Cam Newton has reportedly been named the Patriots' starter. That makes ten black QBs starting by my ciphering -- Arizona, Baltimore, Carolina, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, LA Chargers, New England, Seattle and Washington. That's close to a third, and that percentage is sure to keep rising in the coming years.
This is what I've been personally railing against during my time here at CF.
Scam being named the started in New England is fine with me as I do not believe the Patriots are going to be contenders this season. He isn't the player he was 5 years ago and he has never made efforts to become a competent pocket passing QB. Lots of overthrows for the Pats receivers this season. I believe Josh Allen, Fitzpatrick and Darnold (primed for a breakout) are all better QBs then Scam.
Idler Arm is just a place holder for the uber talented Justin Herbert. Idler Arm was supposed to be the starting QB the whole year in Cleveland and Mayfield came in and won the job. I won't be surprised to see Herbert starting at some point this season.
Prescott is about as overrated as an average QB can be - partly because he plays for the cowboys and partly because he is partly black. The Dallas Oline is a year older, Elliot is a year older too. Who knows what McCarthy will do in Dallas but Garrett built that team to give Prescott every chance to be a transcendent QB and he failed. With this being a contract year and if Prescott struggles it would be great to see the Red Rifle get in there and give the Cowboys some leverage.
I don't think Haskins will be anything better than Jason Campbell was for them. Campbell was an average QB who was propped up by Joe Gibbs. I wouldn't be surprised to see some decent games out of him early in the season before he gets figured out. He does not seem to be overly intelligent or athletic.
I'll group Baltimore, Houston, Kansas City and Arizona together. Mahomes has proven me wrong and has become one of the great QBs in the game - I don't like the guy but I won't deny that he is a top 5 QB. Watson is a paper tiger to me - lots of look at me rah rah nonsense - Deandre Hopkins made him look alot better then he is IMO. I think Murray in Arizona is the black quarterback I hate the most at this point - he's been treated with kid gloves since he was drafted, had the college offense he played in implemented, had several favorable calls over the course of the season to make him appear better than he is - Jones and Minishew were both better than Murray last year but Murray is the poster child BSPN fantasy football this year because apparently that is all that matters. That leads us to Lamar Jackson - the QB that the media has hyped up to a nauseating degree (probably the most hyped QB since Vick). Jackson is a very talented athlete, I do not think his passing game is going to get much more refined though and as I stated earlier in the thread the Titans masterful gameplan in the playoffs last season illustrated how to stop the Baltimore offense as well as show Jackson as not being able to keep his cool as he lost his composure a few times. This season more games will not go his way plus the inevitable big hits he will start accruing will slowly erode his running ability.
Fragile Teddy in Carolina might not make it through the season. He will be the beneficiary of having the best RB in the game to use as a security blanket but outside of C-Mac the Panthers offensive weapons do not at all compare with the Saints. I dislike pretty much everything Rhule has done at this point - he is one of these younger coaches who is all in on the caste system (Kingsbury, Riley, Heupel all come to mind too). I doubt Bridgewater will be more than a stop gap QB. Brady is going to be playing with a huge chip on his shoulder (I am team Brady - screw BB at this point), Matt Ryan is never the problem in ATL - It's the defense and Drew Brees can still get the ball where it needs to be. Bridgewater is a distant fourth and the Panthers are a young team so Brady, Ryan and Brees should all take advantage of that.
And in Seattle Wilson will continue to roll out and heave the ball downfield to an open receiver yet defensive coordinators never play to that obvious tendency.