You didn't debunk shyt.
It's
my opinion that Brady would struggle vs. Belichick because of Beli's
track record. For you to make it that
1. "
i-i-i-i-it's a slight on Brady" ![childplease :childplease: :childplease:](https://www.thecoli.com/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/childplease.png)
2. it's some sort of LEAP to say Brady would struggle in light of Beli's track record
That's on you. Either you say you don't agree with that opinion or you do. Telling me I shouldn't HAVE that opinion based on Beli's track record or you thinking I'm slighting Brady is pure ASS.
And yes...Peyton calls his
OWN PLAYS
http://www.kansascity.com/2013/11/16/4626608/as-nfl-tries-to-mimic-peyton-manning.html
There was a time quarterbacks — from “Slingin’ Sammy” Baugh in the 1940s, to Johnny Unitas in the 1950s to Joe Namath in the 1960s — called their own plays and controlled the flow of the game. Then coaches took the game from the field generals by sending in plays and leaving it to defenses to win championships.
Not anymore. Not since Manning joined the Indianapolis Colts as the first pick of the 1998 NFL Draft. He has taken the game back to the future.
Manning’s ability to size up defenses in seconds and change and call plays at the line of scrimmage resembles the style of those old-school quarterbacks.
He has revolutionized the way offenses operate by spawning a new generation of quarterbacks, including Super Bowl winners Tom Brady, Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers, who run hurry-up, spread-’em-out, no-huddle offenses that keep defenses on their heels.
“
What Peyton has done is take the quarterback position really back in time,” said his former Indianapolis coach Tony Dungy, now an analyst for NBC.
Manning, in his second season in Denver, will bring the NFL’s most-prolific offense into tonight’s showdown against the unbeaten Chiefs. Denver leads the NFL in scoring and in total yardage, and Manning has thrown a league-most 33 touchdowns.
Dungy attributes Manning’s take-charge attitude, even as a young player, to growing up around the game as a son of former NFL quarterback Archie Manning.
“Because of his dad, he felt like as the quarterback, you’re in charge out there, and the big thing he never wanted to do was run bad plays,” Dungy said. “And so if we had a play call that he knew wasn’t going to work, he didn’t want to run it.
“And the more time he could have at the line of scrimmage, the more time he had to figure out whether the play was going to be good or bad. That was really the genesis of the whole no-huddle situation and the whole no-huddle offense and all the audibling. Not every quarterback coming up through the college ranks is trained that way, thought that way, but that’s what he wanted to do, and he has inspired a generation of quarterbacks who want to study and want to know and want to put their team in the right play.
“That has kind of spawned this whole no-huddle thing that’s gone all the way down to college football now.”
Manning said Tom Moore, his offensive coordinator in Indianapolis, gave him free rein to operate the offense as he saw fit.
You're now going to tell me he isn't coordinating his team's entire offense?
You're going to argue with HIS coaches?
You have debunked NOTHING.