Albert Breer: Patriots Shouldn’t Pair Russell Wilson With Rookie QB
On Friday’s edition of Toucher & Hardy, Albert Breer who is the lead content strategist of the MMQB, joined the show and explained how the Patriots may not want pair a rookie QB with Russell Wilson.
Russell Wilson Brings so Much Baggage With Him…
Michael Holley: I am all for Russell Wilson as a bridge guy here. What’s the worst thing? The worst thing is he loses a job, and the kid comes in and and legitimately beats him out. So you move on from Russell Wilson. So what? You’re not paying him that much money?
Albert Breer: Maybe.
Michael Holley: Russell Wilson comes in, he goes nine and eight.
Wallach: And does he have his own own office or is he going to dress in the same locker room.
Michael Holley: You know what? Yeah, you can take over the TB, the vacant tb12 space. Go ahead. I don’t care.
Albert Breer: The problem is, and I really feel this way and I now I am going to tell the Case Keenum story. Felger had no time for it.
Michael Holley: “Bert I don’t want to hear it.”
Albert Breer: But listen like there were teams that like came for Case Keenum at the cut down last year that were willing to trade draft picks for Case Keenum. Now nothing crazy but like a six/seventh round pick that teams were willing to flip to the Texans Case Keenum right.The Texans had depth at quarterback because they had Davis Mills who started games for him behind C.J. Stroud, and Nick Caserio made the conscious decision. No, it is too good for C.J. Stroud to have Case Keenum in that room. We’re going to prioritize his development, and I think C.J. would tell you now that Case was an important part of his rookie year. The reason I tell that story is because the health of the quarterback room is really important, and all you have to do is look right down route one to see that, right? It’s a huge leap of faith that Russell Wilson’s going to be a part of that environment.
Michael Holley: Here’s the problem, here’s the solution I should say, don’t have two quarterbacks. Have three quarterbacks. You said they already had David Davis Mills, C.J. Stroud, and Case Keenum. So you have Russell Wilson, you have a kid, and then you pay somebody who is not really there to play but to be a you know a confidant, some quarterback guru.
Wallach: Who would that be?
Hardy: It’s Brian Hoyer. Talking about bringing in Brian Hoyer.
Albert Breer: Here’s the thing is, I just think Russell brings so much baggage with him. I don’t want to put that in the room. Like I just don’t . Like I’m sorry, to think that he’s suddenly going to turn the corner and be different than who he’s been for the last 12 years is a huge leap of faith. If you’re investing the third pick in a quarterback, you are tying your job security to him. If you’re Jerod Mayo, if you’re Eliot Wolf, if you make the decision to stick there and pick a quarterback at three, you are legitimately tying your career to the guy.
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