Not always; if you’re talking about a broken bone, it can indeed heal and be stronger than before. Other conditions can linger and and worsen steadily and never ever heal right. Every single doctor that I’ve heard on the subject has said very clearly that, other than arm-strength issues, Manning is at no more risk than any other 36-year-old QB.
Saying that “older players don’t bounce back easily” is very different from saying “He will not be able to take many hits and will be out after 3 or 4 games.” The former is obviously true as a general proposition (even though several guys have played till 40); the latter is a specific prediction with no supporting evidence.
I think it’s probably as simple as that in NY, the GM/coaching staff wanted him, and in Jacksonville, they didn’t. Jacksonville had the potential to be Denver all over, where his every success was met with the roar of the crowd and the look of annoyance on the GM’s face.
Well, the question was why New York would want him. On a good day he sucks less than Sanchez, and this game wasn’t his best. He did score the winning TD in a game where running the ball went nowhere.
This goes back to what is so exciting about the Manning trade. The Broncos’ team is pretty solid. Now they have an MVP QB. Hello, playoffs! (okay, maybe, it is too early to say…)
I think the Jets signed him to get the media and fans, to stoke Rex Ryan’s ego, and because Sanchez is a dissappointment. With an inventive OC (Sparano may fit the bill), Tebow could latch on as a change of pace/red zone QB and share time with Sanchez and it could all work. But making Tebow a starting QB in the NFL for the Jets? I don’t think it will work. Which is nice, because I dislike the JETS and like having them add a bad passing QB.
And we get to the million dollar Tebow question. Can he improve? Can he hit a comp% of 60 and hang on to some of his scrambling ability? Can they figure out what makes Tebow get streaky and keep him there? If you could get him to be ‘on’ all the time, he’d do well.