Observations for the Bucs Game. | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Observations for the Bucs Game.

ckparrothead

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Had a BIIIIIG thing written out, lost it all because my screen refreshed for no good reason. Yowsa. So, I lost my play-by-play notes and had to go off memory to get these observations.


1. Seth McKinney made dramatic improvement in the last few games from what he looked like against the Bears. DRAMATIC. One on one assignments were not a problem for him in general. That's very odd.

2. Jeno James also appears to have worked out a few kinks.

3. Vernon Carey is not as good a RT as he is a LT, curiously enough he can actually struggle with the bullrush of LDEs, and he is not as inspiring a run blocker as he is a pass protector, at least not yet.

4. Damion McIntosh proved he can do a lot of the same things Vernon can do in the pass protection game (not all of them, he's not a black hole like IHOP is), and he's a better run blocker, that I can tell.

5. Randy McMichael deserves a medal for the number of times he took on a defensive end all by himself in run and pass blocking, and just flat out DOMINATED. He owned Simeon Rice. It wasn't even funny. All night. Randy was the most improved player from Game 3 to Game 4...although considering the game he had in Game 3, that's not surprising.

6. Ronnie's fumble was his fault. He ran the same up the gut play that Ricky gained good ground on the first drive, was matched up 1on1 with safety Phillips just like Ricky was, but Ricky used his body maneuvering to get good yards after meeting Phillips, while Ronnie merely dove and laid in for the hit leaving the ball exposed to Phillips' helmet. Rookie mistake. Otherwise, he's a good powerful runner, and his weaknesses in vision did not show up tonight. He did muff a pass on a screen play that was called back for defensive holding. Obviously the rook had some jitters to shake out.

7. Ricky Williams still does not look like the Ricky Williams of old, but he is still cat quick, uses his body well even though his body isn't as dominating and physically powerful as it once was, and he has remarkable vision. He and Ronnie will be dangerous together, but it may be hard for Ronnie to find his own ways of outshining the crowd with Ricky in the game too.

8. I like some of the plays Linehan has in the arsenal. The end-around used by Welker & Chambers that worked twice was the same that we used against the Jags with success I believe. The "90 flip" play that Ricky ran for a good amount on in the first drive was one we used against the Jags with great success (remember the rookie CB that Ricky faked out of his pants?). The long plays are working; the plays are there to be had, and when Gus gets on the right page with the WRs they will start becoming completions. What is important here is that we do not make another quarterback switch because that will only take us two steps back in making these long plays a success. Our allegiance for picking a QB shouldn't be to fairness, it should be to getting the maximum production out of the QB. Right now that means continuing to allow Frerotte to air it out with the first team until he feels out exactly how far he needs to throw David Boston on the fly pattern, or Bryan Gilmore, or Chambers, or Booker, or Welker, etc. Part of the reason AJ Feeley has such a better completion rate is because the guy doesn't throw those long deep shots the way Frerotte does. If you go back into a shell with those deep shots, we're back to the same offense we basically ran all last season. Do you want that? I don't, and I'm willing to sacrifice a little completion percentage to get it.

9. The offense had something going on two drives during the first quarter, but Ronnie Brown coughed up the ball on one of them. That drive was going to score points, and I don't think it was going to be a field goal. The backfield of Ricky & Ronnie together looked dangerous. Imagine the same end-around play that Chambers & Welker ran, except with Brown barreling down the field just as fast except with 230 pounds of steam behind him. That could have happened, Ricky was the one-back and Ronnie the motioning slot man playing the same position Welker & Chambers ran the end-around from.

10. JT made Anthony Davis his b!tch and pimp slapped him aside on more than one occasion, and also proved he's better than Simeon Rice. Or at least, he was last night. Simeon got dominated by Randy McMichael but when the Bucs tried to have Becht do the same thing, JT blazed by Becht as if he was standing still and sacked Griese on a short 3 step drop. You're not supposed to get sacks on a 3 step drop, that's why they designed them that way.

11. Kevin Carter continues to be our most valuable addition on defense. He was BORN for playing LDE in the 3-4 technique. If you see the 3-4 used on 50% of our plays or more this season (and I suspect you will), you can thank Kevin Carter for that. He's like Richard Seymour out there. He's dominant. Can't say enough. JT had a great day, but Carter is consistently collapsing things more than JT is.

12. Reggie Howard will start at CB this season. Say what? I'm sorry, but after embarrassing himself against the Bears he has been our most improved defensive secondary player. He tackles well, he seems born for zone play where he gets to read the QB's movements, he peels off his assignments and flies to the ball, and he's been staying up with receivers deep lately. The guy has flat out outplayed Travis Daniels if you ask me. Daniels may know this defense, but he has a thing or two to learn about the abilities of WRs and offensive schemes in the NFL. Not to knock Daniels, he's done extremely well too, but Howard has shown the kind of promise that leads me to believe he can literally replace Surtain in his role as starting CB and slot man in the nickel package. He can blitz, he can tackle, he can play zone, he can keep up deep, he can read the QB's eyes, and he can catch the ball. He has it all and it is showing. Has anyone else been waiting for the glaring weaknesses in our secondary to start hurting us in first team play yet? You know why it hasn't? Yup. Howard.

13. Sam Madison's days as a Dolphin are numbered. He's never been asked to be responsible for making plays on the ballcarrier the way he is in this defense, and he's failing at it. We've always known he's a pedestrian tackler, but now we see why Bill Parcells use to have little respect for Madison and use to send runners right toward his position on the outside. He will only be a Dolphin until we find a suitable replacement. Whether Will Poole turns out to be that replacement or not, I don't know. For now, he's still great at covering people, and Saban will use that believe me.

14. Channing Crowder had a decent game, but I thought Spragan and Seau were both better. I'm just sayin...I know we have a lot of hopes for Crowder, but he's not there yet. Spragan, Seau, and Thomas ARE there. Channing will be eventually.

15. Holliday continues to perform excellently, like a poor man's Kevin Carter. And Tractor Traylor does too, but we need Chester to get back so that he can give him rest every now and then otherwise Traylor will wear down before the mid-year mark.

16. Yeremiah Bell may have played himself out of the starting lineup with his poor technique against the Bucs. In coverage and in tackling, he had poor technique. On one play he should have helped Crowder put a contain on Caddy who was running out right, instead he cut Crowder off and tried to tackle Caddy, who broke the tackle and got about 6 more yards. On that Galloway deep cross that resulted in a touchdown pass called back by holding, Bell displayed extremely poor technique in picking up Galloway's coverage on the deep cross. I actually thought he was going to trip over himself and fall down it was so poor. Schulters, on the other hand, seemed to play well in this game...we could see a move very soon.

17. Did I mention that Randy McMichael deserves a medal for this game? ;) Did I mention that Ron Jaworski deserves a good punch in the throat? Consistently called McMichael "Randy McDaniel" and as always, has been a BLATANT apologist for every player on the Bucs' roster. I love how he'll talk up that Galloway TD on the deep cross called back by a "stupid holding penalty" all day long, except if you look at the tape Kevin Carter knocked the RT flat on his face and had the RT not reached out his hands and outright TRIPPED Carter, then that ball never would have gotten out of Griese's hands unless it was a fumble. YEESH.

18. Also, the Bucs played their 2nd string a little early for my tastes. I thought they'd have had an agreement in place on when to take them out. Nope. By the time AJ Feeley played, that wasn't the Bucs' 2nd stringers out there in the secondary, those were the 3rd stringers and the guys who will never see an NFL roster. Sorry to take the wind out of your sails AJ, but that TD pass to Farmer came against Blue Adams, Ronyell Whitaker, and Kalvin Pearson. Ouch.
 
very good write up. i erased my tivo accidentally so i couldnt go back and break it down which sucked. i feel pretty much everything you just said, but its hard without a second look

i will add this, im actually liking this ricky more. hes quicker, while not as powerful he seems to be a bit better in space and hes not taking abuse like he would in the past, i think you can notice him getting down and avoiding square on hits, the ones he used to take all game long
 
Always look forward to your posts. Excellent detailed and informative post as always. Keep up the great work Chris. :up:
 
claytonAndDuper said:
very good write up. i erased my tivo accidentally so i couldnt go back and break it down which sucked. i feel pretty much everything you just said, but its hard without a second look

i will add this, im actually liking this ricky more. hes quicker, while not as powerful he seems to be a bit better in space and hes not taking abuse like he would in the past, i think you can notice him getting down and avoiding square on hits, the ones he used to take all game long


Yeah, but I do miss the power sometimes. I bet he does too.
 
i agree with you, its late though and the point i think i was trying to make was, maybe he will take less abuse, and be easier to manage for the staff and team. all the pieces he needs to suceed are in place. hes got a new head coach and a qb controversy to help take some heat of him, a highly touted number 2 rb to share the load, i think things are going to work out very well for him this time around
 
ckparrothead said:
Had a BIIIIIG thing written out, lost it all because my screen refreshed for no good reason. Yowsa. So, I lost my play-by-play notes and had to go off memory to get these observations.


1. Seth McKinney made dramatic improvement in the last few games from what he looked like against the Bears. DRAMATIC. One on one assignments were not a problem for him in general. That's very odd.
I made a thread concerning this earlier, thanks for confirming it for us.
ckparrothead said:
3. Vernon Carey is not as good a RT as he is a LT, curiously enough he can actually struggle with the bullrush of LDEs, and he is not as inspiring a run blocker as he is a pass protector, at least not yet.
So do we have a net gain on the play at tackle because of this move?

ckparrothead said:
10. JT made Anthony Davis his b!tch and pimp slapped him aside on more than one occasion, and also proved he's better than Simeon Rice. Or at least, he was last night. Simeon got dominated by Randy McMichael but when the Bucs tried to have Becht do the same thing, JT blazed by Becht as if he was standing still and sacked Griese on a short 3 step drop. You're not supposed to get sacks on a 3 step drop, that's why they designed them that way.

Yeah, I couldn't believe those sacks myself! Those were the type of sacks you would see in a football movie, used for dramtic effect.. but during a real game?
ckparrothead said:
13. Sam Madison's days as a Dolphin are numbered. He's never been asked to be responsible for making plays on the ballcarrier the way he is in this defense, and he's failing at it. We've always known he's a pedestrian tackler, but now we see why Bill Parcells use to have little respect for Madison and use to send runners right toward his position on the outside. He will only be a Dolphin until we find a suitable replacement. Whether Will Poole turns out to be that replacement or not, I don't know. For now, he's still great at covering people, and Saban will use that believe me.
I don't think sam is as good as Deon Sanders in taking away half the field, but I can see him being used in a similar way to minimize his importance on run plays.


ckparrothead said:
16. Yeremiah Bell may have played himself out of the starting lineup with his poor technique against the Bucs. In coverage and in tackling, he had poor technique. On one play he should have helped Crowder put a contain on Caddy who was running out right, instead he cut Crowder off and tried to tackle Caddy, who broke the tackle and got about 6 more yards. On that Galloway deep cross that resulted in a touchdown pass called back by holding, Bell displayed extremely poor technique in picking up Galloway's coverage on the deep cross. I actually thought he was going to trip over himself and fall down it was so poor. Schulters, on the other hand, seemed to play well in this game...we could see a move very soon.
I saw that touchdown that was called back, was that entire play Bell's responsiblity or did someone else muff it too?


ckparrothead said:
18. Also, the Bucs played their 2nd string a little early for my tastes. I thought they'd have had an agreement in place on when to take them out. Nope. By the time AJ Feeley played, that wasn't the Bucs' 2nd stringers out there in the secondary, those were the 3rd stringers and the guys who will never see an NFL roster. Sorry to take the wind out of your sails AJ, but that TD pass to Farmer came against Blue Adams, Ronyell Whitaker, and Kalvin Pearson. Ouch.
I wish we could have the oppurtunity (without injuries of course) to see what AJ could do with a good line in front of him and these receivers of ours catching his passes. What I want to know is, did you see any of the mistakes AJ made last year showing up in this game? Has he improved his own play? I don't care about the competition, because he can't control that part of it, all he can do is concentrate on his play, and that is what I am curious about.
 
(On if he is worried the offensive line will only play well after they are criticized by the media) – “You are making the assumption that the criticism that they took is what motivated them. I talked to them, I’d like to think the meeting I had with them had something to do with it. Coach Hudson (Houck) talked to them, I’d like to think what he said to them had something to do with it, but you guys can take all the credit for it. I really do believe that there was some improvement made. I’ll be honest with you, Randy McMichael, it was the best he’s blocked and the best he’s played this preseason, which contributed largely, based on the defense they play, to our effectiveness running the ball, as well. He should also receive credit for the very good job he did, in terms of the way he blocked and the aggressiveness he played in this game. It certainly contributed, in a very positive way, to the running game. That’s not to minimize the fact that I thought we played better in the offensive line, but the challenge to the offensive line that was given early on was – if we are going to get better on offense we are going to have to have balance and that balance is going to start with our ability to control the line of scrimmage, whether we want to throw it or run it. They have responded to that.â€Â

Wow. Thank you Nick Saban for confirming for me what JUMPED off the screen at me. McMichael was the MVP of the blockers basically.

To answer your questions...

So do we have a net gain on the play at tackle because of this move?

It appears so, just by way of less penalties if nothing else...

I don't think sam is as good as Deon Sanders in taking away half the field, but I can see him being used in a similar way to minimize his importance on run plays.

I don't want to say that is impossible in this defense, but I will say it would be exceedingly difficult. The way this D works, the outside can be exposed, and if you don't have a corner there willing to get down and dirty and take good angles against the runner, you can be in trouble. This defense isn't like our old D at all. When you're responsible for your zone, you're responsible in more than one way.

I saw that touchdown that was called back, was that entire play Bell's responsiblity or did someone else muff it too?

First off, understand what happened. Carter had a sack, but was held illegally. Normally, QBs don't have the time to throw a deep cross like that against a zone blitzing 3-4 D like ours. And, in this case, Griese did not. But, hypothetically speaking had Griese actually legally had the time to throw the ball he threw, yes I believe the fault was entirely on Bell. In the zone, when you run a cross like that, defenders pass the guy off to one another. Galloway traveled into Bell's zone, Griese threw the ball, and Bell sat there twisting his legs like a pretzel almost falling on his butt trying to decide which way to go with the effect that he didn't go enough toward the ball while Galloway did.

I wish we could have the oppurtunity (without injuries of course) to see what AJ could do with a good line in front of him and these receivers of ours catching his passes. What I want to know is, did you see any of the mistakes AJ made last year showing up in this game? Has he improved his own play? I don't care about the competition, because he can't control that part of it, all he can do is concentrate on his play, and that is what I am curious about.

I don't. A QB change at the present is the last thing needed. Frerotte needs the repetitions to make sure the deep shots begin working. AJ Feeley, for the most part, doesn't even have the guts during games to take those deep shots because he's so eager to prove he's better than Gus and not eager to see those incompletions on his record. Feeley played his way out of this starting job a while ago. The coaches aren't babysitters, and they don't have a responsibility to hold anyone's hand while they get use to things. They have a responsibility ONLY to get the best QB play possible, they do not have a responsibility to make things all fair and equal and lovey-dovey in the QB race.

And as for seeing the same mistakes as last year, yes. All of them. He stares down receivers, he shows little or no touch on short passes, and he does not take enough shots deep. Some offenses, that will work. Some offenses, it won't.
 
To add a note after watching game today, the play by boston where he caught the ball and juked those two defensive guys was awesome. He did to the bucs what ricky did last week to the jags, just got em confused and got them jumping all sorts of directions. Hilarity at its best.
 
Yup. Man I'm wondering who CANT run that end-around WR reverse play that Linehan has run against the Jags and Bucs.

Ronnie Brown was in that same formation as the same motion man slot WR, and he could have even taken the end-around in that formation...he's fast enough and he'd have a HUGE head of steam coming around the corner.

And now that you mention it, Boston would be good for it too...fast enough, huge head of steam. Welker & Chambers have already run it...and you know Gilmore could too.
 
NICE thread and that was a huge improvement on how our O-line held up against their D-line
 
ckparrothead said:
I don't. A QB change at the present is the last thing needed. Frerotte needs the repetitions to make sure the deep shots begin working.

never going to happen. You make a mistake in assuming this is a timing problem or a "working out the kinks by playing together " problem. It's neither. Go back and look at Frerottes career. He can't hit the side of a barn at 30 yards!!! He never could. His problem has always been accuracy. This has been his story since his Redskin playing days and has followed him his whole career.
 
ckparrothead said:
Had a BIIIIIG thing written out, lost it all because my screen refreshed for no good reason. Yowsa. So, I lost my play-by-play notes and had to go off memory to get these observations.


1. Seth McKinney made dramatic improvement in the last few games from what he looked like against the Bears. DRAMATIC. One on one assignments were not a problem for him in general. That's very odd.

2. Jeno James also appears to have worked out a few kinks.

3. Vernon Carey is not as good a RT as he is a LT, curiously enough he can actually struggle with the bullrush of LDEs, and he is not as inspiring a run blocker as he is a pass protector, at least not yet.

4. Damion McIntosh proved he can do a lot of the same things Vernon can do in the pass protection game (not all of them, he's not a black hole like IHOP is), and he's a better run blocker, that I can tell.

5. Randy McMichael deserves a medal for the number of times he took on a defensive end all by himself in run and pass blocking, and just flat out DOMINATED. He owned Simeon Rice. It wasn't even funny. All night. Randy was the most improved player from Game 3 to Game 4...although considering the game he had in Game 3, that's not surprising.

6. Ronnie's fumble was his fault. He ran the same up the gut play that Ricky gained good ground on the first drive, was matched up 1on1 with safety Phillips just like Ricky was, but Ricky used his body maneuvering to get good yards after meeting Phillips, while Ronnie merely dove and laid in for the hit leaving the ball exposed to Phillips' helmet. Rookie mistake. Otherwise, he's a good powerful runner, and his weaknesses in vision did not show up tonight. He did muff a pass on a screen play that was called back for defensive holding. Obviously the rook had some jitters to shake out.

7. Ricky Williams still does not look like the Ricky Williams of old, but he is still cat quick, uses his body well even though his body isn't as dominating and physically powerful as it once was, and he has remarkable vision. He and Ronnie will be dangerous together, but it may be hard for Ronnie to find his own ways of outshining the crowd with Ricky in the game too.

8. I like some of the plays Linehan has in the arsenal. The end-around used by Welker & Chambers that worked twice was the same that we used against the Jags with success I believe. The "90 flip" play that Ricky ran for a good amount on in the first drive was one we used against the Jags with great success (remember the rookie CB that Ricky faked out of his pants?). The long plays are working; the plays are there to be had, and when Gus gets on the right page with the WRs they will start becoming completions. What is important here is that we do not make another quarterback switch because that will only take us two steps back in making these long plays a success. Our allegiance for picking a QB shouldn't be to fairness, it should be to getting the maximum production out of the QB. Right now that means continuing to allow Frerotte to air it out with the first team until he feels out exactly how far he needs to throw David Boston on the fly pattern, or Bryan Gilmore, or Chambers, or Booker, or Welker, etc. Part of the reason AJ Feeley has such a better completion rate is because the guy doesn't throw those long deep shots the way Frerotte does. If you go back into a shell with those deep shots, we're back to the same offense we basically ran all last season. Do you want that? I don't, and I'm willing to sacrifice a little completion percentage to get it.

9. The offense had something going on two drives during the first quarter, but Ronnie Brown coughed up the ball on one of them. That drive was going to score points, and I don't think it was going to be a field goal. The backfield of Ricky & Ronnie together looked dangerous. Imagine the same end-around play that Chambers & Welker ran, except with Brown barreling down the field just as fast except with 230 pounds of steam behind him. That could have happened, Ricky was the one-back and Ronnie the motioning slot man playing the same position Welker & Chambers ran the end-around from.

10. JT made Anthony Davis his b!tch and pimp slapped him aside on more than one occasion, and also proved he's better than Simeon Rice. Or at least, he was last night. Simeon got dominated by Randy McMichael but when the Bucs tried to have Becht do the same thing, JT blazed by Becht as if he was standing still and sacked Griese on a short 3 step drop. You're not supposed to get sacks on a 3 step drop, that's why they designed them that way.

11. Kevin Carter continues to be our most valuable addition on defense. He was BORN for playing LDE in the 3-4 technique. If you see the 3-4 used on 50% of our plays or more this season (and I suspect you will), you can thank Kevin Carter for that. He's like Richard Seymour out there. He's dominant. Can't say enough. JT had a great day, but Carter is consistently collapsing things more than JT is.

12. Reggie Howard will start at CB this season. Say what? I'm sorry, but after embarrassing himself against the Bears he has been our most improved defensive secondary player. He tackles well, he seems born for zone play where he gets to read the QB's movements, he peels off his assignments and flies to the ball, and he's been staying up with receivers deep lately. The guy has flat out outplayed Travis Daniels if you ask me. Daniels may know this defense, but he has a thing or two to learn about the abilities of WRs and offensive schemes in the NFL. Not to knock Daniels, he's done extremely well too, but Howard has shown the kind of promise that leads me to believe he can literally replace Surtain in his role as starting CB and slot man in the nickel package. He can blitz, he can tackle, he can play zone, he can keep up deep, he can read the QB's eyes, and he can catch the ball. He has it all and it is showing. Has anyone else been waiting for the glaring weaknesses in our secondary to start hurting us in first team play yet? You know why it hasn't? Yup. Howard.

13. Sam Madison's days as a Dolphin are numbered. He's never been asked to be responsible for making plays on the ballcarrier the way he is in this defense, and he's failing at it. We've always known he's a pedestrian tackler, but now we see why Bill Parcells use to have little respect for Madison and use to send runners right toward his position on the outside. He will only be a Dolphin until we find a suitable replacement. Whether Will Poole turns out to be that replacement or not, I don't know. For now, he's still great at covering people, and Saban will use that believe me.

14. Channing Crowder had a decent game, but I thought Spragan and Seau were both better. I'm just sayin...I know we have a lot of hopes for Crowder, but he's not there yet. Spragan, Seau, and Thomas ARE there. Channing will be eventually.

15. Holliday continues to perform excellently, like a poor man's Kevin Carter. And Tractor Traylor does too, but we need Chester to get back so that he can give him rest every now and then otherwise Traylor will wear down before the mid-year mark.

16. Yeremiah Bell may have played himself out of the starting lineup with his poor technique against the Bucs. In coverage and in tackling, he had poor technique. On one play he should have helped Crowder put a contain on Caddy who was running out right, instead he cut Crowder off and tried to tackle Caddy, who broke the tackle and got about 6 more yards. On that Galloway deep cross that resulted in a touchdown pass called back by holding, Bell displayed extremely poor technique in picking up Galloway's coverage on the deep cross. I actually thought he was going to trip over himself and fall down it was so poor. Schulters, on the other hand, seemed to play well in this game...we could see a move very soon.

17. Did I mention that Randy McMichael deserves a medal for this game? ;) Did I mention that Ron Jaworski deserves a good punch in the throat? Consistently called McMichael "Randy McDaniel" and as always, has been a BLATANT apologist for every player on the Bucs' roster. I love how he'll talk up that Galloway TD on the deep cross called back by a "stupid holding penalty" all day long, except if you look at the tape Kevin Carter knocked the RT flat on his face and had the RT not reached out his hands and outright TRIPPED Carter, then that ball never would have gotten out of Griese's hands unless it was a fumble. YEESH.

18. Also, the Bucs played their 2nd string a little early for my tastes. I thought they'd have had an agreement in place on when to take them out. Nope. By the time AJ Feeley played, that wasn't the Bucs' 2nd stringers out there in the secondary, those were the 3rd stringers and the guys who will never see an NFL roster. Sorry to take the wind out of your sails AJ, but that TD pass to Farmer came against Blue Adams, Ronyell Whitaker, and Kalvin Pearson. Ouch.

Nice report CK, however, I do think Crowder is a bit better than you give him credit for, I see him being a factor for this team this year.
 
Gotta love Tampa. Last night their Sports Extra thingy was on. And JP Peterson said on that TD to Galloway, "We went back and checked the tape. There was absolutely no holding going on. Terrible call". :rolleyes: Carter was clearly tripped.

And after he was lifted from the game, Simeon Rice was on the sidelines telling Peterson about how he's going to break the sack record this year. Hey buddy, you just got owned by a TE all night. Good luck beating the bigger guys whose sole job is to block.

Anyway, back to Galloway. Bell should have easily defended that ball. Or at least made Galloway play defense. Bell was pretty much playing center field there, positioning himself to catch a pop fly ball. I don't know if the wind (which was blowing that night) got ahold of that thing at the last second or what. But he fell all over himself, allowing Galloway to grab the ball untouched.
 
CK - Great job. Your reports are better than any that are out there. Light years better than the local papers. Those guys do not know how to report on a game.
 
ckparrothead said:
Had a BIIIIIG thing written out, lost it all because my screen refreshed for no good reason. Yowsa. So, I lost my play-by-play notes and had to go off memory to get these observations.


1. Seth McKinney made dramatic improvement in the last few games from what he looked like against the Bears. DRAMATIC. One on one assignments were not a problem for him in general. That's very odd.

2. Jeno James also appears to have worked out a few kinks.

3. Vernon Carey is not as good a RT as he is a LT, curiously enough he can actually struggle with the bullrush of LDEs, and he is not as inspiring a run blocker as he is a pass protector, at least not yet.

4. Damion McIntosh proved he can do a lot of the same things Vernon can do in the pass protection game (not all of them, he's not a black hole like IHOP is), and he's a better run blocker, that I can tell.

5. Randy McMichael deserves a medal for the number of times he took on a defensive end all by himself in run and pass blocking, and just flat out DOMINATED. He owned Simeon Rice. It wasn't even funny. All night. Randy was the most improved player from Game 3 to Game 4...although considering the game he had in Game 3, that's not surprising.

6. Ronnie's fumble was his fault. He ran the same up the gut play that Ricky gained good ground on the first drive, was matched up 1on1 with safety Phillips just like Ricky was, but Ricky used his body maneuvering to get good yards after meeting Phillips, while Ronnie merely dove and laid in for the hit leaving the ball exposed to Phillips' helmet. Rookie mistake. Otherwise, he's a good powerful runner, and his weaknesses in vision did not show up tonight. He did muff a pass on a screen play that was called back for defensive holding. Obviously the rook had some jitters to shake out.

7. Ricky Williams still does not look like the Ricky Williams of old, but he is still cat quick, uses his body well even though his body isn't as dominating and physically powerful as it once was, and he has remarkable vision. He and Ronnie will be dangerous together, but it may be hard for Ronnie to find his own ways of outshining the crowd with Ricky in the game too.

8. I like some of the plays Linehan has in the arsenal. The end-around used by Welker & Chambers that worked twice was the same that we used against the Jags with success I believe. The "90 flip" play that Ricky ran for a good amount on in the first drive was one we used against the Jags with great success (remember the rookie CB that Ricky faked out of his pants?). The long plays are working; the plays are there to be had, and when Gus gets on the right page with the WRs they will start becoming completions. What is important here is that we do not make another quarterback switch because that will only take us two steps back in making these long plays a success. Our allegiance for picking a QB shouldn't be to fairness, it should be to getting the maximum production out of the QB. Right now that means continuing to allow Frerotte to air it out with the first team until he feels out exactly how far he needs to throw David Boston on the fly pattern, or Bryan Gilmore, or Chambers, or Booker, or Welker, etc. Part of the reason AJ Feeley has such a better completion rate is because the guy doesn't throw those long deep shots the way Frerotte does. If you go back into a shell with those deep shots, we're back to the same offense we basically ran all last season. Do you want that? I don't, and I'm willing to sacrifice a little completion percentage to get it.

9. The offense had something going on two drives during the first quarter, but Ronnie Brown coughed up the ball on one of them. That drive was going to score points, and I don't think it was going to be a field goal. The backfield of Ricky & Ronnie together looked dangerous. Imagine the same end-around play that Chambers & Welker ran, except with Brown barreling down the field just as fast except with 230 pounds of steam behind him. That could have happened, Ricky was the one-back and Ronnie the motioning slot man playing the same position Welker & Chambers ran the end-around from.

10. JT made Anthony Davis his b!tch and pimp slapped him aside on more than one occasion, and also proved he's better than Simeon Rice. Or at least, he was last night. Simeon got dominated by Randy McMichael but when the Bucs tried to have Becht do the same thing, JT blazed by Becht as if he was standing still and sacked Griese on a short 3 step drop. You're not supposed to get sacks on a 3 step drop, that's why they designed them that way.

11. Kevin Carter continues to be our most valuable addition on defense. He was BORN for playing LDE in the 3-4 technique. If you see the 3-4 used on 50% of our plays or more this season (and I suspect you will), you can thank Kevin Carter for that. He's like Richard Seymour out there. He's dominant. Can't say enough. JT had a great day, but Carter is consistently collapsing things more than JT is.

12. Reggie Howard will start at CB this season. Say what? I'm sorry, but after embarrassing himself against the Bears he has been our most improved defensive secondary player. He tackles well, he seems born for zone play where he gets to read the QB's movements, he peels off his assignments and flies to the ball, and he's been staying up with receivers deep lately. The guy has flat out outplayed Travis Daniels if you ask me. Daniels may know this defense, but he has a thing or two to learn about the abilities of WRs and offensive schemes in the NFL. Not to knock Daniels, he's done extremely well too, but Howard has shown the kind of promise that leads me to believe he can literally replace Surtain in his role as starting CB and slot man in the nickel package. He can blitz, he can tackle, he can play zone, he can keep up deep, he can read the QB's eyes, and he can catch the ball. He has it all and it is showing. Has anyone else been waiting for the glaring weaknesses in our secondary to start hurting us in first team play yet? You know why it hasn't? Yup. Howard.

13. Sam Madison's days as a Dolphin are numbered. He's never been asked to be responsible for making plays on the ballcarrier the way he is in this defense, and he's failing at it. We've always known he's a pedestrian tackler, but now we see why Bill Parcells use to have little respect for Madison and use to send runners right toward his position on the outside. He will only be a Dolphin until we find a suitable replacement. Whether Will Poole turns out to be that replacement or not, I don't know. For now, he's still great at covering people, and Saban will use that believe me.

14. Channing Crowder had a decent game, but I thought Spragan and Seau were both better. I'm just sayin...I know we have a lot of hopes for Crowder, but he's not there yet. Spragan, Seau, and Thomas ARE there. Channing will be eventually.

15. Holliday continues to perform excellently, like a poor man's Kevin Carter. And Tractor Traylor does too, but we need Chester to get back so that he can give him rest every now and then otherwise Traylor will wear down before the mid-year mark.

16. Yeremiah Bell may have played himself out of the starting lineup with his poor technique against the Bucs. In coverage and in tackling, he had poor technique. On one play he should have helped Crowder put a contain on Caddy who was running out right, instead he cut Crowder off and tried to tackle Caddy, who broke the tackle and got about 6 more yards. On that Galloway deep cross that resulted in a touchdown pass called back by holding, Bell displayed extremely poor technique in picking up Galloway's coverage on the deep cross. I actually thought he was going to trip over himself and fall down it was so poor. Schulters, on the other hand, seemed to play well in this game...we could see a move very soon.

17. Did I mention that Randy McMichael deserves a medal for this game? ;) Did I mention that Ron Jaworski deserves a good punch in the throat? Consistently called McMichael "Randy McDaniel" and as always, has been a BLATANT apologist for every player on the Bucs' roster. I love how he'll talk up that Galloway TD on the deep cross called back by a "stupid holding penalty" all day long, except if you look at the tape Kevin Carter knocked the RT flat on his face and had the RT not reached out his hands and outright TRIPPED Carter, then that ball never would have gotten out of Griese's hands unless it was a fumble. YEESH.

18. Also, the Bucs played their 2nd string a little early for my tastes. I thought they'd have had an agreement in place on when to take them out. Nope. By the time AJ Feeley played, that wasn't the Bucs' 2nd stringers out there in the secondary, those were the 3rd stringers and the guys who will never see an NFL roster. Sorry to take the wind out of your sails AJ, but that TD pass to Farmer came against Blue Adams, Ronyell Whitaker, and Kalvin Pearson. Ouch.

thanks CK for this comprehensive deep line analysis....Appreciate it more than you know. It just amazes me that you can absorb all of those nuiances during a game...Terrific!
 
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