Cam Newton, Bengals would be disastrous

Cerberus

In Dog We Trust
Let's start by saying I'm torn on Cam Newton.

The former Auburn quarterback has a ton of athletic ability that could make him a future Pro Bowler. Yet, after watching Newton this season and talking to people around the league, I'm also convinced he is one of the biggest boom-or-bust candidates of the past few years.

If a hit-or-miss prospect like Newton is drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals, his career probably will go bust. That is why the potential pairing of Newton and the Bengals would be disastrous for both sides.

Last week NFC South blogger Pat Yasinskas explained why the Carolina Panthers should take Newton with the No. 1 overall pick. This week I will explain why Newton and the Bengals, who hold the No. 4 pick, must avoid each other at all costs.

Remember Carson Palmer?

Eight years ago, Palmer was the safest possible pick in the 2003 draft. He had the prototypical size and arm strength and played in a pro-style offense at USC. He was considered a can't-miss prospect, and the Bengals took him No. 1 overall.

The Bengals would have to be patient with Cam Newton as he takes time to develop and acclimate to playing in the NFL.Eight years later, Palmer is a disgruntled, battered quarterback who has never won a playoff game or reached his full potential. The 31-year-old has been "Bengalized" and wants out of Cincinnati, which is why the team is interested in Newton in the first place. Palmer told the Bengals to trade him or he's retiring. He has no intentions of playing another down in Cincinnati.

This year, Palmer joined teammate Chad Ochocinco and former Bengals Corey Dillon and Takeo Spikes as players who all grew tired of the losing. It would be sad to see Newton suffer the same fate in Cincinnati, which hasn't had back-to-back winning seasons in 29 years or won a playoff game in two decades.

The Bengals do not have a strong support system in place to cater to Newton, who is a raw talent and needs time and patience to develop. Cincinnati hired first-year offensive coordinator Jay Gruden from the UFL; he will be learning on the job this season while trying to implement a West Coast offense. It's questionable if Newton can even thrive in that system after playing in a shotgun/spread formation at Auburn. Is Cincinnati's coaching staff creative enough to alter the offense to fit Newton's unique abilities?

Newton also would enter the toxic situation of replacing Palmer. All through training camp, Newton would have to answer Palmer questions, which are distracting and unrelated to his development. In addition, the possibility still lingers of Palmer having a change of heart and wanting his job back, which the Bengals are hoping for. How would Newton handle that?

Fair or unfair, Newton would draw instant comparisons to draft bust Akili Smith in Cincinnati, who was taken No. 3 overall by the Bengals in 1999. Both players transferred from junior colleges to have one productive year in Division I before skyrocketing up the draft boards. Because of this, Bengals fans would be on edge before Newton threw his first NFL pass. Newton is already a lightning rod for controversy and doesn't need the added pressure.

In terms of personnel, the Bengals' offensive line is in shambles, starting tailback Cedric Benson is a free agent and the team is looking to go younger at receiver. Cincinnati's best receiver, Ochocinco, could be trade bait once a new collective bargaining agreement is reached. Pairing two strong personalities like Newton and Ochocinco is probably a bad idea anyway, especially with Newton trying to get his NFL career off the ground.

Another hurdle to Newton’s getting his career started on the right path would be facing the vicious defenses of the Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens a combined four times per year. I've seen Baltimore and Pittsburgh ruin the confidence of many young quarterbacks, and some were never able to recover.

Can you imagine Steelers outside linebacker James Harrison blasting Newton from the blind side next season? Or Ray Lewis coming up the middle, unblocked, to stick his helmet in Newton's chest? Pro Bowl safeties Ed Reed and Troy Polamalu could have field days picking off Newton's passes.

Ask Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy, who went 0-3 against Pittsburgh and Baltimore and threw two touchdowns and eight interceptions last season as a rookie. It's a nightmare for an inexperienced quarterback to play the Steelers and Ravens twice a year. Newton's chances for a long and successful career are much better facing those elite defenses only once every several seasons.

Time will tell whether Newton will be a great NFL quarterback or a draft bust. But for all the reasons above, Cincinnati is the worst possible destination for Newton to ply his trade. He'd be better off in Carolina, Buffalo, Arizona, San Francisco, Washington, Minnesota or just about any team not in southern Ohio.

For the betterment of both sides, Cincinnati, do the right thing.

Pass on Cam Newton.


Cam Newton, Bengals would be disastrous - AFC North Blog - ESPN
 

Coachnorm

Moderator
Newton probably would have done well with a Jeff Fisher/Titans atmosphere, But alas, that can't happen anymore. Fisher did a great job of adapting the O to Steve McNair's unique set of skills during the McNair era at Tennessee.
 

Coachnorm

Moderator
ESPN AFC North blogger James Walker believes QB Andy Dalton's accuracy could make him a second-round target for the Bengals.
 

Sgt John

Sith Lord of T&A
Everyone is looking for the next Tom Brady and hoping for the next Drew Brees. I believe the bulk of this QB class will end up Akili/Alex Smith.
 

Phicinfan

Expert on nothing, opinionated on everything
Administrator
I will say it here. Just my gut feeling, but Ryan Mallett = Aaron Rodgers. He will get drafted late, will learn and will dominate once the chance is given. He is just too good.
 

Phicinfan

Expert on nothing, opinionated on everything
Administrator
Rodgers, if memory serves, wasnt a jackass like Mallet. Im not so sold.

No, he is alot more mobile than Mallett as O pointed out as well, but that isn't the point I was making.

Elway could be considered a jackass couldn't he? He refused to go where drafted. Eli Manning as well. Being a jackass won't keep you from being a great Qb. Ask Favre.
 

Sgt John

Sith Lord of T&A
I dont see Elway or Manning in the same mold as Mallet. They didnt want to play in what they thought were bad situations and they fought it. I have no problem with that, and it worked out well for them both.

Mallet strikes me more as a Leinart waiting to happen.
 

Phicinfan

Expert on nothing, opinionated on everything
Administrator
I dont see Elway or Manning in the same mold as Mallet. They didnt want to play in what they thought were bad situations and they fought it. I have no problem with that, and it worked out well for them both.

Mallet strikes me more as a Leinart waiting to happen.

I spent last night watching the Gruden Qb camps with Locker, Dalton and Mallett. Then i saw the Qb skill contest.

What I got out of it?

Locker is a complete and total waste of a draft pick. I wouldn't even draft him in the 7th. He has NO accuracy, none.

Dalton looks to me to be a project. He isn't a stud, but he has "it." He just wins every where he goes and he busts his butt. He could be a solid "care taker" type Qb for some team.

Mallett has the best Qb talent in this draft bar none. No one can touch him with skill or arm. He may have a 10 cent head, but you can lock him in at night if you need it. I also think he will have a chip on his shoulder that pushes him to throw it in the faces of all the teams that pass him up.
 

Cerberus

In Dog We Trust
I watched that also last night. To me Dalton looked the best of the 3 and was disappointed that Colin wasnt there. Liked the chance i had to see the other players show some stuff and the chance to see them play for the first time.
 

Phicinfan

Expert on nothing, opinionated on everything
Administrator
I watched that also last night. To me Dalton looked the best of the 3 and was disappointed that Colin wasnt there. Liked the chance i had to see the other players show some stuff and the chance to see them play for the first time.

I need to go back and watch the Cam Newton and Blaine Gabbert ones. I hear he lights up Cam on verbage. Not sure what he thought of Gabbert.

for the record though, the best part of the Andy Daulton one was when he was showing video of Cam dancing in the stands...and I think needling Newton on it... :biglaugh:
 

Cerberus

In Dog We Trust
I need to go back and watch the Cam Newton and Blaine Gabbert ones. I hear he lights up Cam on verbage. Not sure what he thought of Gabbert.

for the record though, the best part of the Andy Daulton one was when he was showing video of Cam dancing in the stands...and I think needling Newton on it... :biglaugh:


I don't remember that. And i was sober to, so that could be the problem. I do remember Mallett having trouble throwing the ball down field into the net basket, and missing a WR running down field badly. Dalton was much more accurate. Starting to wonder if we watched the same thing now. LOL
 
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