Bird Droppings wrote:Winston and Wade Smith both got some action.
I believe Smith played both left and right guard. Seemed to have slow feet. He got beat outside at least once, but also seems difficult to move. The fact that Unger was out might have compromised his action ... or ... it could be ... that's why he was available.
Winston didn't move much on some of those Pryor roll outs, but at least one of those might have been a broken play.
Denver really worked on the Hawks right side throughout the game.
Then, again, I didn't see Ware or Small getting to the second level effectively.
Too hard to evaluate either new OL until they go against number ones.
And my eye as provided by tv cameras is getting too slow getting to my brain, which has trouble keeping up with all those numbers anyway. Pete would be well advised to go with the older and more experienced Winston, again noting that I haven't seen Winston yet.
And, Dog, d coordinators are going to go after Britt until he stops them.
That reads, to me, that Winston will be the starter against the Pack with this limited early sample
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Irish Greg 2.0 wrote:He looked like a rookie playing in his first NFL game lol.
I think we are in for another year of Wilson running for his life.
Irish Greg 2.0 wrote:He (Britt) looked like a rookie playing in his first NFL game lol.
I think we are in for another year of Wilson running for his life.
RiverDog wrote:Irish Greg 2.0 wrote:He (Britt) looked like a rookie playing in his first NFL game lol.
I think we are in for another year of Wilson running for his life.
That he did. Not as bad as Carpenter's first game, but not good enough to think that he's on pace to nail down the starting RT job.
I'm a little worried that the success some teams had against us in stacking the box, taking away our run game, and making Russell beat them one-on-one becomes a blue print on how to stop the Seahawk's O. Hopefully Harvin and Richardson can loosen things up.
NorthHawk wrote:There was a stat provided earlier in the year that 75% of the sacks given up were against a 4 man rush.
If this is true and continues, it means the quick passes that have been floated as a good tactic could become ineffective as the Defenses could cheat forward to both eliminate or minimize the effectiveness of the quick pass or stuff the run. Without having to blitz, 7 Defensive players are there to attack the ball.
HumanCockroach wrote:NorthHawk wrote:There was a stat provided earlier in the year that 75% of the sacks given up were against a 4 man rush.
If this is true and continues, it means the quick passes that have been floated as a good tactic could become ineffective as the Defenses could cheat forward to both eliminate or minimize the effectiveness of the quick pass or stuff the run. Without having to blitz, 7 Defensive players are there to attack the ball.
True, but having a couple guys that can run by all 7 in a breath can't hurt in the least. I'm really not sure if people truly appreciate the speed and acceleration that Harvin ( and now Richardson ) bring. Literally, a missed angle or two, results in huge gains or points, it puts pressure on the defense, that never leaves, eventually, Harvin is going to torch a defense, you really can only "hope to limit the damage" as opposed to just shut him down, he is that type of player. The more Skill players on that offense, the more difficult it becomes. Hell they can add delayed draws to great effect as well ( fake a quick WR screen, those 7 will bite, hand to Lynch up th. In the middle with only four in the box etc) there is a LOT that can be done with that type of speed to threaten a defenses exterior. We ain't seen nothing yet, that SB was just an apetizer.
HumanCockroach wrote:I'm not talking about a fly? I'm sorry was I unclear? I meant quick throws, receiver bubble screens etc. Harvin has made a career of simply out running groups of defenders, he doesn't need get down field to score, he can do it every single time he touches the ball, and it can happen within a yard of the line of scrimmage. He rally is that damn fast. One bad angle from a defender , and *poof* no more Harvin.
Futureite wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:I'm not talking about a fly? I'm sorry was I unclear? I meant quick throws, receiver bubble screens etc. Harvin has made a career of simply out running groups of defenders, he doesn't need get down field to score, he can do it every single time he touches the ball, and it can happen within a yard of the line of scrimmage. He rally is that damn fast. One bad angle from a defender , and *poof* no more Harvin.
I agree Harvin is an explosive, big play receiver. But I also agree with most others here that bubble screens and slants cannot be the bread and butter of an O in the NFL. The Eagles did this a lot with Desean Jackson and now Chip Kelly with some success, but it's not the heart of what they do. It works to an extent but as others pointed out there is too much traffic, and LBs at this level cover too much space for that to be a consistent staple of the O. I can honestly remember the exact game when D coordinators effectively eliminated the slants from the 49ers playbook, even though we had notched big plays ofc of them for yrs.
NorthHawk wrote:Futureite wrote:HumanCockroach wrote:I'm not talking about a fly? I'm sorry was I unclear? I meant quick throws, receiver bubble screens etc. Harvin has made a career of simply out running groups of defenders, he doesn't need get down field to score, he can do it every single time he touches the ball, and it can happen within a yard of the line of scrimmage. He rally is that damn fast. One bad angle from a defender , and *poof* no more Harvin.
I agree Harvin is an explosive, big play receiver. But I also agree with most others here that bubble screens and slants cannot be the bread and butter of an O in the NFL. The Eagles did this a lot with Desean Jackson and now Chip Kelly with some success, but it's not the heart of what they do. It works to an extent but as others pointed out there is too much traffic, and LBs at this level cover too much space for that to be a consistent staple of the O. I can honestly remember the exact game when D coordinators effectively eliminated the slants from the 49ers playbook, even though we had notched big plays ofc of them for yrs.
Thanks, that's what I was trying to get at. Making the pass game largely one dimensional isn't a good game plan.
HumanCockroach wrote:Yes sir, and I expect that to be quite honest. I'm only trying to express how a player like Harvin helps on so many different levels as to not be dismissed. Having him on the field healthy, improves the offense across the board, from pass blocking, to running the football, passing game you name it.
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