Author Topic: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?  (Read 1776 times)

G_Thang

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What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« on: December 07, 2010, 05:53:49 AM »
could a minority coach get away with running off the star QB, WR, RB and number 2# DB?  anyway...this boy blunder is finally gone.  tebow???

anyway...it's off to brixton and hackney i go.  i'll see you bitches after xmas.  ::)




Josh McDaniels’ stay in Denver was short. Tim Tebow’s(notes) might be shorter.

The rookie quarterback could get caught up in the ripple effect of the Broncos’ firing of McDaniels, who was let go Monday after less than two full seasons. The Broncos are likely going to try to get off the hook for the remainder of McDaniels’ contract, using the Spygate II incident as justification that McDaniels could be fired for cause.
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Sadly, this was all predictable, and the move calls into question whether team owner Pat Bowlen has a good feel for what should be done next to restore the 3-9 Broncos to competency after their run of 5-17 over the past 22 games. It was only last week that Bowlen first said he wasn’t looking to fire McDaniels, then issued a statement hours later retracting that.

What may be just as predictable is that Tebow’s career may be over before he gets a real chance. Or as one NFC general manager put it recently: “The thing that’s tricky [about firing McDaniels] is what happens with Tebow. This is a league where at least 75 percent of the coaches and personnel people are not Tebow-ites.”
Rookie quarterback Tim Tebow has 12 rushes for 28 yards and three touchdowns.
(Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

Whomever Bowlen turns to next as coach is likely to look at Tebow and say, “Thanks, but no thanks.” McDaniels’ unwillingness to turn to Tebow as this season unraveled will probably be viewed as an indictment on the first-round draft pick.

The bottom line is that Tebow is an acquired taste who needs a coach who believes in him and is willing to work on his throwing motion until it has completely changed. Even then, there are significant questions about Tebow’s accuracy.

Outside of University of Florida coach Urban Meyer, who looks lost these days without Tebow (and Percy Harvin(notes), for that matter), few coaches are invested in Tebow. Of course, some of Tebow’s devout followers will take this as a personal and spiritual affront. Save it, please. This is not about religion, this is about football.

As an athlete, few come close to Tebow’s dedication. He’s the kind of player anyone should appreciate. His work ethic is off the charts. His size and speed are certainly good enough to give him a fighting chance. But Tebow also needed a coach who was willing to work through the flaws, to design an offense around him, not just with any quarterback.

Tebow

   

   [Photos: See more of Broncos rookie QB Tim Tebow]

So far this season Tebow has only been used on occasion as a Wildcat quarterback, primarily running the ball when he has played. He has 12 rushes for 28 yards and three touchdowns and has thrown one pass, completing it for a 3-yard touchdown. None of that is an indication of long-term success.

Worse, the coach who had so many grand visions for Tebow is now gone. McDaniels was the guy who traded up into the first round to get Tebow in April. He was the guy who fell in love with Tebow’s character the first time they met.

Too bad McDaniels was also the guy who didn’t think it through enough when a former employee approached him with the tape of San Francisco’s walk-through practice. Sure, McDaniels didn’t watch the tape, but he also didn’t report the incident to the league. Not smart for a guy who was in New England for Spygate.

Then again, if McDaniels had any foresight, maybe he never would have done a lot of things, like dumping quarterback Jay Cutler(notes), receiver Brandon Marshall(notes), running back Peyton Hillis(notes) and cornerback Alphonso Smith(notes). Maybe he wouldn’t have locked horns with defensive coordinator Mike Nolan so much that Nolan left Denver after one year.

Maybe McDaniels might have thought, “Hey, maybe taking a quarterback like Tebow with a first-round pick isn’t such a good idea when I need players in other spots to play now.”

Hubris was never in short supply for McDaniels. As one NFL assistant coach put it recently: “Josh really believes that he’s the reason Tom Brady(notes) has been such a success. Not that he helped Tom, that he made Tom.”

Never mind that Brady had won two Super Bowls before McDaniels ever coached him. Taking credit for Brady’s success, such as his 50 TD passes in the 2007 season, was just par for the course for McDaniels. Randy Moss(notes)? Wes Welker(notes)? Nah, it was all McDaniels.

“I know [former New England assistant and current Kansas City offensive coordinator] Charlie Weis is cocky,” the assistant coach said, “but Josh makes him look bashful.”

The future looks bleak for Tebow. And the Broncos, too.


 ;D

biff

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2010, 06:59:43 AM »
could a minority coach get away with running off the star QB, WR, RB and number 2# DB?

if they win games, of course


never understood why the broncos took tebow in the first round. as a long term project, maybe a 4th round pick at best.

tendonitis

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #2 on: December 07, 2010, 07:13:00 AM »
Seriously, has there ever been a worse coach than that clown. First thing he does is run off an All Pro QB and wide receiver.
Moves up in the draft to draft a running back as the teams future quarterback.
Then to top it all off he pulls that same shit as the Cheatriots but continues losing. If you're going to cheat dude, at least win a few games.

Clown should never be allowed to coach a high school team.

Tre

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #3 on: December 07, 2010, 07:22:13 AM »

The media is partially to blame, but why are there still highly-paid individuals who think that Tim Tebow should be an NFL QB?  I didn't understand it before the draft, after the draft, or now.  You can't turn someone who's never been a quarterback into an NFL quarterback when they're 23 years old.  If he wants to be a QB or if you want him to be a QB, then he needs to be sent off to 'QB training school' for 3-4 years and then give him a tryout for an actual team.  It's too bad there's no more arena football, as that might be a good training ground for him. 

At 6-3, 245, he should be playing tight end.  (no homo)




Palpatine Q

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #4 on: December 07, 2010, 07:25:14 AM »
The media is partially to blame, but why are there still highly-paid individuals who think that Tim Tebow should be an NFL QB?  I didn't understand it before the draft, after the draft, or now.  You can't turn someone who's never been a quarterback into an NFL quarterback when they're 23 years old.  If he wants to be a QB or if you want him to be a QB, then he needs to be sent off to 'QB training school' for 3-4 years and then give him a tryout for an actual team.  It's too bad there's no more arena football, as that might be a good training ground for him.  

At 6-3, 245, he should be playing tight end.  (no homo)







Tim Tebow never played quarterback..... ??? ::) ???

no one

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #5 on: December 07, 2010, 07:27:57 AM »
The media is partially to blame, but why are there still highly-paid individuals who think that Tim Tebow should be an NFL QB?  I didn't understand it before the draft, after the draft, or now.  You can't turn someone who's never been a quarterback into an NFL quarterback when they're 23 years old.  If he wants to be a QB or if you want him to be a QB, then he needs to be sent off to 'QB training school' for 3-4 years and then give him a tryout for an actual team.  It's too bad there's no more arena football, as that might be a good training ground for him. 

At 6-3, 245, he should be playing tight end.  (no homo)





he was drafted more as a utility weapon that can be used out of the back field. he can throw the ball, run the ball and catch the ball. wasn't drafted solely based on his merits in the pocket as a QB.
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bigkid

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #6 on: December 07, 2010, 08:06:18 AM »
I think he will be a good NFL quaterback. He wasn't gonna get outta the first round either.  Vince Young went top 3.  Tebow is a 1st rounder on potential alone.

Formerly_Owner76

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #7 on: December 07, 2010, 05:38:41 PM »
Tebow will get a new job:



The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: What happens to Tebow after McDaniels’ firing?
« Reply #8 on: December 07, 2010, 05:48:26 PM »
This asshole McDaniels has told other coaches that he made Tom Brady who he is today. What a joke. People have said he is possibly the most cockiest guy on the planet. I hope Denver gets out of paying him the 7 million that owe him.