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If only Adam Snyder had protected Kevin Kolb half as well on the field as he does on Twitter then perhaps none of this would be necessary.

Snyder, who took to social media to defend the quarterback, is proving to us what I think we already knew: Kevin Kolb is a good guy who works his ass off and has his teammates' respect. He's incredibly tough and wants to be out on the field.

The problem is Kevin Kolb is also fragile, and has not played more than nine games in any of his six NFL seasons. You can't be a franchise QB if you can't stay on the field, no matter how talented you are.

Which, even now, we don't really know how talented Kolb is.

At 28 and having been given a nice big contract, the time for Kolb to prove himself on the field has come and gone. The coach who brought him to the team is no longer around, and the general manager who signed him to that big contract is also unemployed.

Back in May of 2011, I wrote that trading for Kolb would be Ken Whisenhunt's ‘defining decision'. If it didn't work, the coach would be out of a job.

Well the coach is out of a job, so does that mean it didn't work?

Not yet. Probably.

Kolb's time in the Valley is not officially up, unless of course he does not restructure his contract. The thinking here is he will, though, because no other team is likely to give him a shot at a starting job this season. Because for all he's done in this league (which isn't much, really), Kolb is still unproven as an NFL quarterback. Snyder brought up Kolb's "potential", and said it's the line's job to let him show it. Without a doubt, improved play on the offensive line will go a long way towards helping Arizona's quarterbacks look better.

But even then, it's fair to wonder what Kolb would look like over a 16-game season. All we have to go off of right now is speculation based off an incredibly small sample size. Last season saw Kolb play well (vs. Seattle, vs. Philadelphia), play alright (@ New England, vs. Miami), and play not so good (@ St. Louis, vs. Buffalo).

Which one is the real Kolb? Is he a combination of the three?

While Snyder clearly disagrees with fans who take shots at Kolb, chances are good they agree in one key area: Everyone wants to see the QB have a chance to prove himself, for better or worse.

Adam Green, Web Content Editor - ArizonaSports.com

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  • Abuse
    AZSPORTFAN wrote...
    Fragile
    Kolb isn't fragile ............ If anything is fragile it's your articles. I wish I had a job to where all I had to do was read everybody elses articles and then copy & paste.
  • Abuse
    theAdamGreen wrote...
    @ AZSPORTFAN
    I'm sorry, who wrote this one already? I'd be happy to give them credit for it.
  • Abuse
    crusaders wrote...
    Fragile?
    Kolb took a ton of hits last year with the pathetic O-Line we started the season with. The second half of the year the line did play better. PLEASE draft good linemen, coach them up right, and the offense will have success.
  • Abuse
    StubbyJ23 wrote...
    Potential and Chances
    I think that's been the presiding theme when speaking of Kolb, he has some potential (shown in flashes) but he's also had the chances to expand upon his own potential and sometimes has not shown what is needed. In 2011 it was the lack of an offseason and 2012 was the lack of O-line play. Kolb was prepared to play to everyone's expectations this past season but did not get the opportunity to play as well because he took nearly half the teams total sacks himself. Give Kolb his final chance in 2013. If he fails to live up to the expectation he can go.
  • Abuse
    BLUWATR wrote...
    HEAD COACH SPEAK
    What would be a good article would be to examine what Arians as said and how that relates to the QBs on the roster. We are going to throw deep. Our RBs are going to catch fewer balls, RBs to run and protect. Now those two statements I don't think help Kolbs case to stay on this team. He has been tagged as a "Westcoast" style QB and when he plays in vertical offense he has struggled.
  • Abuse
    Whatashame wrote...
    Perhaps nobody wrote the article
    but it does not contain a single original thought or new idea. The same concerns and comments and observations have been voiced over and over for well more than a year. Look up hackneyed next time before you decide to start typing.
  • Abuse
    tracerm17 wrote...
    Kolb
    I like Kolb, I think if he's protected he will do well. He took more hits in 6 games than some QB's did all year. However, even if he does well for the Cardinals next year, I can see him getting replaced mid-season by a rookie QB because the coaching staff wants to move forward with their guy.
  • Abuse
    sayswho wrote...
    Why
    is it that teams make stupid decisions when it comes to contracts and then expect the players to restructure them? I don't see teams restructuring contracts to reward players after pro-bowl seasons. Kolb signed in good faith and the team should pay for their folly. It's not like they won't overpay their next free agent with the money they save.
  • Abuse
    theAdamGreen wrote...
    @ Whatashame
    If this article has not been written before isn't it by definition a new thought? Ahh well, sorry if I've offended you, I guess. Thanks for reading anyway.
  • Abuse
    Whatashame wrote...
    About the depth of thought
    I would have anticipated from the author of such a tired piece. Glad to see you are so proud of your "work".
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