Can't we say that both are valid points? Both analysts are merely picking and choosing which plays Tannehill could have have gotten rid of the ball quicker (Sharpe) and which plays Tannehill either made great plays despite the poor o-line play or made bad plays because of the o-line play (the other guy). The fault of the bad play changes depending on the play (sometimes it's Tannehill's fault, sometimes it's the o-line's fault, sometimes it's an unfortunate interaction of both).
Spreading the blame, and acknowledging reality just doesn't fit some peoples anti-tannehill obsession. It just shows their ignorance.
---------- Post added at 10:04 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:03 AM ----------
I think it's quite possible that what he meant was that the inordinate number of sacks, i.e., the number of sacks over and above the league norm, is, in his opinion, on Tannehill. I doubt "all those sacks" means for him "every one of them." I suspect it instead means "the number of them that are over and above the ordinary."
Nope. He said what he said. Your expert meant what he meant.