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As a passer, I put Stroud right with Burrow and above the other 3. There is just no substitute for throwing an accurate and catchable ball. If we're truly going to run a WCO, then he's the guy. Of course he has to put in the work but he has premium talent.Going back to LZ’s rankings of QBs since the 2020 draft (4 drafts) that @Lucky posted he has Stroud is the 5th rated prospect. Behind Trevor Lawrence, Joe Burrow, Bryce Young and Tua.
It all comes down to coaching, the team putting the tools around him he needs to succeed and (perhaps most importantly) his ability to work his tail off and take that step into the elite tier. He has the physical tools to be elite. He now needs to work to get there.
Get a decent center and the OL is more than capable of holding it's own. However, let's not fool ourselves, it doesn't matter how good the run game is, you're not going to run past Mahomes/Burrow/Allen.Stroud will understand very quickly that the Texans have no Ohio State trio of receivers to put on the field with him. Next, there better be a homerun waiting to happen in regard to the OL....otherwise we'll all get to see how correct the assessment on him, regarding pressure, really was. He'll have a running game to lean on, but the OL will have to open the lanes to make defenses respect the run.
I keep thinking good Matt Ryan but more mobile.
Like tk above, if we can get him an effective TE buddy and stout running game, combined with the QB friendly WCO, he will serve us well.
That's why we got Will Anderson. See if their passer rating goes down with pressure.However, let's not fool ourselves, it doesn't matter how good the run game is, you're not going to run past Mahomes/Burrow/Allen.
I must be pumped about this draft. I never use "we" instead of "the Texans".That's why we got Will Anderson. See if their passer rating goes down with pressure.
Get a decent center and the OL is more than capable of holding it's own. However, let's not fool ourselves, it doesn't matter how good the run game is, you're not going to run past Mahomes/Burrow/Allen.
Get a decent center and the OL is more than capable of holding it's own. However, let's not fool ourselves, it doesn't matter how good the run game is, you're not going to run past Mahomes/Burrow/Allen.
Solid enough to make the playoffs and then immediately wiped off the field. Will need good coaching and supporting cast to do more.
Sneaky accuracy.
He probably ends up somewhere in that 10-20 level. You like him, but don't love him. Serious question on if you give him a second contract, etc... Dak, Cousins, Goff, Jimmy, type guy.
I'd really like to see that article... @Lucky if you could post it again.Going back to LZ’s rankings of QBs since the 2020 draft (4 drafts) that @Lucky posted he has Stroud is the 5th rated prospect. Behind Trevor Lawrence, Joe Burrow, Bryce Young and Tua. He was a five star recruit coming out of high school and starred at a big time college football program. He is a premium prospect at the game’s most important position. We can nitpick all we want if he will be elite. But as a prospect he is more highly rated than several of the elite QBs were coming out (Patrick Mahomes, Aaron Rodgers, Josh Allen, Jalen Hurts).
It all comes down to coaching, the team putting the tools around him he needs to succeed and (perhaps most importantly) his ability to work his tail off and take that step into the elite tier. He has the physical tools to be elite. He now needs to work to get there.
All of the rankings are in this thread.I'd really like to see that article... @Lucky if you could post it again.
Going by NFL.com rankings (Lance Zierlein), here are some pre-draft QB rankings from 2020-2023:
2020
1. Joe Burrow - 7.07
2. Tua Tagovailoa - 6.77
3. Justin Herbert - 6.45
4. Jordan Love - 6.36
5. Jacob Eason - 6.25
6. Jake Fromm - 6.16
7. Jalen Hurts - 6.14
2021
1. Trevor Lawrence - 7.40
2. Zach Wilson - 6.50
3. Trey Lance - 6.47
4. Justin Fields - 6.45
5. Mac Jones - 6.33
7. Davis Mills - 6.14
2022
1. Malik Willis - 6.41
2. Kenny Pickett - 6.40
2. Matt Corral - 6.40
4. Desmond Ridder - 6.36
5. Sam Howell - 6.22
2023
1. Bryce Young - 6.82
2. CJ Stroud - 6.70
3. Anthony Richardson - 6.40
4. Will Levis - 6.34
5. Hendon Hooker - 6.23
Lol, Good Morning Football giving some love for CJ. Female host really making fun of Youngs size. She wouldn’t let it go, lol. Said it doesn’t look good when the guy handing out the hats to the draft picks is taller than Young.
If Stroud can translate that accuracy to the WCO I think he will be great. I also think he’s more mobile than Schaub was.
Throw on the tape and there is zero sneakiness about his accuracy. It's really wild.
That is why I like his TOP END and very much unlikely scenario to be a similar player to Aaron Rodgers. Would take improvement when under pressure, but like Aaron.. Quick release and can make throws that nobody else in this class can.
People talk about arm strength, but it doesn't matter if you can't layer in throws.
The only reason Bryce Young got the Steph Curry name is probably because for the sport he is relatively small.
I would suggest CJ deserved that praise as he his ELITE throws are a different breed and more consistent. He led NCAA by a ton in what was tracked as PERFECT throw percentage over 26%.
He didn't have the best receiving corp in the NCAA last year either.One of the things that stood out to me in the highlights was how open his guys AREN'T. He's throwing into very small windows, but has very few interceptions. Defenders are always just a half second behind.The touch on his passes is great.
I think (hope) that will translate well to the nfl. Looks like he's driven by timing and rhythm. I can see how any defense that gets him off his clock would have way more success. He'll need more protection particularly early in games to get in rhythm.
I said "sneaky accuracy" ,but you're right. It's not a secret. It's his biggest attribute. The better term would be "sneaky arm strength." The ball just always gets there. He doesn't have to Nolan Ryan his throws to do it.
But he had JSN, Olave and Wilson... that's pretty stackedThe top two receivers combined for 20 catches total the previous year (Harrison and Egbuka).
One of the things that stood out to me in the highlights was how open his guys AREN'T. He's throwing into very small windows, but has very few interceptions. Defenders are always just a half second behind.The touch on his passes is great.
I think (hope) that will translate well to the nfl. Looks like he's driven by timing and rhythm. I can see how any defense that gets him off his clock would have way more success. He'll need more protection particularly early in games to get in rhythm.
I said "sneaky accuracy" ,but you're right. It's not a secret. It's his biggest attribute. The better term would be "sneaky arm strength." The ball just always gets there. He doesn't have to Nolan Ryan his throws to do it.
Those labels are highly subjective. But just in general terms, I’ve got good as the floor and great as the ceiling. I’ll say great for purposes of the poll, but it’s a measured great. To say it another way, in 2025 I could see subjective rankings of him being as high as 4th or as low as 15th. It’s hard to envision the guy failing, but as with all human beings…until you see them do it at this level, nothing is 100% assured.
IMO, when compared to the NFL...All college QBs have GREAT BIG windows to throw thru to wide-open WRs with plenty of time to throw. In the NFL he will have tiny little windows to throw thru with a lot less time to throw, and under a lot more pressure.
I'm really not worried about this. This is a very coachable thing. Preparation. Repetition. Whatever they were doing at Ohio probably didn't address his issue for situations. That's what his coaches will help him navigate.Cons: doesn’t handle pressure well. Has an inability to hit open receivers when it’s not his 1st or 2nd read. Doesn’t see backside safeties sometimes which will result in turnovers in the nfl.
The 1st and 2nd read thing is what I feel he did good at. There was a breakdown in tape where he was scanning the whole field before he made a throw.I'm really not worried about this. This is a very coachable thing. Preparation. Repetition. Whatever they were doing at Ohio probably didn't address his issue for situations. That's what his coaches will help him navigate.
You left out Tom Brady!Going back to LZ’s rankings of QBs since the 2020 draft (4 drafts) that @Lucky posted he has Stroud is the 5th rated prospect. Behind Trevor Lawrence, Joe Burrow, Bryce Young and Tua. He was a five star recruit coming out of high school and starred at a big time college football program. He is a premium prospect at the game’s most important position. We can nitpick all we want if he will be elite. But as a prospect he is more highly rated than several of the elite QBs were coming out (Patrick Mahomes, Aaron Rodgers, Josh Allen, Jalen Hurts).
It all comes down to coaching, the team putting the tools around him he needs to succeed and (perhaps most importantly) his ability to work his tail off and take that step into the elite tier. He has the physical tools to be elite. He now needs to work to get there.
CJ had GREAT BIG windows to throw thru to wide-open WRs with plenty of time to throw. In the NFL he will have tiny little windows to throw thru with a lot less time to throw, and under a lot more pressure.