Seahawks4Ever wrote:Point of fact, the NFL was already clamping down on holding and grabbing by DB's hence all of the flags that Brandon Browner used to draw.
All of the Seahawk haters really came out of the woodwork on that site, they are really going to gnash their teeth when our Hawks repeat by running the table!
I mean, you would think they would have earned some respect but there was that former Charger saying that our receivers were still "pedestrian"! I couldn't believe my ears, and today he says we won "without" a very good QB. Really?? keep hating Mr. Merriman!
burrrton wrote:I get a kick out of the comments implying this is some new Seattle invention. If someone thinks this is going to have a disproportionate effect on us, I think they're in for a rude awakening.
*Every* secondary mauls/grabs/whateveryouwanttocallit on every play- LOB doesn't do it *more* than most, they just do it *better*.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:Anthony; Maybe it wasn't Merriman, but the ex charger I am talking about is the one who is on the NFL channel every single day. No, I don't have a link for a particular episode of a television show, how could I unless the NFL channel put it out on the internet. I do know what I heard YESTERDAY and what I heard from the ex Charger host was that in his opinion Russell Wilson wasn't a very good QB and that our receiving core wasn't very good either. No, he did not use those exact words but there was no mistaking what he meant.
Futureite wrote:burrrton wrote:I get a kick out of the comments implying this is some new Seattle invention. If someone thinks this is going to have a disproportionate effect on us, I think they're in for a rude awakening.
*Every* secondary mauls/grabs/whateveryouwanttocallit on every play- LOB doesn't do it *more* than most, they just do it *better*.
I don't know if it will have a disproportionate effect on the Hawks winning but that's not the point. Point is they do it a lot and it should be called. I've been posting for a while that I saw it with my own eyes Thursday Night in 2012 before I was really even familiar with your entire secondary, long before it became a national storyline. Your DBs were holding damn near every pass play. Sherman tried to shift the narrative to "the bully doesn't like to be bullied", but that made no sense (per usual). A receiver's job is not to engage in hand fighting or overpowering a DB 15-20 yds down field. Every DB would love to force a wr to engage like that on every play. This is about the 3rd point I've been criticized here for making in the past but has been independently validated within the last week! The football gods are bestowing the "anti-homer" defense upon me this month, "schmacking" (as Browner once said) some of you around pretty good lately.
Point is they do it a lot and it should be called.
Your DBs were holding damn near every pass play.
This is about the 3rd point I've been criticized here for making in the past but has been independently validated within the last week! The football gods are bestowing the "anti-homer" defense upon me this month, "schmacking" (as Browner once said) some of you around pretty good lately
burrrton wrote:And your receivers shove off damn near every pass play, and considering that's also going to be a point of emphasis (if I read that story right), I think you should be much more worried about that.
You guys weren't that good to begin with.This is about the 3rd point I've been criticized here for making in the past but has been independently validated within the last week! The football gods are bestowing the "anti-homer" defense upon me this month, "schmacking" (as Browner once said) some of you around pretty good lately
LOL.
Future, I've been one of the 'regulars' who enjoyed engaging with you more than most over the years, and I'm about 3 nonsensical posts away from just completely ignoring you.
You've been on a roll lately alright, but I'm not sure it's the one you think.
Hawktawk wrote:Future can STFU. On the heralded tip in the NFC Title game I got the Crabs Tree shoves Sherman so hard a Kelly Jennings type guy would have been on his face. Pushing off is the only way any SF reciever other than VD can get open.And they call Seattle's receivers pedestrian!
I wonder if their focus on OPI will have an effect on the Broncos. They had more YAC than any team last year. And it was primarily a result of Broncos players engaging defenders LONG before the pass was thrown. They tried that stuff vs the Hawks but with our freakish speed in the secondary coupled with great linebacker play the Hawks stuffed it. But they wound up knocking Aquib Talib out of the AFC championship with one of those plays. I doubt it will get called next year either. Gotta keep the noodle armed fossil around you know.Good for TV ratings....
It is a big part of their strategy and it is no mystery.
It is not a material paet of what our WRs do.
2nd, contact downfield contact disproportionatly effects a WR more than a DB.
A WR would like to avoid contact at all cost and disengage.
What I do believe is that a call or two will have an effect in a close game, and what I saw in person multiple times was PI - nothing more, nothing less.
burrrton wrote:Future, Clayton and Aikman are paid to fill air time (you like running to authority, don't you?). In fact I listen to Clayton a lot (or did- I haven't caught him since they reorganized the ESPN Radio Seattle lineup on 7/14), and I've heard him discussing the physical nature of secondaries *we faced* being tougher on our smaller receivers.
You know as well as I do that *every* DB could have a flag thrown on virtually every pass play if the referee wanted to throw one, and nothing you quoted/paraphrased contradicts that. Crying that you heard Aikman make a remark about our secondary once certainly doesn't- do you think he or Clayton would say contact downfield is a uniquely Seattle phenomenon?2nd, contact downfield contact disproportionatly effects a WR more than a DB.
Sorry, Future- calling DB contact more closely will have less effect on a team that is at the top of the league and for the most part simply does it better than most, and that every other team in the league also does on virtually every play, than calling OPI on a team that relies on it to simply be bad.
A couple more PIs a game could make our secondary slightly less effective, but it could make your passing game a non-factor (in theory- everyone adjusts).A WR would like to avoid contact at all cost and disengage.
Of course, but the NFL isn't played in the Land of Unicorns, so there *will* be guys contacting them, and a *very* effective way to get away from that contact at key moments is... say it with me... shoving off.
So arguing calling OPI for "shoving off" won't have much effect on a team that does it a lot because receivers would prefer to be left alone is, well, I don't know what (not enough coffee yet), but it has nothing to do with it.What I do believe is that a call or two will have an effect in a close game, and what I saw in person multiple times was PI - nothing more, nothing less.
Future, I have every game on Tivo upstairs- you want to bet me I can't find textbook DPI (contact past 5 yds when not looking for the ball, jersey grabs, etc) on your secondary "multiple times", too?
but playing pbysical both at the line and downfield is the Hawks ENTIRE strategy.
Most teams do not have the personnel to do this either at corner or FS.
I am going to strongly disagree with your assertion that contact aids a WR as much as a DB.
burrrton wrote:but playing pbysical both at the line and downfield is the Hawks ENTIRE strategy.
Future, if this is your honest opinion, and you're not just trying to bullsh*t your way out of a stupid position, I'm going to be done addressing you.
Our corners may be taller than most, and they may not be "burners", but neither is a linebacker for chrissakes, and since when is either of those things a barrier or requirement (respectively) for being good without "cheating"??Most teams do not have the personnel to do this either at corner or FS.
They don't have the personnel to be *good* at it, but getting up in the receivers' grills and bumping and grabbing, and having a free safety that roams, are part of (virtually) EVERY team's strategy.
Again, you want to bet me I can screenshot "multiple" examples of your team doing it (to pick one example you might be more familiar with)?I am going to strongly disagree with your assertion that contact aids a WR as much as a DB.
I don't think I made that assertion- I said *pushing off* aids *your* WRs more (relative to other teams) than downfield contact aids *our* secondary (relative to other teams), and also that you don't have any room for error (so to speak).
You posit that my position has no support, yet as I stated there are former professional athletes and analysts that have spoken to this topic.
Why do so many other people perceive this the same way that I do?
The majority of what he does is built on precision route running, shielding a defender with his body to gain postion, and using his strong hands to fight for 50/50 balls.
When you can show me the collective national football audience calling out our WRs for employing a strategy that is potentially crosses the line, I'll change my opinion.
How about manning up and just owning up to it.
Lol I'd just like to be on record for this.
HumanCockroach wrote:"The majority of what he does is built on precision route running, shielding a defender with his body to gain postion, and using his strong hands to fight for 50/50 ballS"
What that says to me, is you watch Boldin only slightly more than you watch the Seahawks defensive backfield, which if that is what you believe, isn't very much. Boldin is in a constant hand battle on almost every route where he isn't provided a cushion, which has allowed him to have this "HOF" career ( LOL) which is why he has struggled so mightily against the Seahawks defensive backfield, because he CAN'T simply push them out of the way to garner the seperation he gains from doing so on a regular basis against smaller ( and common) defensive backs. Without the ability to do that, he no longer creates seperation. he can still use his hands and size to make plays, but now you are talking about Mike Williams, instead of a PRO BOwl, guy. Big difference there. He isn't a guy that is going to run away from anyone, nor has he ever been that guy. Without his ability to physically create space, he really isn't worht much.
That said, I do NOT believe for a second, that Refs will call him on it ( after all OPI has been on the books his entire career and they haven't done so with any regularity up to this point) and as ALWAYS the league continues to attempt to skew the rules to encourage scoring. I'm sure there were quite a few panties in a bunch after this defense completely dismantled "the best offense in the history of the game" personally I have zero delusions of who the cartel at the top of the NFL wanted to win that SB, and not by a few points. Offense ( ie, the NFL's version of "chicks dig the long ball") is what the NFL wants, strives for and attempts to force feed every fan in the world. That isn't going to change, and as such, offensive players will be aloud to continue to run illegal pick plays, push off, shove in the back, pull on DB's jerseys and pretty much do whatever and whenever they feel the desire to do so, cause hey, why would anyone want to actually watch FOOTBALL when they can instead watch fast breaks on a football field...
But like I said, engaging in any physical contact at all with a DB is a win for the DB and a loss for the WR. Doing so throws off the timing of both the QB and the WR.
HumanCockroach wrote:This is stupid. Anyone that thinks receivers don't benefit ever from pushing off, or grabbing a DB is retarded and doesn't watch, hasn't played, or hasn't coached the game. In one post there is a claim to precision route running, the next how Boldin has "pushed" Sherman all over the field. Stupid.
Of course receivers wish there was no contact, as much as they wish there was no defenders what so ever. Players like Boldin made their career on "out physicalling" defensive backs, it is his bread and butter, and the ONE thing that seperseparates him from being an "ok" receiver, without it, he wouldn't be what he was, and arguing he would, shows a fundamental lack of understanding about not only him, but the game itself.
NorthHawk wrote:There's definitely going to be a "learning curve" for DBs, just like it was for hits.
I wonder if the Refs will start out being real strict then ease off as the year goes on and the games become more important.
It's human nature to not try to influence games and let the players decide the outcome except for extremely obvious violations.
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