Process is simply a means to an end. In football, on offense, production is that end goal. Focusing on it doesn't yield nothing. It yields wins.fiestavike wrote:You are correct. I view production as secondary, and process as primary. Focusing on process will yield steady production over time, but focusing on production produces nothing. I guess its a subtle distinction but it seems very clear to me.
I like your painting analogy but it's a bit off-target. Focusing on finishing paintings, doing the work, learning from mistakes, building on what you've done right and wrong is precisely how a painter becomes better. That IS the process. Fussing over the minutiae forever in an effort to produce a masterpiece is a dead end in the earlier stages of an artist's development. An artist gets better by doing. You learn to make good paintings by making bad paintings, by failing and learning from your mistakes. One of the reasons I've been so critical of the way Patterson has been marginalized is because I understand the value of that experience. I'm not talking about taking short cuts with him. That has never been the point. I don't think most of the plays Musgrave used for him were shortcuts. Are screens, end arounds, pitches, etc. shortcuts? Turner was using those plays as part of his "Da Vinci" offense last year.Let's assume every painter wants to produce a painting. But focusing on finishing paintings is likely to produce either no work or lousy work. Focusing on the process is the key to completing good paintings. Taking a short cut to get closer to finishing the painting may achieve the goal of producing a completed piece of work, but it does not produce as nice a piece of work, and it does not build the skills to consistently produce great work.
To carry the above analogy further into our conversation. Musgrave was using Patterson to produce Warhols. Nothing wrong with them, they are popular, they are accessible, they are a finished product, you can win with them. Turner is trying to produce Da Vinci's. The margin for error is smaller, it takes longer, but the finished product is a much higher quality. I don't think you can try to do both at the same time.
The Warhol/Da Vinci analogy is interesting but I don't buy it as it applies to Turner and Musgrave (and let's not forget that Warhol was quite successful, in both an artistic and economic sense). Both coordinators are trying to win football games. They each have a system and I have no doubt they both want their plays executed correctly but if Turner is actually eschewing production and development in search of perfection, he's making a mistake.
I wasn't trying to imply that.I agree that player development is an important part of the "long view". Its really what its all about. I feel like its my whole point. I disagree with you that Patterson isn't being developed, and I also disagree with the implication that Thielen or even Johnson also aren't players worth developing.
This is one of the areas where I feel you seriously misunderstand me. I'm not a football hedonist who favors the quick fix so I can feel happy every Sunday. That's why I was against adding Favre to the team from the start. I'm not in favor of the immediate gratification of production at the cost of everything else. I just have a different view of how to build and develop a winning team.As far as the other point, about utilizing different player's talents in different ways, I have no problem with that, but there still has to be a baseline standard, and I'm just not sure why the people who feel Patterson should have been getting more snaps prefer not to believe that this is the most likely reason he isn't on the field.I do understand rejecting what I'm calling the 'Turner approach' in favor of the 'Musgrave approach'. So for those who simply say, "the standard doesn't matter, its about the best chance to win this sunday, put him on the field," I disagree but I understand the position. If we acknowledge that there should be a standard, and if we assume he's not meeting it, that seems like the end of the issue, despite his great physical talents. This is where I see the divide on the board about Patterson.
I see you as standing with one foot in each camp, saying there should be a standard AND its about the best chance to win this sunday. The easiest way to maintain that position with one foot in each camp seems to be to remain very skeptical about Patterson not meeting said standard, occasionally intimating that perhaps the wrong standard is being used, or even that the coaches perhaps have a grudge against said player (or that the standard should just be production, which is basically just back to the Musgrave approach?). Obviously if one believes there should be a standard, there will be times when the player who gives you the most production still won't be on the field. This seems like the most obvious explanation, the one thats been intimated and confirmed by coaches and media.
I still see this as basically a divide between two schools of thought. The first one is the one that the Vikings have been using for all the years I've been a fan. Get the production, the standard is secondary to the talent, production is king so get the old QB who can put the best numbers now, etc.
You seem to view playing Patterson as some sort of cheap pursuit of production instead of an effort to achieve a higher goal. That's not how I view it at all. As I said above in regard to painting, an artist improves by doing. I think football players also benefit from doing, from actual playing experience. Musgrave wasn't just using Patterson to "produce Warhols", he was giving him valuable game experience and simultaneously helping the team win by making good use of Patterson's game-breaking ability. I don't think that hurt the Vikings in the short or long term. Patterson's the opposite of the "old QB" you referred to above. He's an extremely talented young player in whom they made a significant draft investment. He offers the upside of being developed into a highly productive core player that can benefit the team for a long time. He's not the short term quick fix of the aging veteran stop-gap, he's a player they literally invested in as a project to be developed. I don't just think he should be on the field to provide quick fix scoring on Sundays, I think he should be out there taking his lumps and learning on the job for the same reason Bridgwater is doing the same. The team traded back into the first round to draft both players to make them a part of their future.
I think they've tried it a number of times. It simply hasn't been successful and frankly, I'm seeing signs that it may not work this time either, although it's too soon to tell.In my view, this is the first time I've ever seen the Vikings try another way, prioritizing the process. I think its going to end with great results and great production.