Henne and the myth of zone coverage | Page 6 | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Henne and the myth of zone coverage

Good thread/debate. I think teams watched our tendencies on tape and knowing how Henning like to do things and knowing we lacked explosiveness in the running game and at TE, started undercutting routes while daring us to go deep (with no speed at WR). Was it Henne or was he doing WTF he was told to do? Remember how they beat on him to get rid of the ball or dump it off early in TC and the season, only to want him to hold it and go down field later on in the year. Also remember the lack of nads at G. Not only did we get no push with the running game but other teams knew right where to pressure the passer... right up the middle. I saw a combination of things that contributed to our demise ( a comedy of errors in a sad way). Lack of pure speed, coaching, strength at G/C, coaching philosophy, depth, and not to mention coaching. Did anybody see any halftime adjustments that worked for us? The other teams surely made ones against us. IMHO to place the blame solely on Henne is just not fair.
 
This thread is terrible. You're just making Slimm repeat himself over and over. I'm glad - for his sake - that he's finally given up.

EVERYONE KNOWS that Henne sucks against the zone. If you WATCHED us play last year, you'd KNOW it.
 
slimm and magoo...you guys laid it all out there on a platter...i'm reminded of the old saying "i can lead a horse to water...but i can't make him drink"
 
I think everyone but the poster is missing the point of this thread. He is obviously a student of philosophy and logic. His understanding is that anecdotal evidence (the Patriots game) does not prove anything. Only a detailed analysis over an extended period of time will provide any conclusions and no one on this thread has provided one for the assumption that Henne plays poorly against zone. In the early 1900's it was assumed that the Irish were drunkards. Why? Because of bias reinforced by anecdotal evidence; not because of any researched data. Most posters on this forum follow similar flawed logic. There have been some very good detailed analysis of line play (often supplied by CK) at Finheaven. Evidence such as this go far in forming accurate appraisals of a player. It is what is called, in philosophy, warrant. Dolphone is basically saying that the belief on this forum that Henne plays poorly against zone coverage currently has no warrant.
 
Henne struggles against zone coverage, not Cover-2. He struggles against zone coverage by the linebackers moreso than the cornerbacks. The worst interceptions Henne throws are against zone coverage by the linebackers where he misreads the middle of the field (see the picks to Ninkovich, Rolando Mclain, etc.) They're all basically the same mistake over and over again.

Henne just doesn't see those linebackers. Henne's biggest flaw is his limited vision of the field. 2nd biggest flaw is his unpredictable accuracy (some throws are perfect some throws are trash).

I think Henne gets tunnel vision on the field. Even in the first scrimage he tosses his signature LB pick to Dansby.
 
I think everyone but the poster is missing the point of this thread. He is obviously a student of philosophy and logic. His understanding is that anecdotal evidence (the Patriots game) does not prove anything. Only a detailed analysis over an extended period of time will provide any conclusions and no one on this thread has provided one for the assumption that Henne plays poorly against zone. In the early 1900's it was assumed that the Irish were drunkards. Why? Because of bias reinforced by anecdotal evidence; not because of any researched data. Most posters on this forum follow similar flawed logic. There have been some very good detailed analysis of line play (often supplied by CK) at Finheaven. Evidence such as this go far in forming accurate appraisals of a player. It is what is called, in philosophy, warrant. Dolphone is basically saying that the belief on this forum that Henne plays poorly against zone coverage currently has no warrant.

My god, someone gets it!

I can't believe the so-called "proof" is three or four plays he's screwed up against a zone coverage. I can name three plays for ANY QB against ANY coverage, where they screwed up badly. And the worst part is that it's just SO OBVIOUS... yet the best I've seen is naming three plays (and part of that is some nebulous recollection of some random games last year, or the year before).

Thank you, 72PhinFan. I think the forum would be a much better place with substantiated discourse, instead of just spitting out whatever comes to mind because of a play or two. It's not about being pedantic - I'm quite fine with game-day reactions and the like, obviously - but when you're trying to make a case for something, aren't we looking for the truth, after all? Debate for the sake of debate makes no sense at all.
 
Passing statistics vs. man and zone are not currently kept by any bureau that I'm currently aware of. So what dolphone is asking for -- that I keep my own stats and track the results -- is frankly unrealistic. I don't care enough about convincing him to go through all that work. But one of those things you can take to the bank with football is that any analysis that relies purely on statistical breakdowns -- which is what he seems to be after -- is an analysis that is incomplete and more than likely wrong. There are simply too many variables to take into account to point to two numbers as being proof of anything. It's why scouting has always been more of an art than a science.

Chad Henne is a tick slow in his decision making, tends to stare down his receivers a bit too much and has a hitch in his release (though his release does vary). Once you accept that these are parts of his game (and I don't know any credible observer who would disagree with them), it should be fairly simple to conclude that ANY quarterback that has those traits is going to struggle vs. zone relative to how he plays vs. man. Is it not obvious that the more you give zone defenders reading the eyes of the quarterback time to read your eyes and break on the ball, the more they're going to react and be in position to break up the play? To anyone who watches a lot of football, this logical progression should be a fairly easy thing to digest.

But this sort of weakness is not a death sentence, at least in my view. There are quarterbacks who play better against zone than against man, with no less a quarterback than Tom Brady being one. He's freely admitted in interviews that cover 2 man under is the coverage he struggles against more than any other. It's where he placed the blame on his struggles against the Dolphins early in his career (when we played that coverage almost exclusively) and it's also -- not coincidentally -- the coverage the Giants ran against the Patriots in their upset Super Bowl win.

And this makes sense when you look at Brady's game. He's one of the absolutely best pre-snap readers in the NFL. I remember reading somewhere that he decides where he's going to throw the ball before the snap better than 80% of the time. He comes up the line, reads the coverage. He sees it clearly and knows who's going to be open based on that coverage. Then the ball is snapped, he looks off the coverage, turns back and boom -- a completion, to exactly who he knew was going to be there. It's relatively simple (at least for him).

Man coverage is better at defending this kind of skill because it's less susceptible to the quarterback looking off the coverage and there's also the possibiity that when Brady looks back at the receiver he's intended to throw to that the guy is going to be covered (his pre-snap read against man is more of a matchup game than a 'where is the hole in the zone going to be' game. I'd bet anything Wes Welker's targets go up vs. man rather than zone -- Brady trusts him to get open). In other words, Brady's chief asset is his brain. His arm is stronger than people give him credit for but his overall arm talent is not the chief weapon in his arsenal, not are his receivers man to man dynamos who can make plays against tight coverage. This is not to say he plays poorly against man coverage teams, only that he plays better against zone because of his overall skill set. Consider Ben Roethlisberger as a counter example. Ben is not a great pre-snap reader but his arm talent is better than Brady's and his ability to improvise helps him find guys open who would otherwise be covered. Both are great players but for entirely different reasons.

The key to getting the most out of Henne -- as RobertHorry said -- is to create more of a spacing offense. The farther apart the routes, the bigger the holes in the zone, therefore the more you mitigate Henne's decision making issues, as now you're relying on his arm strength to make up the difference over those long distances. A constraint based system played in tight spaces -- which is what we had last year -- is perfect for a great decision maker and pinpoint accurate quarterback like Pennington, but exactly the wrong kind of system for Henne. You need to stretch the field and let him use that bazooka's he's got, otherwise you're misusing him. He's also got to become more aggressive in taking those shots and his deep accuracy must improve, but those are other discussions.

Hopefully this clears some things up, and you'll stop with replies that basically boil down to "yeah, but show me numbers." It's more complicated than that.
 
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Never in my life have I seen information laid out this clearly and someone be so totally lost.
 
Passing statistics vs. man and zone are not currently kept by any bureau that I'm currently aware of. So what dolphone is asking for -- that I keep my own stats and track the results -- is frankly unrealistic. I don't care enough about convincing him to go through all that work. But one of those things you can take to the bank with football is that any analysis that relies purely on statistical breakdowns -- which is what he seems to be after -- is an analysis that is incomplete and more than likely wrong. There are simply too many variables to take into account to point to two numbers as being proof of anything. It's why scouting has always been more of an art than a science.

Chad Henne is a tick slow in his decision making, tends to stare down his receivers a bit too much and has a hitch in his release (though his release does vary). Once you accept that these are parts of his game (and I don't know any credible observer who would disagree with them), it should be fairly simple to conclude that ANY quarterback that has those traits is going to struggle vs. zone relative to how he plays vs. man. Is it not obvious that the more you give zone defenders reading the eyes of the quarterback time to read your eyes and break on the ball, the more they're going to react and be in position to break up the play? To anyone who watches a lot of football, this logical progression should be a fairly easy thing to digest.

But this sort of weakness is not a death sentence, at least in my view. There are quarterbacks who play better against zone than against man, with no less a quarterback than Tom Brady being one. He's freely admitted in interviews that cover 2 man under is the coverage he struggles against more than any other. It's where he placed the blame on his struggles against the Dolphins early in his career (when we played that coverage almost exclusively) and it's also -- not coincidentally -- the coverage the Giants ran against the Patriots in their upset Super Bowl win.

And this makes sense when you look at Brady's game. He's one of the absolutely best pre-snap readers in the NFL. I remember reading somewhere that he decides where he's going to throw the ball before the snap better than 80% of the time. It's relatively simple for him. He comes up the line, reads the coverage. He sees it clearly and knows who's going to be open based on that coverage. Then the ball is snapped, he looks off the coverage, turns back and boom -- a completion, to exactly who he knew was going to be there.

Man coverage is better at defending this kind of skill because it's less susceptible to the quarterback looking off the coverage and there's also the possibiity that when Brady looks back at the receiver he's intended to throw to that the guy is going to be covered. In other words, Brady's chief asset is his brain. His arm is stronger than people give him credit for but his overall arm talent is not the chief weapon in his arsenal, not are his receivers man to man dynamos who can make plays against tight coverage. This is not to say he plays poorly against man coverage teams, only that he plays better against zone because of his overall skill set. Consider Ben Roethlisberger as a counter example. Ben is not a great pre-snap reader but his arm talent is better than Brady's and his ability to improvise helps him find guys open who would otherwise be covered. Both are great players but for entirely different reasons.

The key to getting the most out of Henne -- as RobertHorry said -- is to create more of a spacing offense. The farther apart the routes, the bigger the holes in the zone, therefore the more you mitigate Henne's decision making issues, as now you're relying on his arm strength to make up the difference over those long distances. A constraint based system played in tight spaces -- which is what we had last year -- is perfect for a great decision maker and pinpoint accurate quarterback like Pennington, but exactly the wrong kind of system for Henne. You need to stretch the field and let him use that bazooka's he's got, otherwise you won't get the most out of him. Also, he's got to become more aggressive in taking those shots and his deep accuracy must improve, but those are other discussions.

Hopefully this clears some things up, and you'll stop with replies that basically boil down to "yeah, but show me numbers." It's more complicated than that.

Numbers *support* the case, they don't make it.

I've never said numbers are the be-all, end-all of scouting. What I AM saying is that is virtually impossible to make judgements with the tools at our disposal. I'm asking for numbers to support YOUR case of him sucking against the zone, and you're unable to produce them because - by your own admission - no one tracks them. Which makes any argument about such splits doubtful, at best. Yeah, it's unrealistic to suppose you keep your own stats. But if you don't have them, how on earth can you support your argument?

The bolded paragraph is a prime example of how you can make flawed arguments superficially sustainable. You take three premises, assume them as true, and then decide that by inference, premise 4 is true as well. But you're not really looking at each one of them, and worst of all, you're making the inference without supporting evidence.

To make it brief, I'll give you everything you said about Henne. His decision making can be slow (at times), he stares down at his receivers (at times), and he has a hitch in his release (at times). I'll even discard the inconsistency with which these things happen. Let's pretend these happen continually and without deviation. Now... how is it fairly simple to conclude that this leads to bad performances against zone coverages?

Again, you're not specifying *which* zone coverages, and it's crucial in achieving your point (zones vary wildly in area covered, number of players in pressure, deep/intermediate/short coverages, etc). You say it's fairly simple to conclude the inference, yet you point to a QB that has none of the traits that define Henne as an example of zone struggles. You say anyone that watches a lot of football should easily digest the logical progression, but that just means anyone with exposure to football will understand what you're saying. It doesn't justify what you're saying as right.

Forget the numbers. Give me scout opinions. Show me reports that say "this QB will struggle in zone coverages because of X, Y and Z". If you're mentioning QBs, pick better examples than Tom Brady. He simply doesn't fit - at all - with what you're trying to say. Show a coach's interview where this is discussed. I mean... show me *something*.

Your last sentence sums it all perfectly. It's more complicated than what you're trying to paint. It's an analysis that's probably limited to someone that has access to game film, or a very exhaustive independent tracker. It requires understanding of football concepts trivial to mention but hard to master. Yet it's bandied about like it's the most trivial thing in the world.

All in the name of "debate".
 
dolphone if you don't mind me asking...what is your background??? anything to do with statistical analysis???
 
dolphone if you don't mind me asking...what is your background??? anything to do with statistical analysis???

No, I don't mind. I'm an IT security consultant. All the statistics background I have is a one-semester course in college, though I do frequent Football Outsiders, and I used to game chart games with them.
 
No, I don't mind. I'm an IT security consultant. All the statistics background I have is a one-semester course in college, though I do frequent Football Outsiders, and I used to game chart games with them.

you seem like you have a decent understanding of the game...i'm gonna assume your a big dolphins fan and watch all the games...you gonna sit here and tell me you didn't see plenty of evidence of henne struggling with zone and umbrella coverages in 2010???

your eye should tell you what we can't statistically prove cause its a measure no ones taken that i'm aware of at least ...but i mean the evidence has been there in front of you...the games
 
you seem like you have a decent understanding of the game...i'm gonna assume your a big dolphins fan and watch all the games...you gonna sit here and tell me you didn't see plenty of evidence of henne struggling with zone and umbrella coverages in 2010???

your eye should tell you what we can't statistically prove cause its a measure no ones taken that i'm aware of at least ...but i mean the evidence has been there in front of you...the games

I saw Henne struggle with *everything*. I saw him threw boneheaded balls against man, zone, zone blitz, zone man under, jailbreaks, prevents...

My point isn't that Henne doesn't struggle against zone. My point is that he doesn't struggle more against it than any other coverage. Again, this whole thread was borne out of frustation with the supposed dichotomy (I've already used this term too much, but it applies perfectly) that Henne can't succeed against zone, only man. He struggles (and succeeds) just as well in anything. His main problem, as far as I see it, is inconsistency.
 
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