kalibane wrote:The answer is zero. They were talking about this on the radio this morning. The Patriots have only faced qbs in that mold three times since 2012. Once each against Wilson, Newton and Kaepernick. Lost all three. Rodgers is the next best out of the pocket QB they faced (once) and they lost. Luck is the only mobile QB they've mastered.
NorthHawk wrote:The Pats will have had 2 weeks to study our Offense and will be as prepared as any team has been against us.
My concern is our Offense will come out shooting blanks like last game and get us in a hole we can't get out of.
Hawk Sista wrote:QUICK look at the Pats defense this last year and into the playoffs:
Yards/Game allowed = 344/game 13th
rushing = 104/game (9th)
passing = 240/game (17th)
Points/Game allowed = 19.6/game - 8th
REGULAR SEASON
@ Miami (Tannehill) L 20-33: D allowed 178 Pass Yards; 2 TDs/1 INT & 192 rushing yards
@ Vikings (Cassell) W 30-7: D allowed 202 Pass Yards; 1 TD/4 INTs & 54 rushing yards
VS Oakland (Carr) W 16-9: D allowed 174 Pass Yards; 0 TDs/1 INT & 67 rushing yards
@ KS (A. Smith) L 14-44 D: allowed 248 Pass Yards; 3 TDs/0 INTs & 207 rushing yards
VS Cinci (Dalton) W 43-17: D allowed 249 Pass Yards; 2 TDs/0 INT & 79 rushing yards
@ Bills (Orton) W 37-22 D: allowed 299 Pass Yards; 2 TDs/1 INTs & 68 rushing yards
VS NY Jets (Geno) W 27-25: D allowed 226 Pass Yards; 1 TDs/0 INT & 218 rushing yards (37 by QB)
VS Bears (Cutler) W 51-23: D allowed 249 Pass Yards; 3 TDs/1 INT & 153 rushing yards
VS Broncos (Peyton) W 43-21: D allowed 438 Pass Yards; 2 TDs/2 INT & 43 rushing yards
@ Colts (Luck) W 42-20: D allowed 303 Pass Yards; 2 TDs/1 INTs & 19 rushing yards
VS Lions (M Stafford) W 37-9: D allowed 264 Pass Yards; 0 TDs/1 INT & 91 rushing yards
@ Packers (Rogers) L 21-26: D allowed 395 Pass Yards; 2 Tds/0 INTs & 130 Rushing yards (22 by QB)
@ Chargers (Rivers) W 23-14: D allowed 189 Pass Yards; 1TDs/2 INT & 53 rushing yards
Vs Miami (Tannehill) W 41-13: D allowed 346Pass Yards; 1 TDs/2 INTs & 76 rushing yards (21 by QB)
@ NY Jets (Geno) W 17-16: D allowed 210 Pass Yards; 1 TDs/1 INT &104 rushing yards (37 by QB)
VS. Bills (Orton) L 9-17 D: allowed 176 Pass Yards; 1 TDs/0 INTs & 104 rushing yards
PLAYOFFS
VS. Baltimore (Flacco) W 35-31: D allowed 292 Pass Yards; 4 TDs/2 INTs & 136 rushing yards
VS. Colts (Luck) W 45-7: D allowed 126 Pass Yards; 0 TDs/2 INTs & 83 rushing yards
Hawktawk wrote:The QB position is a huge match up problem for the Pats, as weird as that is to say. RW has more ways to beat his opponent, maybe more ways than any QB in history. His win percentage would indicate that. Hes beyond a read option QB. Hes an I formation QB,drop back QB, roll out QB,scrambling QB. He will want Sunday so bad I think he will be radioactive....
Futureite wrote:
I am going to predict he struggles V the Pats' D. Reason for that is Belichick is going to stack heavily against the run to shut Lynch down and force Wilson to beat them. Now of course you are going to respond that RW has done X, Y and Z v other teams which have employed that strategy. As I've stated here before, RW is great V one on one coverage due to his outstanding deep ball accuracy and mobility. Most of his big games are built from facing stacked fronts and hitting big plays in one on one coverage.
But the Pats D creates a unique challenge though in that they can stick or bully receivers upfront in one on one coverage. Browner may be a liability if matched up with a more speedy receiver, but Richardson is injured and Lockette does not have the lateral movement to give him fits as other wrs have. Belichick will likely plan for this and roll coverage his way, or do something unique to confuse RW. The Pats also have extremely athletic LBs that can cover athletic TE's such as Luke Wilson and chase down QBs. They are not a "great" D by any means, but they do match up very well to defeat Seattle's pass O. I do not think Wilson struggles as hard as he did V GB, but I do not believe he will have a particularly good game either.
Nonetheless, I still believe in my gut that Seattle will win. They have proven too resilient throughout the years, their D and run game is too good, and even special teams seems to step up and make huge plays in big games. The value of the latter cannot be overstated.
Futureite wrote:I am going to predict he struggles V the Pats' D. Reason for that is Belichick is going to stack heavily against the run to shut Lynch down and force Wilson to beat them. Now of course you are going to respond that RW has done X, Y and Z v other teams which have employed that strategy.
c_hawkbob wrote:Yo Anthony, if you must respond to him, at least refrain from quoting him. We've got him on ignore for a reason.
Hawktawk wrote:Wilson will have an opportunity to cement his legacy as the greatest dual threat QB of the modern era and a SB winning QB slayer. His play will be a big factor in determining the outcome.He could easily claim the MVP he was unfairly robbed of last year.
Just as big a spotlight will be on Brady who has looked extremely ordinary in 2 straight Superbowl's without seeing anything remotely like like the LOB. The key was getting pressure with 3 or 4 guys and Brady was flummoxed.
My moneys on Wilson. I dont know how the game will turn out but RW will play his guts out and make some amazing plays I have no doubt.And we have the Beast. Good luck New England....
Unfairly robbed? It was an overwhelming majority, even amongst us 12's, that the MVP had to go to a defensive player as our defense was the largest single factor in our victory over the Broncos. Although he played an excellent game and did all that he was asked (of which the same could be said about nearly every player that day), Wilson's SB numbers weren't particularly eye popping.
Wilson's SB numbers weren't particularly eye popping.
kalibane wrote:The answer is zero. They were talking about this on the radio this morning. The Patriots have only faced qbs in that mold three times since 2012. Once each against Wilson, Newton and Kaepernick. Lost all three. Rodgers is the next best out of the pocket QB they faced (once) and they lost. Luck is the only mobile QB they've mastered.
monkey wrote:Yup. They've only mastered Luck because they've figure out how to keep him on the bench. The Colts couldn't stop my dad from running on them right now.
This is why all the talk about stopping Gronk, or whatever else people want to talk about just really doesn't matter. This game will come down to just one thing; can the Patriots stop both Lynch and Wilson?
I think the answer will be a resounding no, no they cannot.
Old but Slow wrote:Zorny, I usually agree with you totally, but this time I have a minor quibble. You say that Wilson should use his legs early, and I think he should do as he did against GB, handing the ball off continuously, until the DE forgets contain, and then run, probably late in the game. Throw the ball short and quick, run Marshawn, and be patient.
And, I like it when Russell makes the defensive linemen chase him around like a playground game of tag, because it will take their legs away late in the game. Get those big fatties running around, and then run the option to pick up first downs. Keep them winded and frustrated, then they will make mistakes and miss tackles, which all the better when the Beast Mode starts cranking.
Dang, I'm there already!
Zorn76 wrote: I'm speaking more to him running on passing downs when nothing is there unless, of course, he spots a wide open receiver/TE or has a good throwing lane that's worth a shot with only 1 defender to avoid.
Naturally, we can expect plenty of designed plays with him rushing the ball.
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