
all i'm saying is, put in him a system fit for him over the next 2 years in jacksonville. maybe he isnt a 15-20 yd down field guy, but he can hit the 5-10 yd slants and outs, and screens. on top of that, if the defense is spread, you give him gaps to run and slide (RGIII and TT need to figure this part of the game out.). he'd need a damn good RB, who can run draws and traps and catch 40 balls out the backfield. i'd put money he put jacksonville back on the map. if i was the owner, i'd snap him up for the stadium seats alone. then, put a committee together and get the right offensive coordinator to give him 40-50 plays he can manage a game with.
like i said, denver and ny were not built for him.
what doesn't jacksonville have to loose? they are already a dog franchise. it's a positive acquisition for them, no matter how you look at it.
Denver was built for him, so to speak. The issue was John Elway. He's a quarterback, who wants to see lots of yards and lots of points. Tebow was winning with what we Tampa Bay Bucs fans called "Dungy-ball": Low-scoring, lots of defense, keep it close in the 4th quarter, and pull off key big plays to seal the deal.
As Howie Long put it, Elway could have played it safe, kept Tebow, and have the Broncos be good. Or, he could take a risk with Manning and have a shot at the Broncos being great.
Back to Tebow, he can hit the big ones downfield. We saw that against Pittsburgh, also against Minnesota and Oakland. When Tebow scrambles out of the pocket, he isn't looking to dump it off. He's looking for the home-run play. That's partly why his completion percentage is low.
In that playoff game against Pittsburgh, he was 10 for 21. But, 5 of those 10 completions were for 30 yards or more (30, 40, 51, 58, and 80).