Eli is good, but he will never be good enough

Let's address this topic and then move on to what, hopefully, will be a good final seven games.
I have come to believe, firmly, that the New York Giants never should have traded for Eli Manning.
That is not to say Eli is a bad player. He's not. He's an average to above-average NFL quarterback. With the right players around him a team can win.
After four years, though, I have seen enough with Eli to believe he will never justify being the No. 1 pick in the 2004 draft.
By extension, he will never justify the king's ransom then-Giants General Manager Ernie Accorsi paid to get him from the San Diego Chargers.
When Accorsi looked at Eli he had visions of Johnny Unitas, visions that Eli would be the next unforgettable NFL quarterback. So, he gave up the Giants No. 1 pick (4th overall), which was quarterback Philip Rivers, a 2005 first-round pick the Chargers used to select all-world linebacker Shawne Merriman, a 2004 third-round pick (San diego selected kicker Nate Kaeding) and a 2005 fifth-round pick.
The Giants would have been better off to simply draft Roethlisberger with that No. 4 pick, and keep the other draft choices. No guarantee the Giants would have picked them, but how good would Merriman and Kaeding (85% on field goals for his career) look in blue?
A straight up comparison of Roethlisberger and Manning tells you Big Ben is a better player. He has a Super Bowl title, a 63% career completion percentage and a QB rating of 110. Eli has a couple of playoff losses, has never completed 60% and has a career rating of 78.6.
Add to that Roethlisberger's toughness, blue-collar personality and ability to make plays on the move (like that guy the Giants faced Sunday) would suit the Giants well.
None of this is to say that Eli is a bad player. He isn't. I've been in his corner, waiting for the day he turned the corner and became a star. Now, I don't think that day is going to come.
Eli made some marvelous throws Sunday against Dallas, and has had moments in his 3½ seasons where he has looked tremendous.
That's just it, though. They are moments. Many average quarterbacks have 'moments' or streaks if they are around long enough.
If Eli had been a mid- first-round pick, or if Roethlisberger had gone first and Eli was left at No. 4 in 2004 I don't think he would be judged so harshly.
Yet, he lives in the shadow of his brother Peyton, one of the best to ever play. He lives in the shadow of Roethlisberger, who already has what Eli is trying to get.
Thanks to Accorsi, he lives in the shadow of Unitas and a trade he can never justify.
Simply, he's a good quarterback burdened by unrealistic expectations.
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I agree, but
by cjmulrain on Nov 13, 2007 9:33 AM EST 0 recs
Rivers
Now that I've excepted that Eli will never be an elite QB as well, I'm ok with it too. The Giants have a good team and I think they're going in the right direction. We can win with Eli, although I still think that your idea of getting another QB to push him is a good one.
by potroast on
Nov 13, 2007 9:45 AM EST
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Picks
by ETVal on
Nov 13, 2007 10:10 AM EST
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I could be wrong, but I think the Giants drafted
by george cronin on
Nov 13, 2007 2:28 PM EST
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Exactly
by ETVal on
Nov 13, 2007 2:45 PM EST
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this is a fair assesment
by DieEaglesDie on Nov 13, 2007 11:55 AM EST 0 recs
oh please enough...
by bk0831 on Nov 13, 2007 12:03 PM EST 0 recs
All I'm saying
by ETVal on
Nov 13, 2007 12:26 PM EST
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Absolutely, ETVAL
by george cronin on
Nov 13, 2007 2:36 PM EST
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good enough
by potroast on
Nov 13, 2007 4:10 PM EST
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Dave Brown..........
by bk0831 on Nov 13, 2007 4:36 PM EST 0 recs
George Young
by george cronin on
Nov 13, 2007 5:12 PM EST
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Good vs. Above Average
Sure, they could have taken Rivers or R-berger, but it's not like either one of them is Unitas: redux either. Rivers has terrible footwork and an awful release point and R-berger has always been and always will be a caretaker. He's not asked to lift the team on his back. Just to get the first down when Parker and Davenport can't. Who knows how he would be faring in a system that's still run-first, but not nearly to the same extent.
I also think we need to see what happens when he has a completely healthy WR corps, especially when either Steve Smith or Sinorice is healthy enough to show if they can be the speed threat the Giants need.
by GiantTarHeel on Nov 13, 2007 4:39 PM EST 0 recs
Fair points
by ETVal on
Nov 13, 2007 5:02 PM EST
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in time
by johnd134 on Nov 13, 2007 4:49 PM EST 0 recs
hmmm
by SBakerTheTouchdownMaker on
Nov 13, 2007 6:10 PM EST
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Eli: Consolation and Dilemma
There have been quite a few #1 pick QBs and a load of first rounders that never made in in the NFL. Eli doesn't belong to this group.
Dilemma
His salary. Someone suggested bringing in another QB for competition. Fine, but to be viable, the candidate should be worthy of a fairly hefty salary. How much money can you earmark to the QB position? (BTW, haven't the Giants extended Eli's contract?) His salary also seems to preclude unloading him in a trade. Eli seems to be the kind of QB who could go to the SB if surrounded by a bevy of all-pros. But given what he makes, how do you come up with the scratch to sign and keep such guys? Moreover, you have to wonder also how superior players feel about a team mate who isn't himself superior earn so much more than they do. Any solutions?
by george cronin on Nov 13, 2007 4:50 PM EST 0 recs
Justifying the trade
by bk0831 on Nov 13, 2007 4:58 PM EST 0 recs
It wasn't just the draft picks
by george cronin on
Nov 13, 2007 5:14 PM EST
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Eli is above replacement, below average
i like to think he can improve still. i'd like to know how long the organization is planning to stick with him. at what point do you use a high draft on a potential successor? next year? 2-3 years?
by DieEaglesDie on Nov 13, 2007 5:27 PM EST 0 recs
It's a shame
by big blue wrecking crew on Nov 13, 2007 6:56 PM EST 0 recs
Clearly
And it certainly isn't his fault that he shares a last name with one of the best to ever play the game--and it's not his fault either that GM's and the like expected him to be just as good or even better simply because of it.
Go Giants, let's drill the Lions.
by NYinCalifornia on Nov 13, 2007 7:36 PM EST 0 recs
About Accorsi
While looking up that Elway trade (to make sure my facts were straight), I stumbled on the Wikipedia entry for the Rivers-Manning trade, and saw this little gem (gotta love Wikipedia): "Smith submitted his desire for Philip Rivers, the Giants' 2005 1st round pick, and both the Giants' 2004 3rd round pick and 2005 5th round pick. Accorsi initially refused, but after Smith closed talks, Accorsi accepted the offer and the NFL finalized it. However, both teams probably wish they had chosen Ben Roethlisberger. Nice pick Cowher!"
...I thought that was pretty funny.
by cjmulrain on Nov 14, 2007 12:40 AM EST 0 recs
Good point
by george cronin on
Nov 14, 2007 4:08 PM EST
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The draft is always a gamble
My preference, given a high draft pick, would usually be to trade down and get more players, on the basic assumption that one of them will be a star. (throw enough crap against the wall, something will stick)
That said, every so often, you may feel that you have to gamble. Take a big chance for a potential big win. That's what Accorsi did with Eli.
Eli will probably never be an elite QB (although I think many people said the same thing about Phil Simms 4 years into his career) but he can (and probably will) get better.
by NYERinSF on Nov 14, 2007 1:04 AM EST 0 recs
Great point...
by bk0831 on
Nov 14, 2007 10:57 AM EST
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If it helps you to feel comfortable
I agree with those who say they hope Eli can continue to improve, and that one day he'll be "good enough" to get us over the top, even if he's only good enough in a Trent Dilfer kind of way.
The fact is, he's our guy, he's going to be a guy for a while yet, and as such, I have no choice but to root for him.
by Mr Met on Nov 14, 2007 2:25 PM EST 0 recs
Simms....
Eli is definitely good enough to win a Super Bowl. Remember, Phil only won one, he was injured much of the year in 1990. If Jeff Hostedler, who was only a decent backup was good enough to win one, so is Eli.
Just my opinion, but if Eli had started with the Steelers, and averaged about 7-12 passes a game, and Ben came to NY and had to air it up 30-40 times a game he would have never made it.
by giant fan since 57 on Nov 14, 2007 6:35 PM EST 0 recs
Interesting comment
The years the Giants won the SBs, the personnel surrounding the QBs was better than what we have now and the QB position didn't eat up as big a percent of payroll as it does now. A big problem for mgmt is how to pay for the type of superior overall team required to win an SB w/o a superior QB. It's been done. More than once. So, the possibility of an SB win with Eli isn't a pipe dream
by george cronin on
Nov 14, 2007 7:05 PM EST
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Agreed
by ETVal on
Nov 14, 2007 8:32 PM EST
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George...
By the way, I'm not impuning Simms, whom I loved, but rather pointing out that we had plenty of complaints about his consistancy in his first four years.
by giant fan since 57 on Nov 15, 2007 6:28 AM EST 0 recs
One of the things
by george cronin on Nov 15, 2007 6:52 AM EST 0 recs












