OT - Tebow reportedly to sign with the Patriots

Submitted by Erik_in_Dayton on

http://tracking.si.com/2013/06/10/patriots-sign-tim-tebow/?sct=hp_t2_a2&eref=sihp 

I know many people are sick of Tebow news (or just sick with ebola and whatnot), but this seems worth posting to me because it may affect our own Tom Brady.  I don't mean to say that Tebow could take the team from Brady, of course, but he might come in as a wildcat QB at times and make the Pats that much more versatile and hard to prepare for. 

Magnus

June 10th, 2013 at 5:49 PM ^

The Patriots seem to like these multi-dimensional guys, which is why I thought they might draft Denard Robinson. I think this is a good move by the Patriots. And if I were Tebow, I would be open to the idea of playing an H-back type of role. He's near the end of his rope, and he should feel a little bit lucky to catch on with a championship-caliber team.

MI Expat NY

June 10th, 2013 at 5:55 PM ^

The Patriots are far better with Brady taking every snap and not running any wildcat than they would be if Tebow comes in for a few plays.  Can't see this affecting Brady in the least.

93Grad

June 10th, 2013 at 6:00 PM ^

If he wants to ever make any meaningful contributions on the football field he needs to face reality and move to H-back.

Magnus

June 11th, 2013 at 8:14 AM ^

I think people who ask this as a "serious question" aren't open to the idea of a serious answer, because the topic has been discussed to no end The answer is pretty obvious:

He's a good leader. He can run the ball with some effectiveness. He's a positive role model.  He's won games in college and in his only significant playing time in Denver. He sells merchandise. As a second- or third-string quarterback (or an H-back, Wildcat QB, etc.), he offers a lot more versatility and ability than your typical third-stringer or even some second-stringers.

Your reasoning seems to be that he "hasn't exactly been a world beater in the NFL." What backup quarterback in the NFL is a world beater?

GoBlueInNYC

June 11th, 2013 at 8:28 AM ^

"What backup quarterback in the NFL is a world beater?"

This is my point. The poster I responded to said that he "loved" the pick-up. From a strictly football perspective, the Jets cut their 3rd string QB and the Pats picked him up after a frosty free agency response from the rest of the league.

To your other points: being a winner in college doesn't necessarily translate to the NFL, especially if you're a running QB. And his wins in Denver (this we have argued about before) was more a function of kick-ass defense and lights out special teams. Tebow's days in Denver consisted of 3 quarters of offensive incompetence that was overcome in the 4th thanks to the rest of his team keeping the game close (plus a few lucky breaks, a la the Bears' late-game implosion and the Steelers being a walking "Never Forget" banner in the play-offs).

As to his versatility, the Jets tried to use him in various ways with not great results (caveat obviously being the fact that it's the Jets). And Tebow has previously stated that he doesn't want to change positions. Maybe the lack of interest from the rest of the NFL will make him a little more open to the idea. If he switches positions, then he becomes an intriguing question mark. For now, he's a 3rd string QB that makes national headlines when the most incompetent fanchise in the league cuts him.

Magnus

June 11th, 2013 at 8:46 AM ^

But you fail to make an argument for what's NOT to love about it. Why shouldn't a fan of the Patriots love the pickup? You're getting a guy with good qualities to be your third-string QB. Virtually anything he can offer (a trick play here or there, some special teams help, etc.) is a significant step up from what you normally get out of your third-string QB.

You're basically dismissing all of his positive qualities and past achievements in favor of saying "He really sucked for that one year in New York."

Denard Robinson hasn't done jack squat in the NFL, and he was quite honestly a worse college QB than Tebow. If the Patriots - or any other team - had drafted him to be their third-string QB, I'm guessing there would be plenty of people who would have "loved" that pick. Why? Because he's not a starter-quality QB, but he adds a dimension that most third-string quarterbacks don't. If any team signed Tebow as a starter and people "loved" the signing, you might have a point. It's basically a no-risk situation with Brady and Mallett ahead of him.

GoBlueInNYC

June 11th, 2013 at 10:02 AM ^

Fair enough that I'm not addressing why I think it's a bad pick-up, and that's because I don't think it's a net negative. I think it's just not something to get excited about. The Pats basically, by your own description, picked up a guy that will be 3rd at his position and may or may not ever see the field as part of some trick play. That sounds like someone who may not even make the 53 man roster (let's face it, the Pats aren't exactly sentimental when it comes to cutting players).

While I don't think it's bad, I'm honestly wondering if Pats fans are thinking that he'll be a significant contributor in some way (I don't mean that in a snide way, I seriously mean it as a "do you expect him to contribute, if so, how?" question). Which is why I asked the guy who said "I'm a Pats fan and I love it" why. Granted, my post sounded more condescending than I meant it to.

As for Denard, I think you're wrong that non-Michigan fans would be really excited about him being signed as a 3rd string QB (he wasn't signed as a QB, isn't on the Jags roster as a QB, and most Michigan fans knew he shouldn't play QB in the NFL). That's like people being excited about Dennis Dixon. What excitement there is for Denard is in large part due to him playing something other than QB. If Tebow switches to RB or something, then that gets to my original question about if Pats fans think he'll contribute and how.

MichiganManOf1961

June 11th, 2013 at 10:55 AM ^

Yes, but at the same time, I'll give any team I'm a fan of a lot of slack when choosing a third-string QB.  It's like a late-round baseball draft pick, you don't have a great supply of extremely quality QBs, so you might take a risk on potential or a single skill.  The way I look at it is: if the team has to use a third-string QB for any length of time, the season's probably already shot anyways.  I'd rather have a Tebow or Randle El type player who might actually play regularly, than some guy who doesn't move off the pine for 2 years and if he does, be ready for him to go 6/13 for 78 yards and a pick.  I'd rather have Tebow, who even if forced into the same situation, maybe goes 5/13 with two picks, but contributes to the team otherwise.

GoBlueInNYC

June 11th, 2013 at 11:14 AM ^

This exchange has opened my eyes. I have turned into something I hate: I'm that guy (among many) who keeps Tebow in the news because I get in debates about him when really there's no reason to. You and Magnus are both right that as far as 3rd stringers go, he's a more interesting prospect than most.

The fervor over a 3rd stringer is what confused me. But, like I said, it's national news because people like me get in arguments with people like Magnus over it.

LSAClassOf2000

June 10th, 2013 at 6:21 PM ^

CBS Sports has their take here - LINK

"New England is the place where distractions go to die. With Belichick running that team, Tebow likely will sit quietly in the corner and try to be even more milquetoast than usual in interviews. If he's a third- or fourth-string tight end, there won't be much value in interviewing him anyway."

I admittedly laughed out loud at this portion, but it is actually probably true. Of all the teams in the NFL where Tebow might become less of a distraction, the Patriots would perhaps be the most capable at turning him into something resembling "just a guy". After all, he has no hope at being the starting QB (maybe situational....maybe), even though in interviews after his release from the Jets, I believe that he claimed not to be considering a future at other positions. If he has reconsidered that and is open to being a TE or HB, then this has upside for the Patroits.  

Of course, then there is the Onion's take - Patriots Sign New Long Snapper.

Perkis-Size Me

June 10th, 2013 at 6:26 PM ^

If Tebow is open to playing other positions, then this is a good move. The guy's a hard worker and his work ethic is unquestionable. He'll put his head down and learn what he needs to learn. But only under that circumstance would I consider bringing him in. Having him on your team as a QB, even as a wildcat QB, is a media disaster waiting to happen. Something that Pats don't need, or any team for that matter.

The only good thing out of this is that there is no way in hell that Tebow could ever wrestle the job away from Brady. Probably couldn't even take the backup job from Mallett, either.

But finding a way to put Tebow, Hernandez, Gronk, Amendola, and not to mention Brady himself, all on the field simultaneously? Wow, that offense would be lethal.

Perkis-Size Me

June 10th, 2013 at 10:33 PM ^

Do I know for a fact that he'd make a solid contribution as a TE, or a RB or whichever position? No. But judging on his pure athleticism, his drive, and his brute strength, the right coach could find a way to get him on the field and contribute.

I will never trust Tebow throwing the ball, but I do believe he can at least be a contributor on an NFL team, provided he was open to consider learning other positions.

MI Expat NY

June 11th, 2013 at 10:04 AM ^

How many of those carries were handoffs?  How many receptions did he have?  If we're going to take rushing statistics completely out of context, why not throw in his 15 nfl fumbles?  

All I'm saying is for those claiming he is going to be such a weapon, when has he actually demonstrated those skills?  He's demonstrated that he can run from the QB position on scrambles or read-options.  But he's never demonstrated that he can take a handoff, hit the right hole and gain positive yards.  He's never demonstrated that he can run sharp routes and get open.  He has tons of athleticism, there's no doubt about that, and I get bringing him in for a shot in camp to learn/demonstrate those skills.  What I don't get is assuming that he's going to be a valuable weapon.  

Magnus

June 11th, 2013 at 10:21 AM ^

You asked when he has demonstrated non-QB skills. Considering he has basically always been a QB (except, I believe, a few snaps on punt coverage), then the technical answer is "Never" so it's a rhetorical question. From your viewpoint, any runs, passes, or catches he makes after lining up in the QB position are automatically disqualified.

The point is that he can run the ball. He has demonstrated that in college and the NFL. If you choose to disregard relevant examples to answer your question, then you didn't want an answer in the first place.

MI Expat NY

June 11th, 2013 at 11:01 AM ^

Think of it in terms of Denard.  He has obviously shown he can run the ball as a QB and has all the athleticism you could ask for to be a contributor in the NFL.  Yet, he was just a 5th round pick in the draft where teams are more drafting on hope that a guy can contribute not expectation of drafting a weapon.  It's a question of whether Denard can contribute because it's tough to change positions once you're at the NFL level.  I don't see why people are treating Tebow differently, after all Denard is a far better runner (as a QB) than Tebow ever was.  

Tebow's running success as a QB demonstrates athleticism, it doesn't demonstrate the technical skills required to be successful at any other position.  It just doesn't.  Those stats aren't relevant.  It doesn't show how he would run taking a handoff and running between the tackles, let alone how he would be as a receiver or a blocker.  I would think you'd get that.  

Magnus

June 11th, 2013 at 11:56 AM ^

How is Tebow being treated differently?  Most recently, Denard was a 5th round pick and Tebow was a free agent pickup that everyone else passed on. I certainly understand that blocking might be an issue, but Tebow has shown he can run the ball (I don't care about the "he's never taken a handoff" issue because that's a really weak argument) and most quarterbacks have great hands because they're handling the ball and catching the ball every day of their lives. Nobody's arguing that he's an NFL superstar waiting to explode, but he can be a contributor if used properly.

ESNY

June 10th, 2013 at 6:28 PM ^

Don't see it as a wildcat but thinking that maybe Belicheck finally gets through to Tebow that he has zero future as a QB and if he wants to be a good teammate to switch positions which will help his team win

TheLastHarbaugh

June 10th, 2013 at 6:31 PM ^

ESPN is having a collective Tebowgasm, and Skip Bayless has left his physical body, ascending to Sovngarde, where he shall feast forever amongst the heroes of old.

burtcomma

June 10th, 2013 at 7:00 PM ^

Bet it turns into a good deal for both sides....Pats front office and coach have a pretty good track record for acquiring and utilizing talent!

GustaveFerbert

June 10th, 2013 at 8:06 PM ^

I'm going to be perfectly honest here, and this is coming from someone who idolized Trey for a solid 2 years, whose only jersey is a #3, and who ate up everything Trey related for the past 3 or so years... I'm just not that interested in a piece like this right now. There was just so much content during his time here and immediately afterward, from articles projecting his career to articles celebrating his time in uniform to articles looking back at a career well spent at Michigan, and I loved all of it, but for now I've moved on. There will be a time where reading these articles will stop being about raving over how great Trey is, and will transition to being nostalgic about one of the historically greatest wolverines to ever play for Michigan, but it's just not that time yet. It will come, but for now I've moved out of the idolizing phase and have yet to move into the true historical appreciation phase. 

Dustinlo

June 10th, 2013 at 9:07 PM ^

I'm fairly certain that Belicheck will utilize Tebow a little better than Rex Ryan did. Hell, he doesn't have to do much to accomplish that. Another possible weapon is never a bad thing.

Ben from SF

June 10th, 2013 at 9:26 PM ^

Belichick will spend the minicamps teaching Tebow how to block as a H-Back or TE.  If Tebow complains, he will be cut.  The Pats utilize the "no-guarantee" feature of NFL player contracts liberally.

dragonchild

June 11th, 2013 at 8:50 AM ^

If I'm reading Belichick's mind right, he won't teach him anything.  He hasn't got the time, nor does he have the need.

He picked up Tebow after every other team passed on him.  He wasn't going to pick up Tebow until the guy had both gotten the hint that he was unwanted AND had a chip on his shoulder.  Why?  Because then both sides approach camp knowing this is literally Timmeh's last chance to play.  At that point, I imagine the conversation goes like this:

"Are you willing to do anything to see the field?"

"Sure, coach."

"Good.  You're a TE/FB hybrid now; learn to block.  Study fundamentals on YouTube or hire a coach; whatever, I don't care how you do it.  Show up to camp ready to play.  If you don't, you're cut.  See you in X weeks."

I say this, because this is pretty much exactly what he did to Tom Brady when he was a rookie (told him to work on his quickness and forgot about him).  The guy doesn't baby his players.  He treats them like adults and expects them to act like it.  The rest is up to Tebow.

It's the ultimate Moneyball bet -- take a guy with more talent than chances and let him put the pressure on himself to prove everyone wrong.  If he fails, well, the Pats didn't give up much of anything to acquire him.  If he succeeds, they get production for cheap.

WolverineFanatic6

June 10th, 2013 at 9:28 PM ^

Yayyy continuous ESPN coverage of Tebow every day for the next several months. Pencil me stoked.

/s

Shakey Jake

June 11th, 2013 at 8:40 AM ^

Brady can just remind him that his Wolverines whooped his ass in the Crapitol One Bowl game!