The NFL choosing size over skill-set at QB -- whether the player is White, black, Poly or latino -- is going to produce a lot of BUSTS. It's not only Logan Thomas and E.J. Manuel being thrown out there.. it's also Tyler Bray. (And, then, there's the people knocking Matt Barkley's "stature" -- and he was arguably the best college QB last year.)
I'm been following the "internet chatter" for next year's draft for about a month, and if people want to talk about the weak defenses' in the PAC-12, Big 12 and ACC, I'm all for it. Some talking-heads have said that Tyler Bray may be a 1st/2nd rounder by the time his "eligibility is up".. I'm all for that angle of discussion, but don't tell me he's going to be NFL-ready after THIS, his JUNIOR year. We've seen guys like Erik Ainge put up pretty nice numbers at Tennessee, but it didn't translate to the NFL. QBing in the NFL is NO JOKE. Even if it takes the better defenses' 3 or 4 weeks to gel, that still leaves 3/4 of the (regular) season to seriously harass QBs.
Ultimately, in the AFC, young QBs will get several wins over other young QBs, but, overall, the conference should remain top-heavy with New England, Houston, Baltimore, etc. Cinci will be tested this year, and I don't consider their Draft to be "as good" as the MSM suggests.
In the NFC -- if Jay Cutler, Matthew Stafford, Matt Ryan and Aaron Rodgers remain healthy -- there's going to be a brutal fight for a finite number of playoff spots. The same teams, with established QBs (possibly including Philly), will mostly do well again this year. NY has a tough schedule.
In the recent Draft, RG3 and Russell Wilson went to the NFC. Amongst Logan Thomas, E.J. Manuel and Geno Smith, at least one of them will likely go the NFC (Philly, Tampa, Arizona, San Fran, Dallas) IMO. Geno is being pushed as a guy that'll go no lower than the 2nd round. E.J. Manuel may go in the 2nd or 3rd round.