Moderator: Andrew

mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.



Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.

Ben-Gal accused of sex with student
10:15 AM
A Cincinnati Ben-Gals cheerleader was indicted Thursday for allegedly having sex with a student when she was a teacher at Dixie Heights High School.


mikemarrs wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.
Exactly.The only player is I have serious doubts about is Alex Smith too.In my opinion i just don't think he is that good.My opinion is if the 49ers had a better QB they just might've made it to the super bowl last year.If the 49ers had a better QB i think they would be so much better.I have seen teams suffer and waste a super bowl talented team due to having a great team but mediocre QB.2008 Tennessee Titans were great but QB Kerry Collins sucked.2009-2010 NY Jets were very good but Mark Sanchez was the weak link at QB.Now you have a great niners team which is only as good as how far Alex Smith can lead them.For instance i think if the niners had a Matthew Stafford or even a guy like Andy Dalton they would be much better.I think this is why the niners went and got another QB Josh Johnson from Tampa Bay because they know Smith is really only gonna get them to a certain level.As soon as Alex Smith play declines in 2012 there will be a QB controversy in S.F. and Josh Johnson will take over at QB.

Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.
Exactly.The only player is I have serious doubts about is Alex Smith too.In my opinion i just don't think he is that good.My opinion is if the 49ers had a better QB they just might've made it to the super bowl last year.If the 49ers had a better QB i think they would be so much better.I have seen teams suffer and waste a super bowl talented team due to having a great team but mediocre QB.2008 Tennessee Titans were great but QB Kerry Collins sucked.2009-2010 NY Jets were very good but Mark Sanchez was the weak link at QB.Now you have a great niners team which is only as good as how far Alex Smith can lead them.For instance i think if the niners had a Matthew Stafford or even a guy like Andy Dalton they would be much better.I think this is why the niners went and got another QB Josh Johnson from Tampa Bay because they know Smith is really only gonna get them to a certain level.As soon as Alex Smith play declines in 2012 there will be a QB controversy in S.F. and Josh Johnson will take over at QB.
I've heard Colin Kaepernick (drafted in 2nd round last year) is the 49ers future hope at QB. They supposedly like him a lot.


Fact Finder wrote:As if the Bengals didn't already have a bad reputation, now our cheerleaders are getting in on the act....jeez!Ben-Gal accused of sex with student
10:15 AM
A Cincinnati Ben-Gals cheerleader was indicted Thursday for allegedly having sex with a student when she was a teacher at Dixie Heights High School.
Here are some pics of Sarah Jones...man, those gals sure look better from the second deck.![]()
http://news.cincinnati.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 801&Ref=PH



YoungJRNY wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.
Exactly.The only player is I have serious doubts about is Alex Smith too.In my opinion i just don't think he is that good.My opinion is if the 49ers had a better QB they just might've made it to the super bowl last year.If the 49ers had a better QB i think they would be so much better.I have seen teams suffer and waste a super bowl talented team due to having a great team but mediocre QB.2008 Tennessee Titans were great but QB Kerry Collins sucked.2009-2010 NY Jets were very good but Mark Sanchez was the weak link at QB.Now you have a great niners team which is only as good as how far Alex Smith can lead them.For instance i think if the niners had a Matthew Stafford or even a guy like Andy Dalton they would be much better.I think this is why the niners went and got another QB Josh Johnson from Tampa Bay because they know Smith is really only gonna get them to a certain level.As soon as Alex Smith play declines in 2012 there will be a QB controversy in S.F. and Josh Johnson will take over at QB.
I've heard Colin Kaepernick (drafted in 2nd round last year) is the 49ers future hope at QB. They supposedly like him a lot.
Just like Charlie Whitehurst was supposed to be the Seahawks future as well when they gave him a ludicrous contract when Pete Carrol came aboard. I don't buy into teams believing into young draftees who haven't proved themselves neither on the field OR practice field, especially what we've seen on how owners and head coach's are willing to do while jerking around QB's that atleast performed decent in their careers (Sanchez, Smith, etc.) I don't think the 9'ers are going to fully build around Kaepernick until he shows more than enough to atleast get on the field and then perform consistently thereafter.



mikemarrs wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.
Exactly.The only player is I have serious doubts about is Alex Smith too.In my opinion i just don't think he is that good.My opinion is if the 49ers had a better QB they just might've made it to the super bowl last year.If the 49ers had a better QB i think they would be so much better.I have seen teams suffer and waste a super bowl talented team due to having a great team but mediocre QB.2008 Tennessee Titans were great but QB Kerry Collins sucked.2009-2010 NY Jets were very good but Mark Sanchez was the weak link at QB.Now you have a great niners team which is only as good as how far Alex Smith can lead them.For instance i think if the niners had a Matthew Stafford or even a guy like Andy Dalton they would be much better.I think this is why the niners went and got another QB Josh Johnson from Tampa Bay because they know Smith is really only gonna get them to a certain level.As soon as Alex Smith play declines in 2012 there will be a QB controversy in S.F. and Josh Johnson will take over at QB.

Jonny B wrote:mikemarrs wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:mikemarrs wrote:The last time Brandon Jacobs saw the 49ers, he watched them walk off the field as losers in the NFC Championship Game.
Now he’ll be trying to help them avoid the same fate this season. Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that the 49ers and Jacobs have agreed to terms on a contract. There are no details about those terms, but it’s a safe bet that it is for less than the $4 million that Jacobs was set to earn with the Giants before they released him earlier this month.
Jacobs gives the Niners backfield another look alongside Frank Gore and Kendall Hunter......
Gore,Jacobs,Hunter pretty good backfield there for the niners.Looks like they want to continue to play very tough defense and grind out yardage on the ground but they also have some good receivers too with Manningham plus Moss joining the team.The niners have done some things to make the offense better and the defense was already good.I would not be shocked to see the niners make it very far again next season.
The 49ers are going "all in" for sure for the short-term. The only problem is I have serious doubts about Alex Smith. But I love their team and philosophy. I think we will see a retrenchment from arena league-esque teams like the Packers and Saints who merely outgun their opponents in this so-called "passer's league." In their place, we'll see teams undoubtedly adhering to the "passer's league mentality," but I think the future successful teams will strike an eventual "balance" between more passing but still having hard-hitting defense and at least some semblance of a running game.
Exactly.The only player is I have serious doubts about is Alex Smith too.In my opinion i just don't think he is that good.My opinion is if the 49ers had a better QB they just might've made it to the super bowl last year.If the 49ers had a better QB i think they would be so much better.I have seen teams suffer and waste a super bowl talented team due to having a great team but mediocre QB.2008 Tennessee Titans were great but QB Kerry Collins sucked.2009-2010 NY Jets were very good but Mark Sanchez was the weak link at QB.Now you have a great niners team which is only as good as how far Alex Smith can lead them.For instance i think if the niners had a Matthew Stafford or even a guy like Andy Dalton they would be much better.I think this is why the niners went and got another QB Josh Johnson from Tampa Bay because they know Smith is really only gonna get them to a certain level.As soon as Alex Smith play declines in 2012 there will be a QB controversy in S.F. and Josh Johnson will take over at QB.
What killed the 49ers last year wasn't Alex Smith, but two special teams gaffes. The 49ers defense was eating Eli Manning for breakfast lunch and dinner all day long before that. What they need is a few more weapons who can catch the ball. In addition, that running game is gonna be even stronger with Brandon Jacobs thrown into the mix. With a running game like that, they'll contend again next year regardless of who's the QB.

Ehwmatt wrote:Everybody will remember those special teams gaffes, but if you watch the game again with an objective eye you can see that Smith completely tightened up in the second half. He was skipping footballs off the ground 3 yards in front of him on screens and short slant routes and just couldn't do ANYTHING. Hard to throw interceptions when the ball isn't even in the air. He just doesn't have the arm. The era of Trent Dilfer-caliber QBs winning the Super Bowl is long over.
I'm pretty sure John (Enigma) is as unimpressed with Smith as I am. John--care to chime in?

tater1977 wrote:New From Depend®: Football Pros Try the New Depend® Real Fit for Men
http://youtu.be/nf94Y8Tk1Bg
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conversationpc wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Everybody will remember those special teams gaffes, but if you watch the game again with an objective eye you can see that Smith completely tightened up in the second half. He was skipping footballs off the ground 3 yards in front of him on screens and short slant routes and just couldn't do ANYTHING. Hard to throw interceptions when the ball isn't even in the air. He just doesn't have the arm. The era of Trent Dilfer-caliber QBs winning the Super Bowl is long over.
I'm pretty sure John (Enigma) is as unimpressed with Smith as I am. John--care to chime in?
I don't think he'll ever be a top-tier QB but he has, other than his 3rd year in the league, improved every single year and was far better last year than the year before. I think he'll play better this year with a chip on his shoulder. That being said, he probably won't be great but I think he can be more than good enough to win a Super Bowl with the 49ers.



mikemarrs wrote:2012 NFL Draft live on NFL Network, beginning on Thurs., April 26 with the first round, continuing on Friday, April 27 for the second and third rounds, and concluding on Sat., April 28....
Well only a few more weeks until the draft.Can't wait


Ehwmatt wrote:Everybody will remember those special teams gaffes, but if you watch the game again with an objective eye you can see that Smith completely tightened up in the second half. He was skipping footballs off the ground 3 yards in front of him on screens and short slant routes and just couldn't do ANYTHING. Hard to throw interceptions when the ball isn't even in the air. He just doesn't have the arm. The era of Trent Dilfer-caliber QBs winning the Super Bowl is long over.
I'm pretty sure John (Enigma) is as unimpressed with Smith as I am. John--care to chime in?

Enigma869 wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Everybody will remember those special teams gaffes, but if you watch the game again with an objective eye you can see that Smith completely tightened up in the second half. He was skipping footballs off the ground 3 yards in front of him on screens and short slant routes and just couldn't do ANYTHING. Hard to throw interceptions when the ball isn't even in the air. He just doesn't have the arm. The era of Trent Dilfer-caliber QBs winning the Super Bowl is long over.
I'm pretty sure John (Enigma) is as unimpressed with Smith as I am. John--care to chime in?
I'm not much of an Alex Smith fan. He won a playoff game that I didn't think he had any shot of winning (and he won that game on his own). That said, he's a JAG (just another guy). 19th in the league in passing yards and 17th in TD passes isn't good enough in a passing league. Running backs have become almost irrelevant in the NFL. Trent Dilfer's situation was a once in a lifetime occurrence. He just happened to be fortunate enough to land on a team with one of the most dominant defenses ever assembled. Hell, the guy was cut the second his team won the Super Bowl, so that should give you some indication how significant the Ravens thought Dilfer's role in that championship was. Smith (and most other QB's) could win a championship with an all-time dominant defense, but I'm not convinced the Niners are quite that good. It's been said that Smith has "improved" with each season. Perhaps. That said, he's never going to be an elite QB that a team should be build around. Also, he didn't really have any other direction to do in, given how much he sucked his first couple of years.
Alex Smith's career could've been far different
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 1MR5HF.DTL
Eric Branch, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, January 19, 2012
In their second NFL seasons, 49ers quarterback Alex Smith had more yards, touchdowns and a higher quarterback rating than did Hall of Famer Troy Aikman.
After their second year in the league, however, circumstances changed dramatically for Smith and Aikman. And their divergent paths involved the same assistant coach.
In Aikman's case, the Cowboys hired Norv Turner as their offensive coordinator in 1991, and the struggling QB began a three-year run with Turner that included three Pro Bowls and two Super Bowl titles. For Smith, who prospered under Turner's guidance in 2006, his career began a steep descent after his offensive coordinator left San Francisco to become the Chargers' head coach.
Five years, three head coaches and five offensive coordinators later, Smith is on the doorstep of the Super Bowl and Aikman, a Fox analyst, will be in the broadcast booth Sunday when the Niners host the Giants in the NFC Championship Game at Candlestick Park.
Thanks to their shared relationship with Turner Aikman knows better than most how Smith's career trajectory could have been far different before 2011.
"Absolutely it could have been," said Aikman, who threw 20 touchdowns, 36 interceptions and had a 7-19 record as a starter in his first two seasons. "Absolutely. I know what Norv does for a quarterback and I know what he meant to my career. ...
"That's a big part of it is having a guy who really understands offense who is able to put you in the right position. Unfortunately for Alex, Norv was just there one season and then he moved on. You know, Brett Favre ran the same offense for 35 years or however long it was. There's something to be said for that."
Aikman noted that Smith's counterpart Sunday, the Giants' Eli Manning, has had far more stability during his eight-year career. Tom Coughlin has been Manning's only head coach. New York's fifth-year offensive coordinator, Kevin Gilbride, was Manning's position coach in his first three seasons.
For Smith, well, it's better late than never. His career has been resurrected thanks to the guidance of head coach Jim Harbaugh, who had a 15-year career as a quarterback in the NFL.
"Norv just understood," Aikman said. "He played (quarterback) in college, but without having played in the pros, he understood what that guy under center was dealing with. That's Jim Harbaugh and how he's been helpful to Alex in that regard. He's a head coach who played the position and knows how difficult the position is with the expectations and challenges."
Aikman expects Smith to continue improving under Harbaugh, noting Smith is only 27. However, he doesn't expect Smith to ever put up gaudy numbers in Harbaugh's offense, which leans heavily on the ground game.
Smith ranked 17th in the NFL in touchdowns (17) this season and 19th in yards (3,144). Aikman can relate. On offenses headlined by running back Emmitt Smith, he did not have a 4,000-yard season and threw for more than 19 touchdowns once in his 12-year career.
Aikman realized early that his career wouldn't be defined by stats, but by Super Bowls. For that reason, his only focus became winning, and he didn't tolerate teammates who didn't share his mind-set. Similarly, Smith has shrugged off questions regarding his so-so stats this season and repeatedly stated his focus is on wins and losses.
Now Smith is two wins away from sharing something else with Aikman besides their relationship with Turner.
"Right now, Alex is realizing the fruits of that; if you win, none of those other things really matter," Aikman said. "Ultimately, you get the credit and the recognition that you deserve when you win. I think at the quarterback position, if you just win, and make that a priority, the rest of it will take care of itself."
Sophomore years
Alex Smith had a better second season in the NFL than Troy Aikman. By his fourth season, however, Aikman led the Cowboys to a 13-3 record and a Super Bowl title. Smith, now in his seventh season, led the 49ers to a 13-3 record and the NFC title game. A look at Year 2 of their respective careers:





slucero wrote:Enigma869 wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Everybody will remember those special teams gaffes, but if you watch the game again with an objective eye you can see that Smith completely tightened up in the second half. He was skipping footballs off the ground 3 yards in front of him on screens and short slant routes and just couldn't do ANYTHING. Hard to throw interceptions when the ball isn't even in the air. He just doesn't have the arm. The era of Trent Dilfer-caliber QBs winning the Super Bowl is long over.
I'm pretty sure John (Enigma) is as unimpressed with Smith as I am. John--care to chime in?
I'm not much of an Alex Smith fan. He won a playoff game that I didn't think he had any shot of winning (and he won that game on his own). That said, he's a JAG (just another guy). 19th in the league in passing yards and 17th in TD passes isn't good enough in a passing league. Running backs have become almost irrelevant in the NFL. Trent Dilfer's situation was a once in a lifetime occurrence. He just happened to be fortunate enough to land on a team with one of the most dominant defenses ever assembled. Hell, the guy was cut the second his team won the Super Bowl, so that should give you some indication how significant the Ravens thought Dilfer's role in that championship was. Smith (and most other QB's) could win a championship with an all-time dominant defense, but I'm not convinced the Niners are quite that good. It's been said that Smith has "improved" with each season. Perhaps. That said, he's never going to be an elite QB that a team should be build around. Also, he didn't really have any other direction to do in, given how much he sucked his first couple of years.
I don't buy that... and neither does Troy Aikman...Alex Smith's career could've been far different
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 1MR5HF.DTL
Eric Branch, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, January 19, 2012
In their second NFL seasons, 49ers quarterback Alex Smith had more yards, touchdowns and a higher quarterback rating than did Hall of Famer Troy Aikman.
After their second year in the league, however, circumstances changed dramatically for Smith and Aikman. And their divergent paths involved the same assistant coach.
In Aikman's case, the Cowboys hired Norv Turner as their offensive coordinator in 1991, and the struggling QB began a three-year run with Turner that included three Pro Bowls and two Super Bowl titles. For Smith, who prospered under Turner's guidance in 2006, his career began a steep descent after his offensive coordinator left San Francisco to become the Chargers' head coach.
Five years, three head coaches and five offensive coordinators later, Smith is on the doorstep of the Super Bowl and Aikman, a Fox analyst, will be in the broadcast booth Sunday when the Niners host the Giants in the NFC Championship Game at Candlestick Park.
Thanks to their shared relationship with Turner Aikman knows better than most how Smith's career trajectory could have been far different before 2011.
"Absolutely it could have been," said Aikman, who threw 20 touchdowns, 36 interceptions and had a 7-19 record as a starter in his first two seasons. "Absolutely. I know what Norv does for a quarterback and I know what he meant to my career. ...
"That's a big part of it is having a guy who really understands offense who is able to put you in the right position. Unfortunately for Alex, Norv was just there one season and then he moved on. You know, Brett Favre ran the same offense for 35 years or however long it was. There's something to be said for that."
Aikman noted that Smith's counterpart Sunday, the Giants' Eli Manning, has had far more stability during his eight-year career. Tom Coughlin has been Manning's only head coach. New York's fifth-year offensive coordinator, Kevin Gilbride, was Manning's position coach in his first three seasons.
For Smith, well, it's better late than never. His career has been resurrected thanks to the guidance of head coach Jim Harbaugh, who had a 15-year career as a quarterback in the NFL.
"Norv just understood," Aikman said. "He played (quarterback) in college, but without having played in the pros, he understood what that guy under center was dealing with. That's Jim Harbaugh and how he's been helpful to Alex in that regard. He's a head coach who played the position and knows how difficult the position is with the expectations and challenges."
Aikman expects Smith to continue improving under Harbaugh, noting Smith is only 27. However, he doesn't expect Smith to ever put up gaudy numbers in Harbaugh's offense, which leans heavily on the ground game.
Smith ranked 17th in the NFL in touchdowns (17) this season and 19th in yards (3,144). Aikman can relate. On offenses headlined by running back Emmitt Smith, he did not have a 4,000-yard season and threw for more than 19 touchdowns once in his 12-year career.
Aikman realized early that his career wouldn't be defined by stats, but by Super Bowls. For that reason, his only focus became winning, and he didn't tolerate teammates who didn't share his mind-set. Similarly, Smith has shrugged off questions regarding his so-so stats this season and repeatedly stated his focus is on wins and losses.
Now Smith is two wins away from sharing something else with Aikman besides their relationship with Turner.
"Right now, Alex is realizing the fruits of that; if you win, none of those other things really matter," Aikman said. "Ultimately, you get the credit and the recognition that you deserve when you win. I think at the quarterback position, if you just win, and make that a priority, the rest of it will take care of itself."
Sophomore years
Alex Smith had a better second season in the NFL than Troy Aikman. By his fourth season, however, Aikman led the Cowboys to a 13-3 record and a Super Bowl title. Smith, now in his seventh season, led the 49ers to a 13-3 record and the NFC title game. A look at Year 2 of their respective careers:

Ehwmatt wrote:I'm not going to read that whole article, but this dopey (to channel John) chart at the bottom of this article draws the exact same kind of comparisons that the hopers and prayers here in Cleveland are drawing to Colt McCoy. I've heard his numbers compared to Aikman, Manning, Brees etc. It's laughable, and not an accurate metric.

mikemarrs wrote:New Seattle Seahawks Uniform....
With the NFL formally unveiling its new line of Nike apparel today, the Seahawks were the team everyone was keeping an eye on, after they promised a “new age” look.
Now we’ve seen what the new-age Seahawks look like: The team’s website has posted a full-scale fashion show of the team’s redesigned gear.
Reactions have been mixed. Packers tight end Jermichael Finley loves them, writing on Twitter, “Seahawks has the best looking Jerseys. THEY ARE SICK!”
But Paul Lukas, the obsessive chronicler of sports uniforms, wrote on the Uni Watch Twitter, “It is SERIOUSLY ugly.

No Surprize wrote:mikemarrs wrote:New Seattle Seahawks Uniform....
With the NFL formally unveiling its new line of Nike apparel today, the Seahawks were the team everyone was keeping an eye on, after they promised a “new age” look.
Now we’ve seen what the new-age Seahawks look like: The team’s website has posted a full-scale fashion show of the team’s redesigned gear.
Reactions have been mixed. Packers tight end Jermichael Finley loves them, writing on Twitter, “Seahawks has the best looking Jerseys. THEY ARE SICK!”
But Paul Lukas, the obsessive chronicler of sports uniforms, wrote on the Uni Watch Twitter, “It is SERIOUSLY ugly.
I'm all for this but Seattle's is the only one even remotely different, wonder why? I was hoping for a big change in the uni's & helmet's of all the teams. After 40 some years of the same, it's time.

slucero wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:I'm not going to read that whole article, but this dopey (to channel John) chart at the bottom of this article draws the exact same kind of comparisons that the hopers and prayers here in Cleveland are drawing to Colt McCoy. I've heard his numbers compared to Aikman, Manning, Brees etc. It's laughable, and not an accurate metric.
So according to you - you know more about being a quarterback in the NFL than Troy Aikman...
Just how many seasons did you play?..... care to show us YOUR credentials?

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