heres the link
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/9044860
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/9044860
Gregg Easterbrook is a senior editor of The New Republic, a contributing editor of The Atlantic Monthly and a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution. His latest book, The Progress Paradox, was released in December, 2003 by Random House. He will contribute his Tuesday Morning Quarterback column to NFL.com readers each week during the NFL season. He will also appear on the NFL Network, providing weekly commentary on NFL Total Access.
Yet many offensive coordinators insist on going pass-wacky when the end zone is near. Why? Self-promotion. The unspoken belief is that passing is a complex, almost magical activity, and thus passing success means the offensive coordinator must be brilliant; while running is just ill-tempered brutes colliding, anybody can call a run in an obvious-run situation.
morich74 said:TMQ is right on the money with this one, mbmonk. From blogspot's "A Goat & Two Pesos":
This Sunday, I watched with growing anger as the Miami Dolphins snatched defeat from the jaws of victory against the defending champion New England Patriots. During the Dolphins' final drive, I was yelling at the television as offensive coordinator Scott Linehan called pass play after pass play, even when the Dolphins reached the Patriots 5-yard line with almost a minute on the clock and two timeouts remaining. The Dolphins had first-round pick Ronnie Brown and ganja-cowboy Ricky Williams in the backfield, and Linehan put the game entirely on the shoulders of Gus Frerotte. Let me say that again: Linehan put all of our eggs in the clang-basket known as Gus Frerotte. Yes, the same Gus Frerotte who, while starting at quarterback for the Redskins in 1997, ended up on the injured list because he decided to head-butt a concrete wall to celebrate a touchdown. Linehan was not calling for Culpepper-to-Moss like he did in his days as Vikings coordinator. He was giving the ball to Gus Frerotte. GUS FREROTTE! The Dolphins had four downs from the Patsies' 5. Even if Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams averaged a meager 1.25 yards per carry, four carries would have resulted in a touchdown. Four ugly passes later, the Dolphins turned the ball over on downs and the game was over. Linehan squandered away the Dolphins' chance to tie the game against the Falcons the week before in similar fashion, calling for a passing play inside the Falcons' 10-yard line that resulted in Gus throwing a perfect strike - to the Falcons. Interception, game over. Does Linehan not learn from his mistakes? Nick Saban, ditch Linehan before it's too late. If you lie down with a dog like Linehan, you'll wake up with puppies -- hideous man-dog puppies destined to end up in some circus freak-show, or bearing Tom Cruise's child.
I do think Linehan may be trying to show off his offense though. Why else would he be so pass happy with Gus Frerotte at quarterback?mbmonk said:First morich74 welcome to the board. Glad to have you :). :welcome:
I just cant agree with his premise of the article. I was questioning that more than the playcalling aspect of the article. His premise to me is laughable. Here it is:
He attributes to throwing on running situations due to the coaches self-centerdness? Really. That is his arguement. He mentions nothing about passing in running situations as a form of suprising the other team and doing something unexpected in order to give yourself a better chance of success. He also fails to mention the NE secondary was in tatters due to injuries. Unlike the front 7 of NE who had Bruscie back as well as Seamor for this game.
But regardless I feel as if the premise is wrong.
shouright said:I do think Linehan may be trying to show off his offense though. Why else would he be so pass happy with Gus Frerotte at quarterback?
morich74 said:TMQ is right on the money with this one, mbmonk. From blogspot's "A Goat & Two Pesos":
This Sunday, I watched with growing anger as the Miami Dolphins snatched defeat from the jaws of victory against the defending champion New England Patriots. During the Dolphins' final drive, I was yelling at the television as offensive coordinator Scott Linehan called pass play after pass play, even when the Dolphins reached the Patriots 5-yard line with almost a minute on the clock and two timeouts remaining. The Dolphins had first-round pick Ronnie Brown and ganja-cowboy Ricky Williams in the backfield, and Linehan put the game entirely on the shoulders of Gus Frerotte. Let me say that again: Linehan put all of our eggs in the clang-basket known as Gus Frerotte. Yes, the same Gus Frerotte who, while starting at quarterback for the Redskins in 1997, ended up on the injured list because he decided to head-butt a concrete wall to celebrate a touchdown. Linehan was not calling for Culpepper-to-Moss like he did in his days as Vikings coordinator. He was giving the ball to Gus Frerotte. GUS FREROTTE! The Dolphins had four downs from the Patsies' 5. Even if Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams averaged a meager 1.25 yards per carry, four carries would have resulted in a touchdown. Four ugly passes later, the Dolphins turned the ball over on downs and the game was over. Linehan squandered away the Dolphins' chance to tie the game against the Falcons the week before in similar fashion, calling for a passing play inside the Falcons' 10-yard line that resulted in Gus throwing a perfect strike - to the Falcons. Interception, game over. Does Linehan not learn from his mistakes? Nick Saban, ditch Linehan before it's too late. If you lie down with a dog like Linehan, you'll wake up with puppies -- hideous man-dog puppies destined to end up in some circus freak-show, or bearing Tom Cruise's child.
shouright said:I do think Linehan may be trying to show off his offense though. Why else would he be so pass happy with Gus Frerotte at quarterback?
mbmonk said:Also the name of his column tells you exactly what it is. 20 - 20 hind site.
Disgustipate said:My only problem with TMQ's assertion is that Tom Moore did a good job by calling a run in short yardage. Edgerin James is quite possibly the worst franchise running back in short yardage. It seems every year he blows at least two big short yardage situations.