Originally posted by Waldo
However, the Packer press does create positive hype. Recent examples are AJ Hawk, Tyrell Sutton and Atari Bigby/Anthony Smith. The Hawk hype was largely from his draft status and rookie year, but it was real. When his big plays declined (even if they declined due to injury and position/scheme change) the hype reverted to its more insidious form, the prophecy of doom.
Same with Sutton. Preseason of all positive yardage and a natural at one cut running. Even a brief stint with the 1s and 2s and everyone is excited. He gets a tryout as a returner and is WAY to slow to make it. That makes him a special teams liability because he can't be a gunner and he isn't going to block somebody. He isn't good enough to unseat Grant or Jackson. Even though every article states he cannot be trusted to block on third down passing, he gets cut and people are surprised. This is the downside of hype, unfulfilled expectations.
Bigby was hyped as the big hitter who has now been injured. The press cannot tell if he is still slowed or if he has had trouble with the scheme change. But Smith knows the defense and has been knocking heads against 2s and 3s. He also had a INT. He clearly was the heir apparent to Bigby if Atari failed to regain his status. But your backup needs to play special teams and Smith was not as good at that as another guy who came available.
The Packer press knows the Packers have struggled with special teams for several years (except 07). But they don't know what would fix that beside firing the coach.
In some ways, if the Packer press spent more time hyping and fluffing starters, they would be disappointed less. But I don't think they do this more or less than Minneapolis or Dallas. I will give you this, each of those cities is likely big enough that there is one outlet that is primarily the team mouthpiece. The Packers may not have that beside Larivee and McCarren.



Comment