1. He averaged 8.6 ypa and was PFF’s highest graded passer on plays in the pocket. But okay.mgscott wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 8:52 am Lamar has already improved as a passer, but he is still no way near an above average passer in the pocket. The Ravens are smartly using his abilities to the fullest and created an offensive scheme to capitalize on his strengths. He will most likely continue to improve as a passer, but will likely never be an elite passer from the pocket. it's not his game. If you want to use drafting another receiver as an argument they will pass more, how do you interpret them drafting another RB? Lastly, with all of the success they had last year with a run-heavy, RPO scheme, why would they try to pass more? Why go away from what is working?
2. These are all ridiculous straw man arguments. Nobody is suggesting that Baltimore will go out there and tell Lamar to stand still. I’m literally just suggesting that he’ll throw the ball forward more times per game than he did last year, and that his current career trajectory suggests he’ll get better at doing so.
3. Again, I don’t know what you’re implying, but I have a hard time linking “drafting a RB” with “the QB will get more carries.” If that’s your take, well, cool.