Let's try it this way....
1. Chad Henne struggles against zone coverage, specifically the linebackers.
2. Miami's offense struggles against Cover-2 because they lack adequate talent at the TE position to attack the weakness (up the seam). Lacked the consistency along the offensive line to control the line of scrimmage (which is the bread and butter of Henning's offense). Lacked the speed at receiver, and route combinations to attack zone coverage.
3. You specifically asked the question in the post I quoted "If short routes are the most easily defended routes in a zone, (which zone coverage? All of them?) then why were we so successful with them?". So my reply to that was "Miami's offense WASN'T successful"....
4. The evidence you're looking for is already there if you've watched Miami play.
Hmmm.
1. Are you telling me that LBs in zone coverage are Henne's main problem? That's what's meant by "he can't play zone, he can only play man"? You say in another reply, you can't speak for the rest of the forum... but why reply to this thread then? I specifically asked about THAT particular topic. And again, if you're trying to make a case for this argument, at least present some evidence. How many of his INTs/incompletions went to zone LBs? What's his completion percentage otherwise?
2. Nice diversion, but I'm not arguing about Miami's offense. I'm arguing about Henne's (supossed) inability against the zone. It's in the thread title. If you want to argue that Miami's struggle in general is a sign of Henne's struggle, please post some numbers proving that we struggle against C2.
As a small sidebar on this point: when did having talent at the TE position automatically solved all your C2 (I'm guessing you mean Tampa-2, because - once again - C2 is a safety alignment) woes? Alternatively, does missing a "seam busting" TE (whatever that is) automatically disqualifies you attacking T2 teams? I seem to recall teams defeating the T2 with power running, more than these mythical TEs of yore.
3. This takes the cake for me. I'll post your reply again (post 31 in the thread):
The thing you need to focus on here is that Miami's offense as a whole struggled against Cover-2, not just Chad Henne. Meaning, the offense couldn't take advantage of the weak points in a Cover-2... which is the seam up the middle of the field between the safeties - the "honey hole" between the CB's and the safeties - and the line of scrimmage.
Secondly, Miami's offense WASN'T successful.... that's why Dan Carpenter is a pro-bowler, Sparano's shoulder is in a sling, and the offensive coordinator was let go.
When you're talking about "4 deep", what you're talking about is really "quarters" coverage. Most 3-4 defenses run a lot of that as a standard bend-don't-break defense... the just keep everything in front of them. When you're controlling the line of scrimmage defensively, there's no point in taking the risk to get beat on the the big play. You've got the offense by the balls...
Short routes are more easily covered by any type of zone coverage you choose to run. Linebackers are allowed to get involved covering those shorter routes, and the defensive backs are virtually just clicking and closing on the football when the quarterback hits his 5th/7th step at the top of his drop.
WHERE are you saying that Miami's offense (within the short routes that we are arguing about, remember?) wasn't succesful?
4. I'll make this very clear:
I'm not the one with the burden of proof here. If I start saying that you live in Rome, and every time I talk about you I mention that you live in Rome, then people (you, someone who knows you, curious bystanders) might start asking 'hey, why do you say he lives in Rome?' And the burden of proof is mine - I'm the one saying this over and over again. I don't get to say "well just look at him, it's obvious by his writing he lives in Rome". I understand it might not be your battle, but if so... why bother replying? And I don't mean 'shut up and leave' -at all- but if you yourself say that you're not the one saying this stuff... why argue for it?
BTW, I have watched Miami play. And I don't see any noticeable difference between Henne against the zone (or zone LBs) than against any other defense.
PD I don't have anything against Romans, nor do I have any clue where you live