Blue In BC wrote:C'mon. Lulay has some talent and he's started about 16 games. Even AC took about 4 years before he started to look like he good be a keeper.
I'm sure the Bombers would love to have Lulay, so go ahead and trade him to us.
Lulay might still be learning the game but the problems go way deeper than QB for the Lions.
The problems do go deeper than Lulay for sure;. However, Dickenson, Printers esepcially, Buck Pierce, and Jarious Jackson all took their lumps and Lulay has to be expected to take some too...mostly unfair that is. However, Lulay is now stuck in that zone that Buck and Jarious were before him, that Printers was in both times he was here, and that Dickenson got stuck into during most playoffs. The zone is that a quarterback on our Leos can look very ordinary or less when he is mired in an offensive scheme or play calling that is not up to snuff.
We've put too much heat on our quarterbacks...Dickenson held the ball too long, Printers couldn't read a defense, Buck gets hurt too often, Jarious throws long too often, Lulay is not accurate, etc. However, all have been stuck in an offence that made it challening to perform in.
Last night Lulay's frustration finally showed as it has in the past with Dickenson, Printers, and Jackson. For those writing that Lulay has only played in 16 games the fact is that Printers, Pierce, and Jackson all performed better as rookie starters and Lulay has enough experience. Howwever, while I anticipate better games from Lulay in the future, I also do not expect him to get much better overall as long as Chap is running the offence. Quarterbacks in Chap's system tend to become more robotic, less instinctive, and less mobile as time goes on. They also tend to get more frustrated.
For anyone who thnks Reilley is the answer, there is no answer. If Dickenson could not find the answer during most of our playoff encouters, when we had the best offensive talent in the league, no other quarterback is going to be able to perform the magic we hope from him.
"When I went to Catholic high school in Philadelphia, we just had one coach for football and basketball. He took all of us who turned out and had us run through a forest. The ones who ran into the trees were on the football team". (George Raveling)