of looking at things (there are still those on other NU sites, including the NU Daily, who still think that).
Based on perusing a couple of Broncos boards, seems like their fans aren't expecting much (many thinking TS is just practice fodder), but that's understandable since they're just going by the stats and W-L record.
If Trevor catches on and has a strong career in the NFL, It makes me worry about the rest of the offense.Comparing TS to Orton and Cousins is a bit of a reach with existing info, IMO. Both of those guys proved themselves over the course of their careers. The jury's out on TS compared to those guys. We'll see how well he does in camp. I wish him a quick recovery from his knee injury and best luck in camp.
The back shoulder pass is just a matter of where you throw to and how accurate you are throwing it. It's really no different than accuracy on other passes.
Maybe people were being unfair judging him when he was injured or the WR's and OL played poorly, but the OL wasn't horrible every game, and he had a hand in several poor plays and losses over his career. The OL is made more of a scapegoat by some people for our losses in some games than they should be.
Fans who think TS is just a camp arm are being silly. Denver wouldn't spend a draft pick on a camp arm that they could get very easily through free agency. Denver is taking TS seriously as a potential future QB.
Interestingly enough, two WRs were also signed as UFAs.....hmmmm......If Trevor catches on and has a strong career in the NFL, It makes me worry about the rest of the offense.
Don't think McCall was here when the Brewer decision was made. Two QB system worked pretty well a couple years ago until both got injured the next year. Thorsen and Alviti are the two of the highest rated Qbs we've ever had coming out of high school and we have a five star looking at us for 2017. Somebody must think McCall is a pretty good qb coach..I think this development damns the coaches more than it highlights any brilliance upon their part. The age old question returns - what the hell were we doing playing him behind Colter in the first place?
In a perverse and twisted way, I feel some level of vindication on Trevor, though like others I gave up on him after some very mediocre outings - at least until his injuries became a matter of public record. I was one of more than several who had projected brilliance for Trevor, and could never understand why we had an NFL WR (at least on a practice squad) playing ahead of him. They say it was because of our offense. If so, then McCall and the staff are idiots. You don't stick with our offense irrespective to personnel. You modify the offense to fit the personnel. You also don't give snaps away from an NFL draftable QB to someone who obviously can't throw the ball well enough to warrant being looked at as a QB in the league. Imagine what this offense might have been with Siemian playing full time as a QB and an NFL caliber WR in Colter catching the ball. It would be one thing if our O was a prolific as it was under Persa, Basanez, or Kustok with Colter under center. Then it would be hard to argue against the coaches. It wasn't. The defense was the strongest side of the ball during the Colter years.
This together with the decision to play Andrew Brewer over Mike Kafka, and both over CJ Bacher really makes me question the ability of the staff on personnel, particularly at the QB position.
Don't think McCall was here when the Brewer decision was made. Two QB system worked pretty well a couple years ago until both got injured the next year. Thorsen and Alviti are the two of the highest rated Qbs we've ever had coming out of high school and we have a five star looking at us for 2017. Somebody must think McCall is a pretty good qb coach..
In very few instances did TS prove he deserve the job over KC. By any observers standards Trevor's performances were unreliable. You saw it and so did I.The damning was of the staff in general, not McCall, on personnel, especially QB, decisions. (Read it as Fitz).
I think McCall is a pretty good QB coach. He's developed a number of NFL caliber QBs. But, I question the personnel decisions.
But face it, neither Colter or Siemian moved the ball consistently even in the year they combined to lead a team to 10-3 (our defense came up big most of the time). And with Trevor alone it was worse.
I think this development damns the coaches more than it highlights any brilliance upon their part. The age old question returns - what the hell were we doing playing him behind Colter in the first place?
In a perverse and twisted way, I feel some level of vindication on Trevor, though like others I gave up on him after some very mediocre outings - at least until his injuries became a matter of public record. I was one of more than several who had projected brilliance for Trevor, and could never understand why we had an NFL WR (at least on a practice squad) playing ahead of him. They say it was because of our offense. If so, then McCall and the staff are idiots. You don't stick with our offense irrespective to personnel. You modify the offense to fit the personnel. You also don't give snaps away from an NFL draftable QB to someone who obviously can't throw the ball well enough to warrant being looked at as a QB in the league. Imagine what this offense might have been with Siemian playing full time as a QB and an NFL caliber WR in Colter catching the ball. It would be one thing if our O was a prolific as it was under Persa, Basanez, or Kustok with Colter under center. Then it would be hard to argue against the coaches. It wasn't. The defense was the strongest side of the ball during the Colter years.
This together with the decision to play Andrew Brewer over Mike Kafka, and both over CJ Bacher really makes me question the ability of the staff on personnel, particularly at the QB position.
If in fact Trevor makes the Denver roster, how is he not an NFL QB?But I don't think it's right to say that we had an NFL QB on our roster and build arguments on that basis.
If in fact Trevor makes the Denver roster, how is he not an NFL QB?
Per KUSA 9 News -
KUSA-It was the tape, not the stat page, where Northwestern quarterback Trevor Siemian impressed Broncos coach Gary Kubiak.
On the stat page, Siemian threw 18 touchdowns against 20 interceptions in his junior and senior seasons at Northwestern. On tape, Kubiak saw a 6-foot-3, 215-pound quarterback with potential.
"I think I saw something I want to work with," Kubiak said.
"When you look at the film you see pro characteristics," Kubiak said. "He can make the throws, he's very bright. He went to a school where they had a running quarterback (former Cherry Creek star Kane Colter) and him. They played two guys. When he was playing I really liked what I saw. He played in a tough environment – played in Chicago where the wind is blowing everywhere.
"I loved his feet. He's way ahead of the curve."
http://www.9news.com/story/sports/n...nver-broncos-draft-pick-quarterback/26801789/
A mea culpa from Chris Em
http://northwestern.247sports.com/Article/Emma-I-underestimated-Trevor-Siem
He had problems with his ankles for a big part of his time. Hard to get much production under those circumstances. While other areas may have hindered him, (dropped passes and weaker OL) his injuries were the biggest detriment. And it would also seem that McCall would be a pretty fair QB coach as Broncos seemed to like a lot of the way he was coached. Footwork, quick and efficient release, etc. I did think that we did need at least one new coach to shake things up but we will see this year.this is pretty incriminating of the northwestern coaching or the surrounding talent. 7th qb in the draft was arguably not among top 7 college qbs in his own conference
I think this development damns the coaches more than it highlights any brilliance upon their part. The age old question returns - what the hell were we doing playing him behind Colter in the first place?
In a perverse and twisted way, I feel some level of vindication on Trevor, though like others I gave up on him after some very mediocre outings - at least until his injuries became a matter of public record. I was one of more than several who had projected brilliance for Trevor, and could never understand why we had an NFL WR (at least on a practice squad) playing ahead of him. They say it was because of our offense. If so, then McCall and the staff are idiots. You don't stick with our offense irrespective to personnel. You modify the offense to fit the personnel. You also don't give snaps away from an NFL draftable QB to someone who obviously can't throw the ball well enough to warrant being looked at as a QB in the league. Imagine what this offense might have been with Siemian playing full time as a QB and an NFL caliber WR in Colter catching the ball. It would be one thing if our O was a prolific as it was under Persa, Basanez, or Kustok with Colter under center. Then it would be hard to argue against the coaches. It wasn't. The defense was the strongest side of the ball during the Colter years.
This together with the decision to play Andrew Brewer over Mike Kafka, and both over CJ Bacher really makes me question the ability of the staff on personnel, particularly at the QB position.
Pretty easy to take a flyer with a 7th round pick when you have 3 of them. It was a solid way to use one of them. If they had only had one, as most teams did, I would guess they might have tried for him as an UFA. But having a surplus of picks, it was easier to use it to get the UFA they wanted rather than take a chanceThis - always stated that TS probably would have put up some big nos. if he had an O-line and receiving corps like what Cook has had w/ MSU, and he probably would have put up bigger nos. at NU if he hadn't been playing on a bum leg for much of the past 2 seasons (which would have allowed him to buy some time for the receivers to get open).
If TS can remain healthy (those ankle/leg injuries seem like fluke injuries but you never know), don't see why he can't be a decent back-up QB in the NFL.
Think TS is just as good, if not better than Orton, Painter, Hoyer and Cousins (with Cook almost all but guaranteed to be drafted, that would be 3 QBs in a row that Dantonio sends to the NFL).
While TS doesn't have a cannon for an arm, he has good enough arm-strength and above-avg. accuracy (despite his completion %) and can make throws that a no. of NFL Qbs can't make consistently (like the back-shoulder pass).
But whether TS sticks as a back-up or gets a shot as a starter (longer odds there) will depend most of all on his ability to read defenses.
TS is definitely going to the right place - having an opportunity to learn from one of the best thinking QBs ever in Manning (and unlike Manning or Brady, TS has a bit more mobility when healthy).
With the amount of interest the Broncos were showing in TS, seemed likely that they would draft him with one of the 3 compensatory picks they had in the 7th rnd.
Can't but help but think that if TS hadn't gotten injured against PU, that he would have improved his draft stock (finally was showing what he could do w/ the offense by buying time w/ his feet) w/ a W against PU and presumably against UI and then a bowl game, or if he hadn't played w/ a bum ankle for much of the past 2 seasons.
There were those here who placed an unfair amount of blame on the O's woes on Siemian or simply didn't think he was a talented QB, but that was just a way too simplistic way of looking at things (there are still those on other NU sites, including the NU Daily, who still think that).
Based on perusing a couple of Broncos boards, seems like their fans aren't expecting much (many thinking TS is just practice fodder), but that's understandable since they're just going by the stats and W-L record.
The coaches primary job was to give NU the best chance to win and KC added a dimension that TS could not. Playing KC gave us a better chance to win so he played.I think this development damns the coaches more than it highlights any brilliance upon their part. The age old question returns - what the hell were we doing playing him behind Colter in the first place?
In a perverse and twisted way, I feel some level of vindication on Trevor, though like others I gave up on him after some very mediocre outings - at least until his injuries became a matter of public record. I was one of more than several who had projected brilliance for Trevor, and could never understand why we had an NFL WR (at least on a practice squad) playing ahead of him. They say it was because of our offense. If so, then McCall and the staff are idiots. You don't stick with our offense irrespective to personnel. You modify the offense to fit the personnel. You also don't give snaps away from an NFL draftable QB to someone who obviously can't throw the ball well enough to warrant being looked at as a QB in the league. Imagine what this offense might have been with Siemian playing full time as a QB and an NFL caliber WR in Colter catching the ball. It would be one thing if our O was a prolific as it was under Persa, Basanez, or Kustok with Colter under center. Then it would be hard to argue against the coaches. It wasn't. The defense was the strongest side of the ball during the Colter years.
This together with the decision to play Andrew Brewer over Mike Kafka, and both over CJ Bacher really makes me question the ability of the staff on personnel, particularly at the QB position.
Whoosh! You missed my point entirely.
Good, I thought I was losing my mind.......Whoosh, yeah, I missed it too. Can you please elaborate? Trevor was in fact an NFL draftable QB. Which is the point I made, and which I find difficult to dispute. If he makes the Denver roster, then yes, he will be an NFL caliber QB. What was your point exactly then?