That's About Right (Bill Feig)
All the media-elite-talking-heads should be ecstatic, the Falcons finally lost and they lost to everyone’s favorite darlings, the hated Saints. But hey, it’s only the regular season and, as we all know, the regular season doesn’t matter, right? The late game magic finally ran out and, frankly, the Birds deserved to lose. They started fast, blew way to many opportunities, and allowed the Saints to dictate the entire game, save the last quarter. Even Falcons fans and Bird Cage members knew they’d lose at some point, but it just had to be to the Bountygate Saints. A look at the Falcons first loss……….
The Falcons couldn’t have asked for any better start to the game. They had some big plays, scored on their first drive, and literally intercepted the first play of the hated Saints. Even though there was a shadow, garbage penalty on Asante Samuel for “excessive celebration,” the Falcons bogged down and settled for a field goal. Sure, it was points, but the chance to go up 14-0 was definitely a wasted opportunity. After a hot start, the Falcons evidently went back into conservative mode where Drew Brees had enough time to bake a cake and do his taxes and the offense was hell bent on running Turner through a brick wall and taking losses on first down. It looked as though the game may get out of hand until the defense finally found a way to stop the hated Saints and the offense pulled themselves out of their hyper-conservative funk. Fact is, the Falcons had been living on borrowed time with their comebacks, and that magic finally ran out.
Defense Shredded (Bill Haber)
Ryan had a career high with 402 yards and 3 touchdowns and yet the Falcons offense always finds a way to bring it back to Turner. This is a new day and it’s a new Falcons team. Michael Turner has done a magnificent job for the Falcons since he’s been here and may be on a track for the Falcons Ring of Honor, but his time has passed. Not sure whether it’s Smith or Koetter, but the truth is that most times when Turner gets the ball instead of Ryan, it’s usually not as good. This doesn’t mean that the Falcons have to throw the ball 50 times every game, but at some point, Ryan should be allowed to do what Brady, Manning, Rodgers, and Brees do with their teams.
For the longest time fans were able to blame Brian Van Gorder and by extension Mike Smith. Well, we have one of the best coordinators in the game and it’s true that Sean Weatherspoon was surely missed, but the Falcons don’t have much of anything in terms of rushing (or even disrupting) the quarterback. Drew Brees had enough time to cut the grass, do the dishes, and plan his Bountygate party in the pocket on Sunday. The Falcons mustered one sack, but rarely was pressured whatsoever. The defense stepped up some in the second half, but overall it was another pitiful display by the defense in pressuring the QB. Fans no longer know whether it’s the defensive tackles, the defensive ends, the linebackers, or the scheme to pressure the QB. They were sent on bltizes on Sunday, but most times they looked pedestrian and were easily picked up. John Abraham is the lone exception and how long does it take to get him some help. This did not look like the defense who confused and stymied Peyton Manning and Philip Rivers at all. Somethings got to give with the defense and lack of pressure.
400 Yards, 3 TDs = Loss (Bill Haber)
This is not a hatchet job on Michael Turner. The guy has done wonders for this franchise and likely will get a look at the Falcons Ring of Honor, but fans can easily see and call a wasted play coming on first down to Michael Turner. Given first and goal and a chance to go ahead in the game, the Falcons predictably go to Turner (as they always seem to do) to not only a stop, but a loss on the play. It was brought up in the offseason whether or not Turner fits in the offense and it becomes painfully clear every single week that giving the ball to Turner on first down is a wasted play. It’s not necessarily his fault, but seeing undrafted Chris Ivory run like a man possessed makes Turner seem like relic on the Falcons offense.
This is not meant to be slam against Dominique Franks, but the punt return game has become nothing more than catching the punt with a fair catch and surely is not threat to return it and get some yards. Perhaps Eric Weems was undervalued after all (this author admits). Dominique Franks had a blast on the scene in preseason with his dynamic punt return for a touchdown, but ever since he seems tentative at best and weak at worst at returning punts. The Birds put Harry Douglas back at punt returner with the game on the line and he offered little more.
The Falcons deserved to lose. Period. But of course this will come off as sour grapes and may have not made a difference in the grand scheme, but there were some pretty bad calls in New Orleans, a city known for it’s penultimate honesty (Bountygate’s the same as the Iraq War, right Brees?). There was the first part of the game and the “excessive celebration” that Fox never showed. Antone Smith evidently made a penalty on special teams, also not shown at all on Fox. There was the catch that Harry Douglas made as we all saw on tape, but they couldn’t overturn because the initial call was botched to Hades. Again, the Falcons deserved to lose, but the calls all seemed to go the Hated Saints way.
One of Most Pitiful Plays on D EVER! (Bill Feig)
This is not meant to be a hatchet job on Michael Turner. It really isn’t. Turner has been a rock, a stud, and one of the main reasons that the Falcons have been one of the most consistent teams in the National Football League. The argument is always that Turner isn’t very good because the offensive line is so bad. That is an accepted truth with Falcons fans. We all know how poor the OL is. It’s been that way ever since Bill Fralic and Mike Kenn retired. However, one needs to take one look at Saints running back Chris Ivory and the way he runs the football and how Michael Turner runs. Ivory was an undrafted free agent and ran like a man possessed against the Falcons, running tough, delivering blows, refusing to go down, and generally carrying the ball with force. Flip over to Michael Turner and you see the exact opposite. Turner has never seemed to fit in this offense and evidently Coach Smith is afraid of upsetting Turner because after he seemed frustrated with his lack of carries (and subsequent production), Smith and Co. have been committed to giving him the ball regardless. Again, it’s not a hatchet job on Turner, but the fact is that Turner is the exact opposite of dynamic.
Even though the media elite are salivating over the Falcons loss and their emphasis that these are the “same old Falcons,” the coaching staff have control over that. Although they seem to overdramatize the Birds issues on the offensive line and running game, they do have a point. The Falcons had woeful losses last season and in the playoffs because they couldn’t muster a few yards. That point couldn’t be any more true, but it can be broken down into a few areas. Albert Einstein said that “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results” is the definition of insanity. The Falcons have changed only one thing in moving Peter Konz to right guard (only after Garrett Reynolds was injured) on the offensive line from last year’s OT debacle to the hated Saints and Meltdown in the Meadowlands. Why did fans expect anything different? After a supposedly “open competition” in the offseason, the offensive line looked exactly the same. Some were holding onto a new “OL coach and new offensive coordinator” in making all the difference. Please. Same goes for the running back situation.
At Least Mike Johnson Scored (Bill Feig)
Thomas Dimitroff hasn’t done a great job of drafting offensive linemen or invested hardly anything in the running back corps, but he did draft two potential-laden OL and it took Garrett Reynolds getting injured to get Peter Konz in the lineup. For all the talk of other running backs getting looks, that’s become a distant memory. It’s the Turner show and all others are lucky to get scraps. Jacquizz Rodgers has shown he can run the ball and we all know that Snelling can too. Antone Smith has speed, but is never seen. After seeing the Saints plug in a new offensive lineman at right tackle and bring up their 4th or 5th running back to look fantastic (Ivory), the Falcons seem stuck in their same old, same old. There’s evidently a refusal to make many changes on the Falcons offensive line or in the backfield, so Albert Einstein’s looking pretty correct.
The same defense that held a slew of quarterbacks in check and forced Peyton Manning into three interceptions in the first half, looked just as pedestrian as any Falcons defense that’s lined up in recent years. The Falcons produced no pass rush whatsoever, only mustering one sack and never pressuring Brees at all. How many times will defenses allow elite QBs to pick them apart. Great teams and defenses have proven that pressuring the quarterback is the only way to knock them off their game. While it wasn’t quite reminiscent of the Debacle in the Dome seeing Aaron Rodgers pick apart the defense, it wasn’t far off. Not only that, but tackling was as bad as it ever was under Brian Van Gorder. That long TD run by Ivory has to go down as one of the worst defensive meltdown plays in Falcons franchise history and completely jumpstarted a struggling Saints team. After being so creative with his multiple and different looks, Nolan’s defense was a mirror image of it’s failed soft-zone predecessor. Why not try William Moore in some linebacker looks, for instance. The Falcons defense of old was not good, and especially not good against the Saints. The thought was that Mike Nolan was supposed to change all that.
C'mon Smitty, It Was Time (Bill Feig)
A word of advice to Falcons faithful would be to tune out the MTV Sports, Entertainment Tonight Media Elite for the next few weeks. They finally got everything they wanted: the Falcons lost, they’re overrated, they should be 1-8 instead of 8-1, the Bountygate Saints are back on top, and it’s the “same old Falcons” as everyone always says. Too bad Mary Hart and Mario Lopez can’t give their opinions on the NFL, football, and those terrible, overrated Falcons.
1) Simple Sack – how bad of a loss is this: just a loss or a reason to believe the Falcons are the worst team in the NFL?
2) At what point did you get a bad feeling on the game? How tough was blowing a good start?
3) Is this Michael Turner or Matt Ryan’s team? Are there still handcuffs on Ryan?
4) Please, please help fix this anemic pass rush.
5) Why has the Falcons pass rush remained so terribly poor?
6) How about those Turner playcalls right up the gut?
7) Anyone else at punt returner?
8.) Thoughts on the Mercedez-SuperDome officiating?
9) Please explain the Curious Case of Michael Turner.
10) Has Albert Einstein pegged one Coach Mike Smith?
11) What happened to Mike Nolan and his defense? Yikes
12) Promise yourself a prize if you can ignore the MTV Sports / Entertainment Tonight media-elite-talking-heads-experts for a few weeks………..or maybe ever.
1,221 comments Add your comment
D3
November 13th, 2012
7:11 pm
UB — Great point my friend. Hate those halfway “comments.”
Birdman
November 13th, 2012
7:15 pm
Eve Cage
Hope all are blessed and well.
I think letting Ray go was maybe not only his performance . But also a statement to some of the other players to tighten thinks up .And yea Turner could one of those players.
Does anyone think they possibly could be thinking of picking up someone on the wire ? Maybe even an RB if there is one. If Atlanta could open up that part of there game more. There offence would be unstoppable .
Just a question !!
Birdman
November 13th, 2012
7:15 pm
things
Arno
November 13th, 2012
7:19 pm
@ D3 2:43
Sorry– I meant to say you are stating for ALL of us the simple fact. The Saints really had to work hard to get to the top of your list. They managed to do it.
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
7:35 pm
No play Ray was a mistake from the beginning but I thought he was a great pick up at the time, I was wrong. AB gave no play big bucks to get sacks, it never really happened. I’m sure they tried to trade him but no one is going to pay him that kind of money for so little production. They had to cut their losses, no choice.
Wings
November 13th, 2012
7:39 pm
Big Ray we need your analysis of the latest “Turner had no where to go” article.
JB Falcon
November 13th, 2012
7:42 pm
BM, I’m wondering the same thing you are. There has to be some underlying reason for letting RE go midyear. I think maybe it is the money for future use or maybe he just wasn’t worth a sh!t or Nolan saw no use for him or maybe they are going to try to buy someone else, BUT, there is no FA’s available? How many maybes and ifs is that?
Whatever Mud Duck was trying to elicite into the public had an effect on the FO. OR did his comments have anything to do with it? I personally don’t think Adrain Peterson could be effective behind out line so that makes me wonder even more about MD’s comment. If it ain’t the OL. what is it?
Unca' Bob
November 13th, 2012
7:45 pm
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
7:35 pm
I feel we all had hopes with REd. Some one will have to absorb the cost. Just glad it’s not me.
JB Falcon
November 13th, 2012
7:46 pm
AP could “not”.
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
7:46 pm
Hear ya UB!
Paddy O
November 13th, 2012
7:55 pm
Just read DOL’s interview with Welcome Back. That interview is PAINFULLY disturbing. He actually stated it might just be luck that Quizz had some nice runs while Mike Turner got stuffed so chronically. Does welcome back not understand that Turner being back there means really only one type of play is coming? If he does not, the Falcons are screwed.
Sportaree
November 13th, 2012
8:02 pm
falcon21, Turner is facing the same fate as Edwards, its just a matter of time.
DePlane
November 13th, 2012
8:07 pm
Sportaree, I have to agree with you on that one…
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
8:09 pm
Yep Sportaree, he gave us a few good years and I thank him for giving us his best. He is done now IMHO.
DePlane
November 13th, 2012
8:12 pm
Agree on RE D3…dead money.
Paddy O
November 13th, 2012
8:14 pm
geo- thanks for the heads up! see you fellas tomorrow. the ray edwards cut makes no sense at this point of the year – unless he went into the coaches office and said, play me or cut me.
Ken Strickland
November 13th, 2012
8:14 pm
This isn’t rocket science we’re dealing with here. Common sense should tell anyone that after 3yrs of running the same play and the same runner in the same short yardage situations, that DEFs know what to expect with Turner in the gm. Our total unwillingness to pass to him or run him outside in short yardage situations makes it a helluva lot easier for DEFs to figure out what’s coming.
What we’re doing in short yardage situations now is what we routinely did under Mularkey as part of our overall OFF.
DePlane
November 13th, 2012
8:14 pm
Yastinkas….haha!
DePlane
November 13th, 2012
8:15 pm
KS, spot on. If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you always got.
DePlane
November 13th, 2012
8:18 pm
It is said that Ray Edwards was apathetic in the locker room. That is cancerous to a winning attitude. Could be that reason alone he was let go. These coaches are not going to accept anything less then a good attitude and hard work every day. It is a strange mid-season move, but every player who is not giving 110% is now on notice they will not tolerate mediocrity.
That guy stole millions of dollars from the Falcons. To have a crappy attitude on top of that musta really P.O.’d somebody.
Birdman
November 13th, 2012
8:23 pm
Sportaree , JB,. 21, DePlane
Agreed .
Coop
November 13th, 2012
8:32 pm
So in FFL, why did I get a loss against Nookah if we tied?
SeminoleWarrior
November 13th, 2012
8:43 pm
What an interesting two days over in the Godfather’s blog. First, Mud Duck called out the invisible element while standing tall for the offensive line.
Today, DK states that MT33 had no chance. That there were too many runners in position.
Interesting…..let’s see what tomorrow brings in the Godfather’s blog.
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
8:51 pm
SW, I don’t know if you can pick up 92.9 in your area but if you can it is darn good sports radio. I heard a DOL interview today.
SeminoleWarrior
November 13th, 2012
8:56 pm
F21, I can not get it here in middle GA. What were the highlights?
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
9:05 pm
Believe it or not but DOL was dogging the Falcons on their play. The man actually spoke honestly about our Birds, just as one of us would do.
SeminoleWarrior
November 13th, 2012
9:10 pm
Wow…. Props to the Godfather for having the guts to be straight forward and direct.
WU (Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
9:37 pm
After catching up on the chatter in the cage, just wanted to mention I particularly liked the 3:30 post by Matty Bicep. Y’all have fun…
JB Falcon
November 13th, 2012
9:43 pm
Please ya’ll, go to DOL’s blog that was posted at 7:32 this evening. The most perfect example of our shortcomings coming from DK himself, ” It’s hard to do all of those well all of the time.”
http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-falcons-blog/2012/11/13/atlanta-falcons-koetter-on-struggling-run-game-mike-turner-had-no-chance/?cxntfid=blogs_atlanta_falcons_blog
It’s hard to do??? What the F do you think the Falcons are paying you for Mr. Offense?? We know that MT sucks and the OL sucks but don’t some on here and say it’s “hard”! That’s what I say when I’m in the mood!
Our team has some problems and they need to be corrected and we expect the FO to do it. It’s hard my azz, life is hard so if you want it get on it!
That, my friends, was the last beer talking.
WU (Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
9:44 pm
Didn’t notice any mention of it here, but DOL is reporting Falcons signed Toone and Coffman today. Toone takes RE’s spot and Coffman replaces the injured Gallardo. The also signed someone to the practice squad (maybe a TE, I don’t remember).
WU (Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
9:45 pm
G’night cage…
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
9:48 pm
Nice reporting WU, thanks man!
falcon21
November 13th, 2012
9:51 pm
Later all.
JB Falcon
November 13th, 2012
9:53 pm
WU, we know who you are, “why not us” just sounds like “poor pitiful me”.
WU (Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
9:56 pm
JB Falcon – noted. I’ll think on it.
Matty Bicep
November 13th, 2012
10:30 pm
Please ya’ll, go to DOL’s blog that was posted at 7:32 this evening. The most perfect example of our shortcomings coming from DK himself, ” It’s hard to do all of those well all of the time.”
Well, his team is 8-1. What the hell do you want from the poor guy? He is working his @zz off, Ice had the best game ever as a pro, he was one misjudged bomb of being 9-0, and the poor guy is getting ripped. Man, you guys need antidepressants.
His statement tells me he is pushed to his breaking point, why the @@@@@ to we want to do that to the poor guy? He has done a hell of a job, especially with Ryan, and you are ready to buy him…I don’t question anyones fandom, but CMON MAN. Does this guy need support from the fans, or do we want him to have a heart attack?
Matty Bicep
November 13th, 2012
10:31 pm
Bury him
Matty Bicep
November 13th, 2012
10:48 pm
Great players make great plays in big games. All a coach can do is put him in position to do it, but in the end, it is up to the player.
We have had some players make great plays, but our players have not made great plays in big games. Brooking flubbed coverage, Ice threw a pick 6 in a critical juncture of a game. Nobody did anything against the Giants, we just were not good enough.
Now, is Ralph Norwood a great kicker? Nope, he missed the biggest kick in his life, you can blame Marve Levy for coaching and putting the game on the back of his kicker, BUT HE PUT NORWOOD IN POSITION TO BE GREAT. Norwood failed, coaches can’t make players great, they can only put them in position. From there, it is about competing, Norwood was not good enough.
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
10:50 pm
Enter your comments here
Matty Bicep
November 13th, 2012
11:09 pm
Saw this on another blog regarding MV7’s prospects of starting in the NFL again. Thought it was funny.
He’s no puppy and he will be 231 dog years next season. Not your lead retriever anymore, but he still won’t just roll over. Give him a bone as a backup and he might just escape from the doghouse and take a bite out of a defense. As Vick himself would say- still some fight left. Sorry about the dog jokes, but they’re just too doggone easy.
Matty Bicep
November 13th, 2012
11:26 pm
How about Eli Manning? Is he great, yep. Why, he has 2 rings. Coughlin put him in position. But you can’t give Coughlin credit for drawing up a scheme where the QB shakes off a few tackles and tosses up a bomb where a guy catches it on his helmet. No, that is a great player making a great play, you need those to win big games.
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:26 pm
Hi cage! Couldn’t sleep so decided to pop in. I will lose the Whynot Us once y’all get used to the new moniker. Whynot Us probably comes from the angst of being a Falcons fan from the beginning. Let me explain.
I have been a Falcons fan since their first game in ATL. Went to the Pittsburgh game the first season. Tommy Nobis was my little league hero, and I was good enough to get his number. Unfortunately, little league was the peak of my athletic prowess. (I have deceptive speed… I’m a lot slower than I look.) I’ve seen everything the Falcons have put on the football field, and more of it has been bad than good, but I’ve been a fan through it all. There were always glimpses of hope. I was there when General Lee and the Gritz Blitz beat the Vikings in ATL on Monday Night Football. Was fired up with Bartkowski, Big Ben, William Andrews and a slew of others. I was ecstatic with the Super Bowl run of ‘98, thinking we finally had a REAL football coach. Then there was the excitement of the early Vick years. But through it all, my team never won consistently. Shoot, they didn’t even have back to back winning seasons for 4 decades! The media, of course, has never given the Falcons any respect which irks me greatly. But given our history, the truth is we haven’t earned it.
But they were still My Falcons, and I held out hope that someday I’d actually have a team I could be proud of and an organization competent enough to become a winning franchise that was always a factor that would have to be reckoned with.
Then came the ultimate low of the Petrino season. Here I am looking at a REALLY BAD team that’s going to have to rebuild from the bottom up. I was bummed, but being a Falcons fan I felt like I’d been through this before and would just have to do so again. I was enthusiastic about the draft the year AB hired TD and MS, but to be honest I was not particularly enthusiastic about either hire. I did my research (more than normal) and waited for draft day. When it arrived, I was ambivalent about Matty Ice and Baker but thought the rest of the draft was an unmitigated disaster. I was not pleased. I thought I might be at my breaking point with the incompetence of my chosen team.
But then something happened. This really bad team with a rookie quarterback and a backup running back from SD started winning games. Even went to the playoffs. Then they had 2 winning seasons in a row. Now 4. My team had become contenders. I became convinced that if I had been in charge it probably would have dumped the team into another Marion Campbell chasm. At that point I decided I didn’t want to play GM anymore. These guys have given me the team I’ve always wanted – a consistent winner. A team that is a contender. I am enjoying the dickens out of this!!!
Here we are at season five. The rookie quarterback has grown up, and has shown a potential for pulling out games late. Could this kid be another Joe Montana (bad example for skills, but a clutch guy calling the shots at the end of the game)? He gets in a tight spot and he throws it to a first round pick WR who is still in his prime, or to the hotshot young WR that we gave up a bunch of picks to get, or to the Hall of Fame tight end still playing at an elite level at the end of his career. This is our year guys! Does this team have flaws? Yes. But ALL of ‘em do. The NFL is designed that way on purpose so that everybody has a chance. The system is set up where (in theory) no one can win with dominant talent in all phases of the game. Every team has to make choices. Then it comes down to who gets hot (or stays hot) at the right time. The time is NOW!
This team may not be the first Lombardi trophy team from the ATL, but I like our chances. Lets do it now if we can, while continuing to build this organization into one that I can be proud of every year instead of every once in awhile. I will remain a fan regardless, but its much more fun when you’ve got a winning team. I can say that based on experience.
Thanks to JBFalcon for getting me thinking about this. Thanks for putting up with the rant.
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:27 pm
Blogmonster.
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:28 pm
Matty Bicep – think you’ll like the post that just got ate. Check it out later after it gets recovered. Too much work to try to redo it now.
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:32 pm
Matty Bicep (11:26 post) – well said.
Big Ray
November 13th, 2012
11:39 pm
WHAT MAKES THOSE SITUATIONS SO CHALLENGING?:“They are challenging because you need one yard and everybody knows you need one yard. That’s what makes it challenging. It’s like you’re trying to make one yard and they’re trying to defend one yard. Maybe we ought to just pretend its third and 10 and we might be better off.”
I do recall saying that it might be a mental thing….
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:42 pm
Good point Big Ray. Boy I hate the blogmonster…
The Time is NOW ( formerly Whynot Us)
November 13th, 2012
11:52 pm
It’s fun to be a fan of a team that finally consistently matters. To steal a line – these are the good old days. The last five years have been a blast compared to the first 40 years of the franchise. Does my team have flaws? Yes they do. But its fun rooting for a team that you honestly believe has a chance every time they take the field.
Big Ray
November 14th, 2012
12:00 am
http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-falcons-blog/2012/11/13/atlanta-falcons-koetter-on-struggling-run-game-mike-turner-had-no-chance/?cxntfid=blogs_atlanta_falcons_blog
Well, you can take this as Koetter “not knowing what the hell he is talking about”, or you can take this as DOL’s typical sordid and pathetic try at sensationalism, or you can just take it as “coach speak.”
Let’s break it down coldly and methodically, though.
1) Fact – there were several plays where Turner really did have no chance. Defenders were right on him, he wasn’t going anywhere. But was it just because there were a bunch of defenders right there, ready and waiting for him? Yes and no.
2) I think Koetter knows damn well that for Turner to be successful, you have to block the scheme and play right …or he’s toast. This is NOT an indictment of the OL, or even Koetter himself. He just admitted that they blocked the defensive look wrong. In fact, not once does Koetter call out the OL. He says on one play that “we didn’t execute”, which means as an offensive unit, the job wasn’t done. But he doesn’t say who didn’t do what.
Then there is this “There’s always multiple parts. Sometimes we have checks on. WE are checking for different looks. The very first one the other day, we just didn’t block it right. We blocked the look wrong. We either didn’t prepare them good enough or they didn’t recognize it good enough. Translation = he was fooled on that play. And more than just that one, I’d say. Or, Ryan failed to check down properly. One way or another, somebody didn’t have the OL blocking assignments in place. Whether that goes more on the OL or more on the CS is anybody’s guess, but if nothing else Koetter acknowledges that part of it is a coaching issue.
3) Koetter acknowledges that Quizz did a heck of a job on that 18 yard run. I’ll say it again, another way – Koetter gives Quizz credit for that run. He doesn’t say anything about the blocking being right, correct, or good on that play. He doesn’t say ANYTHING about the blocking on that play. What he DOES say is they needed another run like that.
To me, that speaks volumes, even if it’s coach-speak…which is very much mostly what he does in this interview.
We can’t expect the CS to share with us what they are thinking behind closed doors. Especially not THIS CS. Smitty is pretty secretive, he’s going to expect that from his entire staff.
Case in point: ” We’ll see how it plays out. Touches on this team are always going to be an issue because we have so many good skill guys. One guys increase in touches is going to come at the expense of another guy. Who is that? That’s the million dollar question.”
Coach speak. Not going to reveal anything. Can’t do ish about that. Bottom line – I think blocking assignments or no, they need to roll with Quizz because of the simple versatility as a pass-catcher that he brings.
You can fool the defense more when they don’t know if that guy is going to run the ball, catch the ball, chip block and then catch it….they won’t know. And unlike Jerious Norwood, Quizz is difficult to hurt or to cause a fumble. He’s short, stout, tough…and shifty.
So put him in the game early, often, and enough to keep scoring, keep fooling the defense. Defenses fear the Mike Turner punishing run, but most good DCs with enough tools already know how to stop it.
How else can you explain the Saints stopping us cold on the ground? They knew when Turner was in the game that there were only two things he could do – run the ball and be slow going to the hole doing it (and not change direction), or block a rusher. That’s it. Simple gameplan, if you ask me. No versatility, no fooling anybody.
The Saints knew when Turner would run, and they didn’t have to worry about any extravagant blocking schemes. All they had to do was fill the box.
The Time is NOW (formerly Whynot Us)
November 14th, 2012
12:04 am
Big Ray, you ROCK. Excellent post.