Mothman wrote:There are certainly potential pitfalls and it would take a strong, assured coach to navigate them.
And a GM/owner that has patience and confidence in the approach to let it play out for several seasons.
It's hard to answer that question. It probably depends on the rookie and the veteran (and the matchup). An immobile veteran journeyman with an adequate arm might fare worse than an athletic rookie with a strong arm but a rookie is only a rookie for one year. A second or third year backup might very well fare better than a seasoned veteran.
Yeah, it's impossible to say for sure but I would say that the veteran is probably the better short-term option (would be interesting if there were stats to verify). Of course, sometimes
neither are the option as we've seen with Dallas' Weeden-Cassel strategy.
I can see why you'd view it that way but I don't see any such assumption involved. I just view it as an effort to be prepared. Remember, we've seen the alternative play out a few times already. If you put all of your eggs in one basket or don't prepare you end up going into an offseason with somebody like Webb as your only QB and you're forced to draft the best QB you think you can get....
... or you go into an offseason with Matt Cassel as your designated starter and frankly, that's not good for anybody.

Indeed.
They wouldn't have to be highly drafted but obviously, the better talent tends to be in on the board in the first two days of the draft. You're looking at a lot of the nightmare scenarios but remember, success stories like Russell Wilson and Tom Brady illustrate the flipside of this coin.
But they represent the
extreme minority. Did you know there hasn't been a 4th rounder who has won a Super Bowl in 30 years? The only notable QB to come out of the fifth or later rounds in the past decade is Tony Romo and...Matt Cassel.
I encourage you to take a look at this, which lends quite a unique look into QB drafting in relation to "success"
https://www.reddit.com/r/nfl/comments/1 ... thats_not/
The Cliff notes (no, not YOUR notes, Cliff):
If You're Drafting a QB That's Not Considered a First Round Talent, Are You Wasting Your Pick?
The average draft pick for a QB that won at least one playoff game during their career since the 1983 draft was 51.78, so middle of the second round. The Median is much lower at 25.
The average draft pick for a QB that has a winning record in the playoffs drops clear down to 14.20, so middle of the first round. The Median is 21.
Edited this section. Thanks to the two brave redditors that pointed out I was smoking crack with my math here The average draft pick for a QB that has won a Superbowl in this time frame is 43.04. I found this particularly interesting, because this number would be much much lower without Tom Brady (6th round pick, # 199), Mark Rypien (6th round, #146) and Brad Johnson (9th round, #246). Still, just looking at the distribution you can tell that it's heavily slanted toward first round picks, and first picks overall in particular. The Median, which helps deal with outliers here, is 14.5.
So What Did We Learn?
Quarterbacks that advance deep into the playoffs and have success there are quarterbacks that scouts believe have a first round grade, particularly ones that teams believe are worth a high draft pick (10th or higher).
Drafting a QB any later than the middle of the second round could easily be considered a waste of a draft pick. Your odds of landing a winner in the 3rd, 4th or 5th round aren't really a ton higher than if you sign undrafted Joe Schmoe from Northeast Southern Grand Rapids Community College to your practice squad and go from there.
You've got like a 1% chance of getting a Tom Brady.
This is obviously not the end-all-be-all but if you're playing the probabilities, you would be advocating for the Vikings to draft a QB in the first two rounds in 2016 and potentially every draft thereafter (or every other?) until they "hit"? How frequently are you advocating for this approach?
For all I know, Heinicke is a legitimate Plan B and the Vikes already have this covered (but I doubt it). To me, it's more about the upside of the prospect than the round in which he's drafted.
And what your expectations are, too. I would be shocked if the Vikings kept Heinicke on the 53 with the thoughts he could realistically compete to start vs. progress to eventually be a solid backup. And as mentioned above, the upside of the prospect is typically tied to draft position.
Sure, but what's worse, missing out on that player or ending up in another draft where they're forced to grab the best QB they can get and then bank on that guy for another 3 years?
They aren't mutually exclusive. IF Plan B quarterback isn't the guy, you've squandered the pick entirely. Of course you could say this for any pick at any position but I think we've seen enough data to suggest that round 2-3 players of other positions "hit" more often than round 2-3 quarterbacks.
I suppose it's a "swing until you hit" mentality but what's the alternative when, sooner or later, you need to hit? It's also about being ready for the worst, Culpepper went down and they had aging Brad Johnson and nobody they could even consider as a legitimate future for the position. Favre retired and... nobody. Ponder flamed out and... nobody.
This also speaks to the bigger question/problem of dearth of overall competent NFL quarterbacks. We're hardly alone in this.
Hey, I understand. As I said, I see the potential pitfalls. I'm just more uncomfortable with the team putting all of their eggs in one basket again and again.
Couldn't the Plan B approach be seen as putting
more eggs in the same basket?
Look at it this way: if the player you commit to as a starter the starting QB doesn't work out (for any reason) it usually leads to difficulties.
The Plan B approach could lead to just as many (if not more) difficulties as much as it could be a success (one may argue that because you're likely not spending a first-round draft pick on a QB when you recently selected one that it's not the best use of that pick). I can see how it has the possibility of working if the second round 1-3 QB is allowed to sit for a couple of seasons while the Plan A quarterback "grows" (or not). Of course this is predicated on the assumption that sitting and watching/learning is more beneficial than "live bullets." I think that's the assumption because of the success of guys like Brady, Rodgers and
maybe Osweiler.