“We remember who Tua was before Tyreek got there.” Is the most aggravating phrase in sports. 1: Mike McDaniel arrived as well, can we add THAT context. The whole offense changed and became competent. 2: Why don’t we “remember who Josh Allen was before Diggs got there.” #FinsUp
@EmmanuelAcho Allen led his team to the playoffs with a bad oline, John Brown as his WR1 and a washed up Frank Gore as RB1 in yr 2. BEFORE Diggs. Tua is in YR4 and hasn’t played a playoff game, hasn’t beaten a team with a winning record in over a yr. WITH Hill, McDaniel & Waddle
@EmmanuelAcho Don't be a hater like Shannon Sharpe, be someone who looks at the positive like @EmmanuelAcho
@EmmanuelAcho Tua had a pretty good year his last year with Brian Flores once Flores got an OC that was good and once the Dolphins drafted Waddle. He coached Tua hard but they did have success and they had a winning record
@EmmanuelAcho Josh Allen was just the QB that made John Brown work as a WR1 before Diggs got there. That’s who Allen was. I don’t think the two are comparable.
@EmmanuelAcho Tua owns josh (who is fraudulent).
We remember who Herbert was with or without Williams, Palmer, Ekeler, Allen, Guyton, Slater, Linsley, Shane Sticken, Joe Lombardi or Kellen Moore. What he has always been. A rare, elite, generational, complete, QBing machine, created by NASA and the most advanced biotech scientists as the final iteration of the perfect QB model. Then was dumped into a dumpster fire environment to gather test results on how a perfect machine would sustain under insurmountable dire conditions.
The other part of this is that it’s not like he went from an average situation to a great one, he was in a horrible situation. He had a defensive minded HC who didn’t believe in him, co-offensive coordinators with a bad scheme and neither of them called the plays, literally only one offensive weapon in rookie Jaylen Waddle, and one of the worst offensive lines the modern era has ever seen (235 pressures allowed in one season despite running an RPO heavy quick hitting offense). He was in a situation before McDaniel/Tyreek that had no chance of success.