this qb and you give him a run game and the time to read the coverage and field and he will shred you......
Good write up, just wanted to share a couple of thoughts I had during last night's game:
I sat there and cursed Philbin for not taking a shot under two minutes with three time outs left. After the turnover, I still stood by that statement...they needed to score before the half and had plenty of time to make it happen.
Also, I am getting sick of refs getting so many calls wrong. They need to be held accountable for blown calls; maybe I'm just seeing these because they are going against the Dolphins, but it seems a lot worse than I'm used to.
It's already been said numerous times, but we need to figure out these 3rd and 1 situations....can't stand seeing so many failed attempts with the same play to gain 1 yard.
Cogs goes out in come Garner....thoughts?
i thanked this but for whatever reason mine doesn't seem to be working...well said...the run game hides the pass pro and helps keep us out of 5 man protects that expose the protection...also allows for more vertical routes to develop when rush defenders have to play it even
this kids more than a game manager but we can't protect him enough to just let him wing it all over the place...and maybe too he's just not quite ready...but he will be
Behind our O-line, I wouldn't want Aaron Rodgers throwing the ball as frequently as Tannehill has. I don't think it's an indictment on Tannehill to say that you have to protect him. 1. He's still really green. 2. Our O-line will otherwise get him killed. 3. It's just a good idea to protect your QB by running the ball - see what GB is now doing with the running game. If this team has the right plan for Tannehill, I think he can be our guy. He's a very talented passer, and he's smart. I don't think he's very instinctual (I'm hoping this will improve with time), and I do think we were on pace to absolutely ruin him. The bottom line is that you and I (and I think most posters here) want a team that consistently challenges for the playoffs and one that plays well in the playoffs. Given what we have, I think we agree that we'll have to run the ball around 30 times a game (from here on out) to get there. Would have been nice to have a guy like Zac Stacy - rather than Gillislee. I picked the Seahawks to win the SB for two main reasons: 1. Their pass D matches up well against the top teams in the NFC and AFC (though the Packers and Chiefs pose some interesting problems that I didn't anticipate). 2. They have three talented, physical RB's, and they (as a team) run often. And when they don't, they almost lose to the Rams. I REALLY hope that Sherman sticks with the run. If he/we do, I think the team is good enough to make the playoffs and maybe even good enough to win a playoff game. Conversely, if we don't continue to run the ball, I think we're bad enough to lose to anyone.
the problem with seattle is that if that run game isn't there the offense does nothing...it's all predicated on the run game opening up pa and bootlegs rollouts etc...you load the box on that team all game long...although harvin is gonna help with the fronts they face...st louis kinda showed what you need to beat em...make the wrs make plays one on one make the qb have to make plays in the passing game with that protection and shut down the run...it's tough though cause the d gives the o short fields all over the place
I agree, and if I knew the Packers would run the ball this often and this well, I would have probably picked them (first time I haven't picked the Packers to win the SB in 3 or 4 years). Aaron Rodgers with that running game is a nightmare. Still, look at the level of success Seattle has enjoyed despite their 28th ranked passing attack. Also, it's allowed the passing attack to be pretty damn efficient - 8.2 YPA 14 TD's to only 4 INT's. Seattle is doing with Wilson what I think we should be doing with Tannehill. Their team is better/more talented, but I think they maximize their talent by incorporating a physical, run-first philosophy. If Seattle was not committed to the run, they'd be a middle-of-the-pack team. The Colts (amazing as Luck is) wouldn't be as good without their commitment to the run. This, to me, is all encouraging. There's a formula for success. We have access to it, and we have the talent to make it work (if to a lesser degree than Seattle). We just have to remain patient and committed. A punt? All gravy, no worries. Sack fumbles and INT's are a different story.
Also consider, however, that Lamar Miller and Mike Wallace would've had long TD plays in the kind of offense they were running last night had a couple of unusual events not occurred.Good points Hoops.
But, we ran a lot and only scored 13 offensive points. We ddon't have the sender terior linemen to make short yardage or goal line runs.
For this to work we need to bring in better offensive linemen.
i don't really understand the tannehill doesn't appear to be instinctual...i'd like to hear more about why that is the case???