It was his second best because every other season before 2004 sucked....haha. But seriously, reading about how Sean built the system around his strengths made me look at how a QB succeeds a lot differently. Drew didn't fit what Sean wanted to do because Sean built an offense based on what Drew did in San Diego. He will always build a system based on what one can do and what they excel in. Why do you think we became play-action heavy when we got Jameis and started working the intermediate routes more? Because historically, Winston is better than a good majority of the league in both play action and intermediate passing. Our offense would have looked closer to Drew's prime than it ever has because a lot of people missed that a lot of the elements in that offense fits what Jameis is REALLY good at.
I'm of the belief that Jameis getting hurt killed what we may have done last season but also it took him too long to figure out that Carr really wasn't a good fit for the offense that he had in place and he should have simplified it way earlier in the season. It's less about the motion, as every wants to throw out there, and more on simplifying his reads. With so much emphasis on his "pre-snap reads," they didn't take into account the plays that requires pure progressions. When we pulled back some things, Carr played much better.