Did growing up on "Madden" make the progress faster for this new breed of QB's?

Did Growing Up Madden help progress this new breed of QB much faster than expected?

  • Yes - these youngins grew up on Madden certainly helped

    Votes: 36 70.6%
  • No - If this were true, anyone could play QB, fakkit

    Votes: 15 29.4%

  • Total voters
    51
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Wilson, Kaep, Cam, RG3, Johnny Football, hell maybe even AJ McCarron


all these nikkas are doing some BIG shyt really fast in life and besides all the coaching and pee wee games


you cant tell me hours upon hours playing QB in Madden didnt help contribute a focus and understanding of plays. Madden first came out in 1992, a good amount of these dudes were young as fukk and playing Madden each year had to help.


The Madden Babies :salute:
 

iceberg_is_on_fire

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Just imagine if they'd had 2k football to play...



:wow:

Seriously though, coaching at a higher level has started at the pee wee leagues. When I played football as a youngin, I was just required to remember what hold to hit as a RB and on defense, that there are 11 people on the field. Nowadays, kids that are 12 can tell you the differences between the Tampa 2 and the Cover 2. Both based on the 4-3 but will tell you their purposes as well. Sabermetrics has hit the kids too.

































:youngsabo:
 

bsmooth

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Game Changers: How Videogames Trained a Generation of Athletes | Wired Magazine | Wired.com

“These games nowadays are just so technically sound that they’re a learning tool,” says Tim Grunhard, an All-Pro center for the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1990s who now coaches high school football in the Kansas City area, where he encourages his players to use Madden to improve their knowledge of football strategy and tactics. “Back when I was playing football, we didn’t realize what a near or a far formation was, we didn’t really understand what trips meant, we didn’t understand what cover 2, cover 3, and cover zero meant,” Grunhard says, charging through jargon that’s comprehensible only to Madden players and football obsessives.

These days, Grunhard says, high school players have a much deeper understanding of offensive formations and defensive coverages, a development he attributes to their long hours on videogame consoles. “It just seemed to help out,” he says. “The kids understood where the counterplay or power play was going to open up. Or the middle linebacker lining up for a blitz — where the gaps were going to open up.”

No wonder younger quarterbacks are finding more and more success at the college and professional levels. This season, a 19-year-old freshman started for USC, a perennial Pac-10 power. In the NFL, rookie quarterbacks are entering the league and excelling immediately at an unprecedented rate (think of the Steelers’ Ben Roethlisberger, the Falcons’ Matt Ryan, and the Ravens’ Joe Flacco). In decades past, young passers sat on the bench for a year or two while they mastered reading NFL defenses. Now, having learned to differentiate between zone and man-to-man coverage over the course of years on their Xboxes and PlayStations, the rookies are less in need of such apprenticeship.

It’s one thing to suggest that videogames may be making us smarter. It’s another thing altogether to say they might be making us better athletes. But when you add it up, the evidence starts to look pretty overwhelming. At the Pop Warner Super Bowl in 2006, the winning team had 30 offensive plays, which it had learned through Madden. (“I programmed our offense into Madden to help me memorize our plays,” one 11-year-old told Sports Illustrated. “It was easier than homework.”) Dezmon Briscoe, an all-conference wide receiver for the University of Kansas, credited Madden 2009 with teaching him how to read when defenses “roll their coverages” — move their defensive backs to disguise their strategy. Chuck Kyle, a high school coach who has won 10 state championships in football-mad Ohio, has programmed his team USA playbook into Madden and uses it to teach players their assignments. So have coaches at Colorado State, Penn State, and the University of Missouri, among other schools. An offensive lineman for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers used the videogame as a preparation tool for an entire season, scouting his opponents digitally. While even-more-sophisticated software is available for virtual sports training, coaches and players at all levels of football say that Madden‘s off-the-shelf simulation is good enough.
 

Ineedmoney504

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SOHH ICEY N.O.
this true, it brings on knowledge and progression at a much earlier age then they probably would have gotten at that age, which moves them ahead to gain the next lesson

but on the other end of that is if you playing to much u have no time to be athletic and learn how to play from a physical stand point
 

shopthatwrecks

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real life >>> video games..

only so many plays u can run on madden..

a corner lb or end that runs atleast a 4.4 ot 4.6 comin off the line unblocked..only thing a nikka would be able to do is tell if he chewing fieldturf natural grass or synthetic
 
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this isn't an absurd thought,and even if they aren't picking up anything directly related to football, at the least video games are making them (and a whole lot of others) better critical thinkers; which goes a long way at quarterback.
 
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