Futureite wrote:Ready to enjoy this game. And this is admittedly f'd up. But internet or not, I'm not going to allow a couple of the usual suspects off the hook 3 days or a week later calling me x, y and z, claimng my opinion is shared by none or requesting 10 links to prove a quote So while it's still fresh in everyone's mind:
Rodney Harrison, 10 minutes ago:
"Let's face it. RIchard Sherman grabs and holds more than any corner in the league".
Hawk Sista wrote:And then they showed footage of Sherm. The footage showed legal coverage. And then they spoke of GB's corner & showed footage of him in coverage. He did the same thing but WAY WORSE... Illegal even w/ NO mention of the grabbing! It's subjective & media driven. So whatever. How many penalties did our secondary get? How many yards did the NFL poster boy get? Azzzzzz whuppin!
Nuff said. Go away
kalibane wrote:And yet even with the new emphasis on illegal contact and defensive holding the best QB in the NFL opts to not take advantage of the grabbiest corner in the NFL by completely avoiding him for the entire first half.
It's a good thing that everything pundits say is gospel... How about this little nugget previewing the 49ers on Peter King's site:
"But when it comes to the mental and fundamental aspects, Kaepernick is still unripe. Too often he flees the pocket without even getting to the top of his drop, which is the mark of a quarterback who either has no idea what to do on a certain play or no idea what he’s seeing (or both). If Kaepernick’s first read is not open, the play immediately becomes randomized. Not surprisingly, Harbaugh and Roman don’t even ask the 26-year-old to drop back and scan both sides of the field. And Kaepernick’s understanding of how routes are synchronized and intersected is primitive, at least in terms of how they relate to various coverages."
Gonna go out on a limb though and say you probably would say since you disagree with this point of view it's not true. Your interminable hard on for Richard Sherman is getting really boring.
Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:And yet even with the new emphasis on illegal contact and defensive holding the best QB in the NFL opts to not take advantage of the grabbiest corner in the NFL by completely avoiding him for the entire first half.
It's a good thing that everything pundits say is gospel... How about this little nugget previewing the 49ers on Peter King's site:
"But when it comes to the mental and fundamental aspects, Kaepernick is still unripe. Too often he flees the pocket without even getting to the top of his drop, which is the mark of a quarterback who either has no idea what to do on a certain play or no idea what he’s seeing (or both). If Kaepernick’s first read is not open, the play immediately becomes randomized. Not surprisingly, Harbaugh and Roman don’t even ask the 26-year-old to drop back and scan both sides of the field. And Kaepernick’s understanding of how routes are synchronized and intersected is primitive, at least in terms of how they relate to various coverages."
Gonna go out on a limb though and say you probably would say since you disagree with this point of view it's not true. Your interminable hard on for Richard Sherman is getting really boring.
Yep. I was curious to see if the new rules would effect them. As I posted before, if there were any dropoff I expected it to be minimal. If at all. But man your D is good. In all honesty they are fun to watch.
Just thought it was funny how a statement I make as a "troll" is also made in front of the entire country by an ex NFL safety. I wonder how many of you called him a "troll" when he said that.
Anyhow, not exactly the time for you to be knocking our QB. Like I've also posted before, RW is good. But nothing he does from the pocket looks elite to me. He threw several balls that easily could have been picked and were simply bad decisions, threw a bunch of short passes and threw 2 tds on a screen and a fake read option. The only homers are the ones predicting these monster statistical yrs for RW and Brees like mastery of O. When you get down to it, your O is still based off Lynch - always will be - screens and deep playaction shots. I appreciate RW for who he is and what he does, but he is not the guy you've wanted him to be.
Just thought it was funny how a statement I make as a "troll" is also made in front of the entire country by an ex NFL safety.
burrrton wrote:Ok, I'm just going to say it:
Mike and Mike, 10 minutes ago: "That Seattle offense doesn't scare anyone."
People who are paid to pay attention to the entire league spout a lot of cliches, bromides, and conventional wisdom. "RICHARD SHERMAN HOLD MORE THAN ANEEEONE" is one of those things.
[edit- and I've gotta throw out a little LOL for Future not being able to resist illustrating once again how mind-fcked he is over Sherm!]
mykc14 wrote:Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:And yet even with the new emphasis on illegal contact and defensive holding the best QB in the NFL opts to not take advantage of the grabbiest corner in the NFL by completely avoiding him for the entire first half.
It's a good thing that everything pundits say is gospel... How about this little nugget previewing the 49ers on Peter King's site:
"But when it comes to the mental and fundamental aspects, Kaepernick is still unripe. Too often he flees the pocket without even getting to the top of his drop, which is the mark of a quarterback who either has no idea what to do on a certain play or no idea what he’s seeing (or both). If Kaepernick’s first read is not open, the play immediately becomes randomized. Not surprisingly, Harbaugh and Roman don’t even ask the 26-year-old to drop back and scan both sides of the field. And Kaepernick’s understanding of how routes are synchronized and intersected is primitive, at least in terms of how they relate to various coverages."
Gonna go out on a limb though and say you probably would say since you disagree with this point of view it's not true. Your interminable hard on for Richard Sherman is getting really boring.
Yep. I was curious to see if the new rules would effect them. As I posted before, if there were any dropoff I expected it to be minimal. If at all. But man your D is good. In all honesty they are fun to watch.
Just thought it was funny how a statement I make as a "troll" is also made in front of the entire country by an ex NFL safety. I wonder how many of you called him a "troll" when he said that.
Anyhow, not exactly the time for you to be knocking our QB. Like I've also posted before, RW is good. But nothing he does from the pocket looks elite to me. He threw several balls that easily could have been picked and were simply bad decisions, threw a bunch of short passes and threw 2 tds on a screen and a fake read option. The only homers are the ones predicting these monster statistical yrs for RW and Brees like mastery of O. When you get down to it, your O is still based off Lynch - always will be - screens and deep playaction shots. I appreciate RW for who he is and what he does, but he is not the guy you've wanted him to be.
We clearly have a different definition for the word 'serveral.' He made 1 bad throw/decision, the one to Miller that should have been picked. The other pass that could have been picked, was a deep throw to Baldwin with 19 sec left in the half, I have no problem with that throw at all.
The TD to Coleman was not a screen, sorry you continually prove a low football IQ when you try and discuss the intricacies of the sport.
Two seasons played, 1 SB win. The most wins by a qb in their first 2 years in the NFL. 2 Pro-Bowl seasons. 2nd most TD passes thrown in their first 2 season, do I really need to go on? He is BETTER than the guy we could have ever hoped he would be. Again, this statement causes you to look like you don't know anything about the sport. He is everything his coach is asking him to be and he absolutely is the guy we have said he is, sorry you are not as convinced about yours.
Wow, did they really say that? That is funny. Which Mike said it?
burrrton wrote:Wow, did they really say that? That is funny. Which Mike said it?
Yep- that's paraphrased, but the gist is accurate. It was Greenberg looking for rationale for why SEA was going to struggle more than expected this year (passing game no threat, so Lynch would be leaned on too much, and he's old, etc).
Knowledgeable people.
If Kaep had that game against what is obviously a bad GB D, you all would roast him.
Futureite wrote:Ready to enjoy this game. And this is admittedly f'd up. But internet or not, I'm not going to allow a couple of the usual suspects off the hook 3 days or a week later calling me x, y and z, claimng my opinion is shared by none or requesting 10 links to prove a quote So while it's still fresh in everyone's mind:
Rodney Harrison, 10 minutes ago:
"Let's face it. RIchard Sherman grabs and holds more than any corner in the league".
mykc14 wrote:burrrton wrote:Wow, did they really say that? That is funny. Which Mike said it?
Yep- that's paraphrased, but the gist is accurate. It was Greenberg looking for rationale for why SEA was going to struggle more than expected this year (passing game no threat, so Lynch would be leaned on too much, and he's old, etc).
I don't have a problem with people questioning how good the Hawks might be, I mean it's their job, but to categorize their O as not scary after last night is laughable. This O is every bit as scary as any O in the NFL right now.
kalibane wrote:Future,
When people were ripping your offense in the preseason I expressed an opinion that Kaepernick showed improvement, contrary to that quote I just provided. My point is it doesn't matter what Harrison said any more than it matters what this guy said about Kaepernick. Just because one talking head happens to agree with your assessment doesn't make it true.
I provided a published film study of Richard Sherman's 2013 season that broke down every single snap he was on the field. Did you read it? I doubt it. Because you keep coming back with what some talking head on television said. So according to Rodney Harrison holds more than any corner in the game but he wasn't flagged more than anyone. To have you tell it Sherman is an above average corner who only appears good because he grabs and holds on every single play. While Earl Thomas gives help over the top. He had the same amount of defensive holding penalties as Joe Haden. Only two more than Patrick Peterson. Zero illegal contact penalties. The actual facts don't substantiate your claims.
And when you are presented with the actual facts and/or very detailed analysis you choose to ignore it in favor of your unsubstantiated sound bite.
The Packers, who have the best QB in the league, built their offensive game plan around completely avoiding throwing at Richard Sherman. Which makes no sense if he holds more than any DB in the game in a year where defensive holding is a point of emphasis. That says way more than Rodney Harrison spouting off at the mouth in a pre-game show.
Regarding Russell Wilson, but Tony Dungy says that Russell Wilson reminds him of Joe Montana and Dan Patrick agreed. Clearly that means he is the 2nd coming. Somehow that doesn't mean anything though because it doesn't jibe with what your personal opinion is. What Rodney Harrison said on the other hand (since it agrees with your personal opinion) was worthy of it's own thread.
Then you wonder why you're considered an imbicile.
Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:Future,
When people were ripping your offense in the preseason I expressed an opinion that Kaepernick showed improvement, contrary to that quote I just provided. My point is it doesn't matter what Harrison said any more than it matters what this guy said about Kaepernick. Just because one talking head happens to agree with your assessment doesn't make it true.
I provided a published film study of Richard Sherman's 2013 season that broke down every single snap he was on the field. Did you read it? I doubt it. Because you keep coming back with what some talking head on television said. So according to Rodney Harrison holds more than any corner in the game but he wasn't flagged more than anyone. To have you tell it Sherman is an above average corner who only appears good because he grabs and holds on every single play. While Earl Thomas gives help over the top. He had the same amount of defensive holding penalties as Joe Haden. Only two more than Patrick Peterson. Zero illegal contact penalties. The actual facts don't substantiate your claims.
And when you are presented with the actual facts and/or very detailed analysis you choose to ignore it in favor of your unsubstantiated sound bite.
The Packers, who have the best QB in the league, built their offensive game plan around completely avoiding throwing at Richard Sherman. Which makes no sense if he holds more than any DB in the game in a year where defensive holding is a point of emphasis. That says way more than Rodney Harrison spouting off at the mouth in a pre-game show.
Regarding Russell Wilson, but Tony Dungy says that Russell Wilson reminds him of Joe Montana and Dan Patrick agreed. Clearly that means he is the 2nd coming. Somehow that doesn't mean anything though because it doesn't jibe with what your personal opinion is. What Rodney Harrison said on the other hand (since it agrees with your personal opinion) was worthy of it's own thread.
Then you wonder why you're considered an imbicile.
I do not believe Harrison's comment validated my opinion. I hope that is not how my statement was taken. It just means my opinion is shared by others. It also means I do not intentionally misquote people to support my opinion. That's all.
Dungy's and Patrick's statements are fine. I'd never call you out for saying "Hey RW is great and people that know the game agree".
What I will do is dispute all the negative things said about our QB in comparison to RW. When you put this guy up on a level that some of you have, 170+ yds and a couple dink wide open TDs agsindt s very bad D at home doesn't exactly cash the "Krsppernick" checks a lot of you have written over the past yrs. In fact, I think if RW came into Clink as sn opposing QB V your D he'd play worse than Kaep has up there.
But again, that is just my opinion. And has been here for quite a while.
Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:Future,
When people were ripping your offense in the preseason I expressed an opinion that Kaepernick showed improvement, contrary to that quote I just provided. My point is it doesn't matter what Harrison said any more than it matters what this guy said about Kaepernick. Just because one talking head happens to agree with your assessment doesn't make it true.
I provided a published film study of Richard Sherman's 2013 season that broke down every single snap he was on the field. Did you read it? I doubt it. Because you keep coming back with what some talking head on television said. So according to Rodney Harrison holds more than any corner in the game but he wasn't flagged more than anyone. To have you tell it Sherman is an above average corner who only appears good because he grabs and holds on every single play. While Earl Thomas gives help over the top. He had the same amount of defensive holding penalties as Joe Haden. Only two more than Patrick Peterson. Zero illegal contact penalties. The actual facts don't substantiate your claims.
And when you are presented with the actual facts and/or very detailed analysis you choose to ignore it in favor of your unsubstantiated sound bite.
The Packers, who have the best QB in the league, built their offensive game plan around completely avoiding throwing at Richard Sherman. Which makes no sense if he holds more than any DB in the game in a year where defensive holding is a point of emphasis. That says way more than Rodney Harrison spouting off at the mouth in a pre-game show.
Regarding Russell Wilson, but Tony Dungy says that Russell Wilson reminds him of Joe Montana and Dan Patrick agreed. Clearly that means he is the 2nd coming. Somehow that doesn't mean anything though because it doesn't jibe with what your personal opinion is. What Rodney Harrison said on the other hand (since it agrees with your personal opinion) was worthy of it's own thread.
Then you wonder why you're considered an imbicile.
I do not believe Harrison's comment validated my opinion. I hope that is not how my statement was taken. It just means my opinion is shared by others. It also means I do not intentionally misquote people to support my opinion. That's all.
Dungy's and Patrick's statements are fine. I'd never call you out for saying "Hey RW is great and people that know the game agree".
What I will do is dispute all the negative things said about our QB in comparison to RW. When you put this guy up on a level that some of you have, 170+ yds and a couple dink wide open TDs agsindt s very bad D at home doesn't exactly cash the "Krsppernick" checks a lot of you have written over the past yrs. In fact, I think if RW came into Clink as sn opposing QB V your D he'd play worse than Kaep has up there.
But again, that is just my opinion. And has been here for quite a while.
HumanCockroach wrote:Futureite wrote:kalibane wrote:Future,
When people were ripping your offense in the preseason I expressed an opinion that Kaepernick showed improvement, contrary to that quote I just provided. My point is it doesn't matter what Harrison said any more than it matters what this guy said about Kaepernick. Just because one talking head happens to agree with your assessment doesn't make it true.
I provided a published film study of Richard Sherman's 2013 season that broke down every single snap he was on the field. Did you read it? I doubt it. Because you keep coming back with what some talking head on television said. So according to Rodney Harrison holds more than any corner in the game but he wasn't flagged more than anyone. To have you tell it Sherman is an above average corner who only appears good because he grabs and holds on every single play. While Earl Thomas gives help over the top. He had the same amount of defensive holding penalties as Joe Haden. Only two more than Patrick Peterson. Zero illegal contact penalties. The actual facts don't substantiate your claims.
And when you are presented with the actual facts and/or very detailed analysis you choose to ignore it in favor of your unsubstantiated sound bite.
The Packers, who have the best QB in the league, built their offensive game plan around completely avoiding throwing at Richard Sherman. Which makes no sense if he holds more than any DB in the game in a year where defensive holding is a point of emphasis. That says way more than Rodney Harrison spouting off at the mouth in a pre-game show.
Regarding Russell Wilson, but Tony Dungy says that Russell Wilson reminds him of Joe Montana and Dan Patrick agreed. Clearly that means he is the 2nd coming. Somehow that doesn't mean anything though because it doesn't jibe with what your personal opinion is. What Rodney Harrison said on the other hand (since it agrees with your personal opinion) was worthy of it's own thread.
Then you wonder why you're considered an imbicile.
I do not believe Harrison's comment validated my opinion. I hope that is not how my statement was taken. It just means my opinion is shared by others. It also means I do not intentionally misquote people to support my opinion. That's all.
Dungy's and Patrick's statements are fine. I'd never call you out for saying "Hey RW is great and people that know the game agree".
What I will do is dispute all the negative things said about our QB in comparison to RW. When you put this guy up on a level that some of you have, 170+ yds and a couple dink wide open TDs agsindt s very bad D at home doesn't exactly cash the "Krsppernick" checks a lot of you have written over the past yrs. In fact, I think if RW came into Clink as sn opposing QB V your D he'd play worse than Kaep has up there.
But again, that is just my opinion. And has been here for quite a while.
What are you basing that opinion on? Because nothing I've seen makes me believe that, for one thing Wilson practices against THAT defense each and every day, in fact, I could easily say he would be MORE prepared to play against them, IN that stadium, than ANY QB playing the game, period.
Wilson had 240 yards of offense 2td's no turnovers, and did what he NEEDED to do. When they needed a third down conversion, he got it, when they needed a run, ditto. When they needed to kil clock, yep, when they needed a TD sure enough...... You are NOT watching anything "objectively" your looking for a way to pick apart something you don't understand, because you haven't seen a team this complete in your lifetime. The offense scored on eight of ten drives minus the kneel down and series with fifteen second left in the half, the produced four hundred yards of offense, how ANYONE can claim that is a mediocre game, is stupid, anyone that KNOWS football, knows when you can run the ball at will, you DO, and there is NO need to stupidily continue to throw to pad stats. ( which is what your entire argument boils down to, volume, not quality, or excellent play, but number of throws, and nothing more. Can you tell me he doesn't throw for 300 EASILY with the same number of throws as Rodgers? If you try, you are showing your lack of knowledge once again).
Futureite wrote:HC;
I am basing it on what I watched last yr and continued to watch to open this yr. I gave him the benefit of the doubt given the praise most of you heaped on him after preseason games that I did not watch, but what I saw were jet sweeps, WR/RB screens and playaction. I am sorry but this is not the type of O that a "student of the game" who supposedly is so much more gifted in football IQ and reading Ds than other QBs would run. It is a great gameplan because it works. And RW is good at the things he does (playaction, mobile, etc). But he is about a 10-12 range QB IMO. He sure didn't live up to the hype or the crap you guys have talked in the areas he supposedly distances himself from Kaep.
I am also basing it on the fact that your D would not have dropped several of the balls he threw. If he came into Clunk as the Packer's QB he'd have been screwed. And you know it. He'd have thrown for 100 and change and a couple picks. Then you could talk about how he "choked" or "cracked under pressure".
Honestly I am just giving you back some of the shyt talked about our crumbling, choking QB. You have now seen Rodgers and Brees do all the things Kaep did. But RW "remained calm". No shyt. Of course he did. He wasn't the one facing that D, that crowd. And to top it off he's handing off to the best RB in the game.
Sorry if I am talking shyt now but some of you made these asenine points and then filleted me for rebutting them. And lately almost every point I made has been born out. That one about "poise" had to be one of the stupidest ones here. Or maybe Aaron Rodgers has less of it now than RW too.
SMFH.
Futureite wrote:HC;
I am basing it on what I watched last yr and continued to watch to open this yr. I gave him the benefit of the doubt given the praise most of you heaped on him after preseason games that I did not watch, but what I saw were jet sweeps, WR/RB screens and playaction. I am sorry but this is not the type of O that a "student of the game" who supposedly is so much more gifted in football IQ and reading Ds than other QBs would run. It is a great gameplan because it works. And RW is good at the things he does (playaction, mobile, etc). But he is about a 10-12 range QB IMO. He sure didn't live up to the hype or the crap you guys have talked in the areas he supposedly distances himself from Kaep.
I am also basing it on the fact that your D would not have dropped several of the balls he threw. If he came into Clunk as the Packer's QB he'd have been screwed. And you know it. He'd have thrown for 100 and change and a couple picks. Then you could talk about how he "choked" or "cracked under pressure".
Honestly I am just giving you back some of the shyt talked about our crumbling, choking QB. You have now seen Rodgers and Brees do all the things Kaep did. But RW "remained calm". No shyt. Of course he did. He wasn't the one facing that D, that crowd. And to top it off he's handing off to the best RB in the game.
Sorry if I am talking shyt now but some of you made these asenine points and then filleted me for rebutting them. And lately almost every point I made has been born out. That one about "poise" had to be one of the stupidest ones here. Or maybe Aaron Rodgers has less of it now than RW too.
SMFH.
kalibane wrote:True. Even if it's a "gimmick" just like the read-option coordinators really won't be able to really scheme against it until the offseason.
But it's really not the concepts that make the offense scary. It's Percy Harvin aka "the worst trade in franchise history". He alters everything that defenses have to do. If he goes out in the pattern he takes the top off the defense. If he goes in motion on the jet sweep he takes LBs out of the box.
Part of it I'm sure was due to the Packers being soft up front without B.J. Raji but there were several runs by Lynch and/or Turbin where accounting for Harvin forced defenses to commit fewer guys to the box and then caused a split second hesitation until they figure out where the ball is actually going. Consequently those runs with Harvin in motion Lynch and Turbin had holes opened in the first level of the defense that you could literrally drive a golf cart through.
Offense looked impressive... and defensive coordinators are not going to have fun in their preparation. If you don't have fast linebackers it's going to be really tough to deal with.
Futureite wrote:HC;
I am basing it on what I watched last yr and continued to watch to open this yr. I gave him the benefit of the doubt given the praise most of you heaped on him after preseason games that I did not watch, but what I saw were jet sweeps, WR/RB screens and playaction. I am sorry but this is not the type of O that a "student of the game" who supposedly is so much more gifted in football IQ and reading Ds than other QBs would run. It is a great gameplan because it works. And RW is good at the things he does (playaction, mobile, etc). But he is about a 10-12 range QB IMO. He sure didn't live up to the hype or the crap you guys have talked in the areas he supposedly distances himself from Kaep.
I am also basing it on the fact that your D would not have dropped several of the balls he threw. If he came into Clunk as the Packer's QB he'd have been screwed. And you know it. He'd have thrown for 100 and change and a couple picks. Then you could talk about how he "choked" or "cracked under pressure".
Honestly I am just giving you back some of the shyt talked about our crumbling, choking QB. You have now seen Rodgers and Brees do all the things Kaep did. But RW "remained calm". No shyt. Of course he did. He wasn't the one facing that D, that crowd. And to top it off he's handing off to the best RB in the game.
Sorry if I am talking shyt now but some of you made these asenine points and then filleted me for rebutting them. And lately almost every point I made has been born out. That one about "poise" had to be one of the stupidest ones here. Or maybe Aaron Rodgers has less of it now than RW too.
SMFH.
Futureite wrote:HC;
I am basing it on what I watched last yr and continued to watch to open this yr. I gave him the benefit of the doubt given the praise most of you heaped on him after preseason games that I did not watch, but what I saw were jet sweeps, WR/RB screens and playaction. I am sorry but this is not the type of O that a "student of the game" who supposedly is so much more gifted in football IQ and reading Ds than other QBs would run. It is a great gameplan because it works. And RW is good at the things he does (playaction, mobile, etc). But he is about a 10-12 range QB IMO. He sure didn't live up to the hype or the crap you guys have talked in the areas he supposedly distances himself from Kaep.
I am also basing it on the fact that your D would not have dropped several of the balls he threw. If he came into Clunk as the Packer's QB he'd have been screwed. And you know it. He'd have thrown for 100 and change and a couple picks. Then you could talk about how he "choked" or "cracked under pressure".
Honestly I am just giving you back some of the shyt talked about our crumbling, choking QB. You have now seen Rodgers and Brees do all the things Kaep did. But RW "remained calm". No shyt. Of course he did. He wasn't the one facing that D, that crowd. And to top it off he's handing off to the best RB in the game.
Sorry if I am talking shyt now but some of you made these asenine points and then filleted me for rebutting them. And lately almost every point I made has been born out. That one about "poise" had to be one of the stupidest ones here. Or maybe Aaron Rodgers has less of it now than RW too.
SMFH.
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