With the NFL season approaching its midpoint, various sites around the interwebs have started handing out Midseason awards. One race that was particularly intriguing was the Offensive Rookie of the Year award. Clark Judge and Pete Prisco at CBS Sports picked Sam Bradford as their Midseason OROY. Over at Sports Illustrated, Peter King (who picked the Steelers to win the Super Bowl before the season started) named Maurkice Pouncey his Offensive Rookie of the Year.
This sparked some debate on Twitter between us and Will from RamsHerd. We first met Will when he helped us out with our NFC West Draft Preview, dropping some sick knowledge on the Rams on us. Will is a good dude. Hit him up on Twitter if you want to talk about Rams stuff. Chances are, even if you’re some joke like we are most of the time, he’ll talk to you.
After some discussion, we decided to have a cross-blog debate on the topic.
In defense of Mr. Bradford:
As if leading a one-win team back to .500 and shocking respectability wasn’t enough, the numbers say Bradford is quietly having one of the three best years for a rookie quarterback ever. If he performs at the same level over the next 8 games, he will have more TD passes than anyone but Jim Kelly and Peyton Manning. His TD-INT ratio will be better than anyone not named Dan Marino, Marc Bulger or Ben Roethlisberger. And he will have thrown and completed more passes than anyone.
Numbers aside, Bradford stands to be the most impactful draft pick the Rams have had since arriving in St. Louis, perhaps the most impactful since the selection of Eric Dickerson in 1983. (That year he replaced a guy named Wendell Tyler on a 2-7 team, and averaged 113 yards per game and score 18 TDs, leading the Rams on a deep playoff run.)
After signing his $50 million dollar deal, Bradford has done everything right, stabilizing a franchise and giving his young team and coaching staff a rock to lean on. Whether or not he wins the ROY award, there is no one else who could have been a better pick for the Rams. And given our checkered draft history, that is an extremely rare statement.
And now, the rebuttal from our crack team of lawyers.
With both cases presented, we’ll let you be the judge. Who do you think has been the Offensive Rookie of the Year thus far?
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