Admitting, or not admitting, rebuilding is strictly a PR matter.
Letting your players know that rebuilding or no, you are expected to win your individual battles or be replaced is the important part. The need to put aside the desire to coast.
If T2 and McCarthy are throwing veterans over the side and benching others that have poor preformances, or refusing to play talent that hadn't been committed to practicing the correct way, and bringing in possible replacements through whatever means during the season (trade, waiver, practice squad) then it would be hard to have a sense of complacency as a player.
No matter whether you spoke the R word or not.
And Woodie, I don't believe anyone is saying that Favre never completed a long pass. But the bomb has never been his best pass, even when he has a single coverage go route on the sidelines. And he has definitely struggled throwing that deep ball in the middle with double coverage.
The Oakland game was a near miracle, not the least of which was how many jump balls Walker, Driver and Ferguson won over the Raider DBs.
And Harvey, I was joking about Ferguson and the deep ball. Just playing off his too frequent habit of breaking of routes with little warning and returning sheepishly to the huddle while the ball sails by.
Letting your players know that rebuilding or no, you are expected to win your individual battles or be replaced is the important part. The need to put aside the desire to coast.
If T2 and McCarthy are throwing veterans over the side and benching others that have poor preformances, or refusing to play talent that hadn't been committed to practicing the correct way, and bringing in possible replacements through whatever means during the season (trade, waiver, practice squad) then it would be hard to have a sense of complacency as a player.
No matter whether you spoke the R word or not.
And Woodie, I don't believe anyone is saying that Favre never completed a long pass. But the bomb has never been his best pass, even when he has a single coverage go route on the sidelines. And he has definitely struggled throwing that deep ball in the middle with double coverage.
The Oakland game was a near miracle, not the least of which was how many jump balls Walker, Driver and Ferguson won over the Raider DBs.
And Harvey, I was joking about Ferguson and the deep ball. Just playing off his too frequent habit of breaking of routes with little warning and returning sheepishly to the huddle while the ball sails by.


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