
Cool Cage Poster by Arno!
***Super Cool Cage Poster that Fellow Cage Member Arno Created!***
Sure, it was a good year and it will be an even tougher road back for many fans after this one had the feeling that it could finally be “the year,” but alas it was not in the cards yet again. It was a good year that saw the Falcons starting to take a step further and they did finally rid themselves of the playoff albatross (although no one really cares about that now). Even though it may seem as though it’s the end of the world, it really isn’t. There are a ton of teams that would gladly trade places with our current franchise in being competitive every year and giving themselves a chance every season. It should be acknowledged that this regime has reached heights never before seen in it’s history (they only had back-to-back winning seasons back in 2008 and 2009). But it should be a wakeup call to everyone involved, including Arthur Blank, that changes will need to be made and all apart of the Falcons organization will have to work even harder to finally get to that next level. A look at the game and a peek ahead to the off-season……..
Total Team Loss, Not All Ryan (AJC)
The sensationalist, craven writer and pundit crowd have been waiting for this moment since the kickoff of the 2012 NFL season. Most writers love nothing more than to beat up on a franchise with a terrible history and a known penchant for falling short. The biggest line that is out there is that it’s all Matt Ryan’s fault and he’ll never win the big, never win a Super Bowl, he regularly plays the Grinch at Christmas, and is solely responsible for everything wrong in the world. Sure, he picked a bad time to make a fumble and threw an interception in the second half, even though Roddy White took full responsibility for tripping and that’s exactly what happened on replay. The fact is that this was a complete team loss from top to bottom, including General Manager Thomas Dimitroff as well.
All involved are to blame. The coaches got outcoached halfway into the 2nd quarter and completely overwhelmed in the second half. There literally seemed to be no adjustments to either side after their initial schemes were figured out. The defense had another epic failure, having no answer for really any of the offensive players, particularly Vernon Davis. Seems like the TE was an issue in the Seattle game also, right? The running game stalled. The play-calling became more predictable and less aggressive. Julio Jones was dominant, only to never to be seen from in second half. Roddy White trips on a route, leading to an interception. Harry Douglas trips on a wide open route that would have seen him walk into the endzone. The defense was exposed as being weak and the largest indictment on this regime of all, lack of pass rush, was finally taken advantage of.
Emotional Loss (AJC)
And yes, Matt Ryan isn’t doing himself any favors with his mistakes in the postseason, but in case you haven’t noticed, even the super-elite QBs (Brady, Manning, Rodgers) couldn’t do it all by themselves this year either. There was a reason that the vast majority of pundits picked the Niners, because in almost all aspects save quarterback and wide receiver, the 49ers had better players and more depth. Still, after finding a way to win at the end, the Falcons found a way to lose. It’s not the end of the world, but the Falcons have some big, and perhaps painful, decisions to make if they want to take the whole thing.
Yes, there were two second half turnovers and a stall in the red zone to end the game, but as fellow Cage Member Coop said, being up 17-0 in the first half, playing at home with the crowd going nuts, and allowing the Niners to literally do whatever they want for 3 quarters has epic fail written all over it. In was a mirror repeat of the Seattle game where once the defense seemed to be “figured out” there were no answer to be had. The only problem was that instead of one quarter against the Seahawks, it was essentially 3 quarters vs. a more talented and battle-hardened team in the 49ers. The easy and obvious place to go is to Mike Nolan as defensive coordinator. He’s the one designing the scheme and calling the plays, so he gets much deserved criticism and rightly so.
Mike Smith gets some as well for being a defensive minded head coach working with an excellent DC, only to get completely exposed two weeks in a row on defense. The defensive players get some blame too. There was literally no pass rush (see below) and a less-than 100% John Abraham wasn’t to be found. Of course no one assisted him whatsoever in rushing the passer, but what else is new. The defensive tackles weren’t good either after doing a decent job of keeping Frank Gore and Colin Kaepernick in check early on. They, along with the linebackers, allowed the Niners run game to get on track somewhat and it opened up the pass. Speaking of the linebackers, they were terrible in coverage all night. Coverage was atrocious including all cornerbacks and safeties. Kaepernick had a great second half, but the receivers were so wide open that a high school QB may have completed them.
Tough Way for Gonzo to End It (AJC)
The net was cast wide and far, this was a defensive collapse from top to bottom. Frankly, you don’t deserve to win any championships when you play defense that poorly. Last but not least, Thomas Dimitroff deserves some blame as well. We can talk about schemes and missed assignments all day long, but it was painfully obvious in the second half that this defense simply was overmatched personnel wise, especially along the defensive line. He’s missed on some draft picks on defense and will have to find a way to rectify it both through the draft and free agency if the Falcons will ever take the last step.
The Falcons can take some solace in looking at the team that just beat them to advance to the Super Bowl. The 49ers hosted the Giants just last year and came up just short in their bid to go to the big dance right at the end. They dedicated themselves to pushing through, building themselves up during the regular season vs. good opponents, making some moves in free agency, and using that experience to push down that final barrier. The same can be said of the Packers when they lost the NFC championship at home in 2007 in OT. 3 years later, they were Champs. The Eagles actually lost three straight NFC Title games (two of them at home) before they finally went to the Super Bowl, albeit falling short. Maybe those teams made tweaks, maybe they made overhauls, but they fixed what went wrong in the NFC Title game.
Will Falcons Learn from Niners? (AJC)
This will be discussed at length from now to free agency to the draft and training camp, but the Falcons do have some serious, and perhaps painful decisions to make. The question is whether they have the willpower to make those decisions, which has a mixed history at best the past 4 off-seasons. The opposite is obviously also possible as well. If the Dimitroff, Smith, and Co. feel as though they don’t need to make many fixes and were just a play away from the big dance or make the wrong choices than they could be in for a nosedive. The Bears, Cardinals, Eagles, and Seahawks are all examples of teams that were one game away from the Super Bowl and either did too much, didn’t do enough, or simply made the wrong choices and fell back to playoff obscurity. Coincidentally, all four teams got rid of their coaches soon thereafter.
Every single person associated with the Falcons defensive side of the ball deserves blame on this one, save John Abraham. For the past five years, no one in the organization has been able to muster ANY pass rush whatsoever other than Abraham. That is simply inexcusable on all levels. Thomas Dimitroff and Mike Smith deserve the most blame because, ultimately, they’re the heads of the ship. Dimitroff has drafted Lawrence Sidbury, Peria Jerry, Jonathan Massaquoi, Cliff Matthews, Travian Roberston, and signed Ray Edwards. Rich McKay isn’t absolved either because the Jamaal Anderson pick at #8 overall set this franchise back years. Dimtroff may have the best intentions and picks skill players pretty well, but he has been abysmal on both sides of the trenches. Matthews and Massaquoi have shown some potential, but that hasn’t translated into results. Which leads into the next point.
Tough Day, but Good Ones Ahead (AJC)
If Dimitroff has failed at drafting defensive lineman, than Mike Smith has failed equally bad with his “Witness Protection Program” (see below). It would be one thing if every single defensive linemen drafted by Dimitroff showed absolutely no potential whatsoever, but that simply isn’t the case either. Sidbury showed some flashes in his very limited time as a Falcon (seemingly coming to an end). They can’t figure out what to do with Kroy Biermann and is a little too light for an every down DE. Robertson showed flashes during preseason only to never be heard from again. Matthews and Massaquoi never saw the field until Abraham got hurt and that’s only a handful examples. They have drafted extremely light defensive tackles that never draw double teams and allow every DE drafted to not see single coverage blocking and only
The fact remains that whatever the issue, the Falcons have failed miserably at all levels to address the pass rush situation. The defensive coordinators have been part of the problem, but they haven’t had a ton to work with for whatever reason. Nolan did a pretty good job early on to generate a pass rush, only to see it submarine yet again towards the end and in the playoffs. If the Falcons organization can’t find some way, any way, to fix it than the Falcons will either be in for a bad year or will not take the next step anyway.
Tony's Great Run in Atlanta (AJC)
This one goes to no one other than Falcons Head Coach Mike Smith. We can talk about the coordinators, schemes, players, and personnel all day long, but the truth is that this is Smith’s problem and his alone. The Falcons have long been good for a quarter, a half, or even 3 quarters, but just cannot find ways to put teams away. Sure enough, it came back to finally bite them big time at the worst moment imaginable. Fans knew it was just a matter of time. It’s true that sometimes the ball doesn’t bounce your way and other times teams make good adjustments, but this is not only a trend, but an every game certainty. There was one exception with the Giants shutout, but that was about the only one in memory of the last five years.
Some refer to it as a killer instinct. That’s a part of it for sure. Smith has presided over teams with two different sets of coordinators that exemplify the exact same thing of letting teams back in the game. Most times Smith has found a way to win anyway, but that luck finally ran out in the playoffs, as many thought it would. Many times its becoming hyper-conservative with a decent lead. Others it’s trying to run out the clock and others it’s just becoming undisciplined and tensing up. If Smith can somehow find a way to fix this, it could be the final piece in getting over the hump. If he can’t, he might be looking for a new job in the near future.
Plenty of Long Faces (AJC)
The Falcons and Mike Smith could take a cue from Jim Harbaugh, whose on his way to his first Super Bowl. Harbaugh took a lot of heat for changing quarterbacks very late into the season and it’s paid off. Meanwhile, Smith and Co. either can’t make the tough decisions or their changes are at a glacial pace. This will obviously be discussed a ton over the next several months, but there there is some doubt that Smith and, to a lesser extent, Dimitroff that they are unable or unwilling to make the needed changes necessary to take the Falcons to the next level. And Arthur Blank needs to be honest about what he wants as well. He pronounces that only championships will be accepted, but the cold fact is that Mike Smith has led a franchise out of the abyss, but also is 1-4 in the playoffs, has been the #1 seed in the NFC two out of three years, and has yet to grace the Super Bowl. Is Blank prepared to make a hard decision himself if the Falcons have hit a plateau?
Fellow Cage Member Big Ray came up with one of the most poignant, and funny, descriptions of Mike Smith’s Player Development System: Witness Protection Program. Their inability to develop draft picks and get them meaningful playing time is deftly abhorrent. Maybe it’s all on Thomas Dimitroff for drafting poorly, but when fans see players do well at training camp in Flowery Branch and in preseason only never to be seen or heard from again, it’s supremely frustrating. On the surface, it seems that it’s simply Smith’s conservative nature taking hold in every aspect of this team. The list is infinite on seeing potential and never to be seen again: Antone Smith, Drew Davis, Kevin Cone, Lawrence Sidbury, Chris Owens, Dominique Franks, Travian Robertson, Mike Johnson, Lamar Holmes, Dominque Davis, Kerry Meier, Jonathan Massaquoi, Cliff Matthews, Charles Mitchell, and there’s likely plenty more.
Major Changes Needed on D (AJC)
Some of these listed maybe unfair since they were likely just bad picks (Johnson), but others have shown flashes and never seen the field. Not only that, but other players must “wait their turn” and be an apprentice before earning their chance (DeCoud, Moore) or only seeing the field when someone gets hurt (Peter Konz, Matthews, Massaquoi). This is not saying that these players would have necessarily made a difference in the grand scheme of things, but unless you’re a 1st round draft pick, you’re likely to be placed firmly in the Witness Protection Program. As Big Ray has said many times, either keep them, develop them, and let them play or cut them loose.
There can’t be that many things wrong with a team that goes 13-3, gets the #1 seed in the NFC, and is only a play or two away from going to the Super Bowl, right? Well, they had to do something right, but at the same time, his team has some major areas to address in the off-season and it will take an honest, objective, and sometimes difficult look at every single aspect of this team. Successful organizations do it on a regular basis and this is no different. The Falcons are seemingly good in several areas including quarterback, wide receiver, maybe safety, and perhaps cornerback. Even in those areas, the window is either quickly closing (Roddy White, Asante Samuel, Dunta Robinson over 30) or needs another look (is Harry Douglas a legitimate slot receiver? How big of a contract should Ryan get? What happed to the safeties in playoffs?). Those are the best case scenarios. The others, not so much.
One of like 3 Good Plays on D (AJC)
Like mentioned several times above, this will get a long and detailed look in the off-season, but everything else is up for debate. Defensive tackle needs a major overhaul. The Falcons must do something, anything, to solve the defensive end problems. The linebackers, once thought to be a strong area, looked awful in the playoffs. The offensive line played well in the playoffs, but weren’t a Super Bowl caliber unit in the regular season and needs some strength, youth, beef, and overall change to the unit. The running back situation is one of the biggest areas of need. Tony Gonzalez is likely retiring and leaving an enormous void on offense. Punt returner was a joke the entire season and the list goes on and on. Some areas may need tweaks, while others will require major overhauls, and still others will face difficult and sometimes painful decisions. This has been a great run for this franchise, the best in it’s history, but loyalties cannot get in the way of finding the best 53 man roster to make another run, especially on defense. This looks to be the most critical of all the off-seasons to date, seeing the Falcons getting so close, but now looking so far away if some things aren’t fixed in a major way.
We’ve discussed this before in The Cage many times the past several seasons in that the Falcons are reaching one part of a phase where the window is closing for many players that have helped to reach this level of success. Tony Gonzalez is likely retiring. Todd McClure will be 36 in February. Roddy White will be 32 next November. Asante Samuel just turned 32. John Abraham will be 35 in May. Dunta Robinson will be 31 in April. Jonathan Babineaux will be 32 in October. Michael Turner will be 31 in February. The list goes on and on.
Turner's Last Game? (AJC)
This is not to say that the Falcons don’t have a few good years left and some (White, Samuel) have shown no signs of decline while most of the others have. Will the Falcons organization try to go piecemeal and only tinker for one more year or will they make some fairly dramatic changes to set themselves up for the future? It would be tempting to go with the former, but the Falcons are at a point where some major changes are needed in certain areas. This will be a big point in the off-season.
If you are masochist or glutton for punishment than this is your Christmas and Birthday all wrapped into one. You won’t have to venture very far to see that there are literally hundreds of hatchet jobs, gleeful revenge, “I told you so’s,” and “Same Old Falcons” as an ESPN writer said. Matt Ryan is the worst QB to ever grace the playoffs. This is worst franchise to ever play professional sports and should be burned at the stake for even attempting to win. They should have gone 3-13 like those true “same old Falcons.”
Sure, some of the points they make are valid and some major questions will take hold this off-season and some major weaknesses must be addressed, but these are the times why most Falcons fans (and many non-darling team fans) despise national, sensationalistic, and even sometimes, downright hateful sports media. The fact is, these AREN’T the same old Falcons. This regime hasn’t taken the final step, but it has pulled a broken and historically terrible franchise from the ashes to being an annual contender. They completed back-to-back winning seasons for the first time in it’s 40+ year history. They have made the playoffs 4 out of 5 years. They are only second to the New England Patriots in regular season wins (who, by the way, aren’t doing that great themselves in the posteason lately). They finally won a playoff game after everyone said they couldn’t and were a play away from going to the Super Bowl. Sure, this sounds like complete justification and rationalization and, to an extent, it is.
Great Game by JJ (AJC)
The Falcons haven’t figured out how to get over the final hump and Mike Smith and Co. will start entering a much more critical mode this off-season and coming regular season. And if they don’t make certain fixes and tough decisions they could slip right back into mediocrity, but they aren’t those “same old Falcons.” Those would be the ones that never even sniff the playoffs. This is a long-winded way of saying that getting rid of the hateful, virile, infantile, and sensationalistic national sports media may help getting past this loss.
Some great resources Atlanta Falcons news instead of biased, Entertainment Sports News:
http://www.thefalcoholic.com
http://bloggingdirty.com
http://falconsgab.com
http://gritsblitz.com
For those of you who are new to The Cage, we ask that you stay with us because even though it won’t have as much to talk about in terms of games, wins, and losses, it can be just as much fun to discuss about all the possibilities for free agency, the draft, off-season questions, and the upcoming 2013 season. The Cage already has a ton of topics ready to roll for the off-season.
No questions, just let it go on the crushing loss, your thoughts on the season that was, a look ahead to the off-season, and anything else about your favorite team………..
706 comments Add your comment
D3
January 22nd, 2013
8:42 pm
funny how they have so much time to do all kind of stuff, but if you post for ten minutes, all you do is spend time on the computer chatting about sports. — WR
QUOTE OF THE DECADE!!!!!!!!! Luckily, my wife just got new iphone for xmas and I and giving her utter hell for all the crap she’s giving me of “always being on the computer” for the last several years.
JJ
January 22nd, 2013
8:45 pm
WR, love ya brother…quit being a stanger!!!
JB Falcon
January 22nd, 2013
8:48 pm
21, 8:40,
WR
January 22nd, 2013
8:53 pm
D3 and Falcons21, good to be back, as for my comments, kind of just tired of everyone pointing out the obvious. The Falcons D wasn’t good when this regime took over, I still remember many wanting Dorsey over, myself included. I have no problem eating crow, but at least give me a decent side, that’s pretty much my argument. Its been Abe, Abe, Abe, and Abe some more, everyone and there unborn, un-thought of kids know that. But the D even with BVG at least did enough to give them a chance while working a full 60 minutes. Why give a O with so many weapons a pass when they usually do about 30 minutes a game, I just don’t get that.
LRD
January 22nd, 2013
8:56 pm
Grimes.. at this point,what is he worth moneywise? He is undersized, he hasn’t played for a year, has he fully recovered from his Achilles tear? Has he kept in shape? What is the money demands he(and his wife) will make?
Dont get me wrong , be nice to get him back.. but if we can parlay him into trades or drafts, we may want to consider those options.
falcon21
January 22nd, 2013
9:07 pm
Great point WR. LRD, if it takes big money for Grimes to be a Falcon, I say no way in heck. Only my opinion.
WR
January 22nd, 2013
9:09 pm
D3, good to know I’m not alone, lol. I will not drag it out but, as a longtime Falcons fan who has surely endured years of struggle, sorry but I’m not sold on Smitty. With that point out of the way, I loved the fact that the Falcons offense moved into the 21st century. Loved the fact that Nolan did wonders with very little offerings. Then I paused, I thought, haven’t we been here before, has anything really changed. Let’s not forget it isn’t as if the Falcons have been blown out in many first halves, they have just no showed in the second half, during, wait for it, wait for it, a time of adjustments. hmmmmm. But not to deviate to far, Dimitroff, can we please get some help for this defensive front seven, and can love Rodgers, might even be the future, but can you please, please, fingers crossed, please, get a replacement for Turner.
JB Falcon
January 22nd, 2013
9:15 pm
LRD, IF Grimes has stayed in shape and can do what he used to do, bad leg and all, with no lateral, I would definitely trade him for some draft picks. Let him be great for someone else. We are going to have to work the FA market to fill some needs and our 30th draft pick is not going to fulfill our needs.
waynester
January 22nd, 2013
9:20 pm
No, Joe
You’re lucky we drafted Matt. Otherwise, you’d have been the one coming to a dysfunctional team which you’d have to carry for several seasons instead of going to a complete team with an awesome defense which carried you to the playoffs and now, the SB. I don’t think you could shoulder the load Matt has while still putting up better numbers than you every year. No, Joe–you’re the lucky one….
WR
January 22nd, 2013
9:31 pm
Not one for answering the hate-mongers but, Flacco, has not your team continued to build around an already good D, has not your team built to improve your O. Coop is probably the steward when it comes to building from the trenches. Not sure if it was injuries or not, but there’s at least been an attempt to build the Falcons OL. Outside of Audray Bruce, I mean Peria Jerry the Falcons haven’t attempted to rebuild their DL, give or take the luck of finding Corey Peters. But in 4 years of running a 4-3 D, the want to be model, bust, Ray Edwards, has been the only option, and I’m being friendly, because Stephen Nicholas isn’t actually getting it done in pass coverage as an LB either, Its hard to say in TD we trust, at least its hard to say in TD I trust, most of his big splashes have paid off, Turner originally, Ryan, Gonzo, and the trade for Julio, but it takes an entire draft to continue to build a team. William Moore is a beast if he can stay off the injury report, Decoud came through a little more this year, Spoon is a stud, Konz looks like he can take over at center immediately, but over 4 years, 5 drafts, Jerry Jones isn’t exactly the GM, but at times it looks like he is.
Greg Mendel
January 22nd, 2013
9:37 pm
Regarding wives, football, computers, and in-laws:
“Women. Can’t live with ‘em, can’t shoot ‘em.” — Steven Wright.
Greg Mendel
January 22nd, 2013
9:42 pm
And another. (This is true.)
My uncle was once asked if he ever thought about divorcing my aunt. “Nope,” he replied, “never did, never once.”
Then he added, “Thought about shooting her, though, many times.”
They had a great marriage.
Big Ray
January 22nd, 2013
10:17 pm
MB,
If we go 13-3 with next year’s schedule, it will be because we are straight up DOMINATING. I could dig that…
Big Ray
January 22nd, 2013
10:21 pm
WR,
They’re all control freaks, LOL. Wives, that is…
Big Ray
January 22nd, 2013
10:23 pm
QUOTE OF THE DECADE!!!!!!!!! Luckily, my wife just got new iphone for xmas and I and giving her utter hell for all the crap she’s giving me of “always being on the computer” for the last several years.
Got mine an iphone for anniversary gift last year and got her the new ipad this year as early birthday present.
LOL…haven’t been bugged during games for I don’t know how long….
Matty Bicep
January 22nd, 2013
10:42 pm
You guys crack me up, I am a know it all, but most cage member are humble and open minded, right?
But, again, I never call anyone a name, or really personally insult any cage members, it is amazing what alternative thoughts will do.
Again, when we hired Smitty, I figured we were screwed and he would last 2-3 years tops, but he sorta proved me wrong….You really think that it is that easy to win a superbowl? You think if you bring in a guy and say, your pretty much a failure if you “only” get to the championship. We gave it a great run, and unless there is another Harbaugh brother out there, he is our guy…Hell, his team showed up more that B Belichicks did, at least we had a chance to win it.
Matty Bicep
January 22nd, 2013
10:52 pm
when we hired Smitty, how many of you thought we would go to the playoffs 4 of the next 5 years, and get to the NFC championship game? Really…
And for the window “closing”, Ryan, Roddy, JJ and maybe Spoon will be here awhile, there is not another guy on the roster I even care about to be honest….except of course TG….
Matty Bicep
January 22nd, 2013
11:08 pm
BR, I have to admit I like Lacy too, but every run I see, nobody touches him until he gets 5 yards downfield, like I said, the Burner looks good if he gets that type of steam.
I would have to really study to see what he does when hit before he gets going, or how he can find daylight if his assigned hole is not open.
Matty Bicep
January 22nd, 2013
11:15 pm
Something else that sucked was loosing Brady Ewing….Think we coulda used a play like this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuLt4dhfAwE
Matty Bicep
January 22nd, 2013
11:17 pm
Must have had the wrong clip stick in my browser.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llkywgrooNk
Big Ray
January 23rd, 2013
12:10 am
True, Lacy does get a head of steam. Of course, I think he’s a hair faster than Turner, but…
Anyhow, I think Lacy is a younger, cheaper, quicker version of Turner with less weight to boot. A feature RB? Not all that likely.
We’d probably be better off looking elsewhere if possible. I’d rather add more speed but don’t want another stick-figure Ethiopian like Jerious Norwood…dudes like that just can’t stay healthy for sh!t.
Brady Ewing definitely was missed. He could’ve added a dimension we didn’t have besides a good lead blocker. Ewing could also catch fairly well as I understand it.
Big Ray
January 23rd, 2013
12:19 am
What trips me out is he actually keeps ahead of the defense.
Geo
January 23rd, 2013
7:30 am
MB @ 11:15. I looked at your first clip there, the Drew Davis TD. It reminded me that we never used the quick WR screen to Julio or Roddy or any screens at all. That clip shows how we had used those screens so effectively, that we could fake them to open up other things. So yes, we certainly could have used a play like that when we were in the red zone at the end. No throw in the end zone at all….still smh.
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO TELL THE TRUTH
January 23rd, 2013
7:38 am
Falcons taking inventory, doing some spring cleaning in January…starting with Jeff Fish.
After being puzzled by the decision to release the strength and conditioning coach, after thinking about it more in-depth, the missing pieces started to come together and the puzzle is beginning to take shape.
In my opinon, the problems started with Fish in training camp, Lofa Tatufu reinjured his pectoral, was Lofa under supervised lifts? Was he accompanied with a trainer during the lift. Losing Lofa did two things, IMO, Wasited A. Blanks money…and madeTD look like an azz.
Off-season injuries to Larmar Holmes, Corey Peters. Did the rehab take longer than it should have for these two linemen to come back from injury?
Chop Buster
January 23rd, 2013
8:01 am
Somebody, the thing that I always questioned was the hamstring injuries to Willie Moe and Chris Owens. If you know a player has a history with hamstring injuries should you be doing things to help strengthen the hamstring and keep it warmed up during games? I never saw Willie Mo riding a bike on the sideline to help keep his hamstring warmed up. Was he hydrated enough? Lot of hamstring injuries are the result of dehydration as well. The bottom line is every team member should have a workout plan for the off season and then another one during the season. We need strong guys in the trenches and I haven’t seen either of our lines pushing anyone backwards.
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO TELL THE TRUTH
January 23rd, 2013
8:11 am
…Continued on Fish Firing.
Is Grimes rehab/conditioning on schedule? if not, another strike.
Spoon and William Moore, to the untrained eye…took entirely too long to come back from injury? if true, second strike.
There were a number of hamstring injuries, seems if though our players take more healing time, than other teams rehabing this particular injury.
Lastly, When Smith, TD, saw the physical imposing statures (body builds) of of the Seahawks, 9ers, they knew immediately changes had to be made. hahahaha….
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO TELL THE TRUTH
January 23rd, 2013
8:25 am
CB, I agree on the hammy injuries. There are preventive measures to lessen the possibility of hamstring injury…hydration, proper stretching are two.
Can’t over-look the importance of warming up (stretching) before a game. You ever notice the collegiate level, hamstring injuries, IMO, are not as prevalent as the NFL, IMHO, it is because the kids warm up together…and the warm up sessions include several stretching exercises, college kids warm ups could last for an hour or so.
Wings
January 23rd, 2013
8:44 am
At some time during and after the game HC Smith said:
“Never let up,” Smith said. “Never give up. … That’s how you’ve got to play this game in the National Football League. Never let up. Never give up. You have to play it for four quarters.”
I hope he has a tape of this quote so he can look in the mirror and understands he needs to hear himself. It’s funny how people say things that usually they themselves are responsible for and don’t do.
This problem must be fixed with a new attitude and with some new players as we have seen it for the past several years.
Chop Buster
January 23rd, 2013
9:02 am
Wings, Smitty is actually saying he has some quitters on the team, because it couldn’t possibly be the playcalling–or lack of aggressiveness. During the Seahawks game when Ryan threw the deep ball TD to Roddy, Smitty said, “Oooo I like that call, that’s aggressive.” LOL
Big Ray
January 23rd, 2013
9:37 am
The comments on the Jeff Fish firing are interesting. Sounds to me like it was a move just waiting in the wings. I want to see how quickly/efficiently the Falcons make some OTHER moves.
Smitty’s comments about not giving up and playing 4 quarters are not indicative of what happens with his team. I can’t put my finger too solidly on any one thing, so I’m going to say it’s several things.
Playing not to lose, playing too tightly, not making the right adjustments, turning the ball over…something always goes wrong. It’s just too often that it happens for it not to be some sort of issue with the CS, I do know that.
special
January 23rd, 2013
9:38 am
We didn’t have a blocked punt, fake punt, or punt return touchdown all season. We didn’t have a kickoff return touchdown all season. I know these things aren’t common but there was nothing even close. I don’t know the stats, but it seems like we only returned one or two kickoffs to the other side of the 50. During the last game on our first punt, SF went for the block and left our gunner standing alone at the top of the field. Why not have a default to throw the ball to him? Long story, short – fire the special teams coach and get someone in there with some imagination.
Chop Buster
January 23rd, 2013
9:39 am
Which RB would you prefer to replace Turner? De’Anthony Thomas has serious break away speed. Giovani Bernard is another Sprolls (speed and elusiveness).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dq_xrTUMQmk
Paddy O
January 23rd, 2013
9:42 am
I rewatched the 2nd half. Our loss really came down to a few plays. the Ryan fumble, HD falling down on the pass, and two oddly called plays – one after the endzone fumble, the other in the final seconds. Ryan rolls out to his right, and tries to throw a pass in the flat – a relatively short pass – both times the SF linebacker (2nd time being blocked by #19 who did not really get a block on him) jumps high and deflects the pass. Our defense really did NOT play badly.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
9:59 am
Great Wednesday Cagers!
Starting to slowly get over the loss, but that 3rd and 4 and 4th and 4 is seared into my memory. Just can’t get those last plays outof my head.
Paddy — True, it came down to a few plays, but if Crabtree doesn’t fumble at the 1 and they score, we really couldn’t even been that close because our defense couldn’t stop them whatsoever. The following quote from Mark Bradley really sums it up for me…….
By watching its defense force punts on the game’s first two series and not again until 13 seconds remained. After falling behind 17-0, San Francisco went: Touchdown, touchdown, end of half, touchdown, missed field goal, fumble at the 1, touchdown.
We can say that it came down to Ryan’s fumble, but if our defense stops them one time after the first quarter, we’re also in the Super Bowl. I know Smitty likes to say that it comes down to a few plays, and to a certain degree that’s true, but there are also tons of plays that perhaps “weren’t made” that could have had the exact same effect.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
10:06 am
Playing not to lose, playing too tightly, not making the right adjustments, turning the ball over…something always goes wrong. It’s just too often that it happens for it not to be some sort of issue with the CS, I do know that. — Big Ray
Well said. You also forgot to mention that Smitty has had his ass saved tons of time by “Matty Ice” coming back with minutes or second left to win the game, when we really shouldn’t have. Hell, I can count three just this year: Panthers #1, Seahawks, and Raiders just this year. Think about how many other games? Love the guy, but he’s on MY hot seat big time this year. Not like that means anything, but he’s bordering on losing most-to-all my confidence he can win the whole thing.
Geo
January 23rd, 2013
10:07 am
Paddy O, if not for the odd miscues on offense that you mentioned, we win that game. That’s why, while there were some blown coverages and missed tackles, I have a hard time blaming the defense. Due to Kaepernick’s running and throwing ability, and their excellent run game in general, that is a very hard offense to stop. But we could match them on offense. I texted my brother at halftime that we were going to have to keep scoring. He said, “win with offense?” and I said yes. If not for our own errors, we would have.
Geo
January 23rd, 2013
10:10 am
“but if Crabtree doesn’t fumble at the 1 and they score, we really couldn’t even been that close” — D3
But you have to give credit to the defense there. That wasn’t an error on SF’s part; it was a great defensive play by Moore and Robinson.
Geo
January 23rd, 2013
10:12 am
Also, holding them to a field goal was good defense. The offense did not score in the second half. Again, I have a hard time blaming the defense.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
10:18 am
I guess I’m just way out in the left field on this one because I see a lot of you blaming the two miscues as the reason we’re not in the Super Bowl. Agreed that Ryan has got to stop making those stupid @ss mistakes, especially late in the game, but it seems we’re also acting like he didn’t throw for almost 400 yards and 3 TDs on one of the best defenses in the league.
Yes, there offense is good, but they gained a full 100 yards less than we did and they were literally unstoppable for 3 straight quarters. We weren’t playing the Montana, Clark, Rice, Taylor, Rathman, Craig Niners. Would we still be having this conversation if the Niners converted their 10 points they left on the field? At that point, even a touchd down by Ryan doesn’t even get us a tie.
I guess I’ll just have to respectfully agree to disagree with those of you who say our defense wasn’t that bad and didn’t cost us the game.
Unca' Bob
January 23rd, 2013
10:21 am
During the Seahawks game when Ryan threw the deep ball TD to Roddy, Smitty said, “Oooo I like that call, that’s aggressive.” LOL- CB
It tells me Smith does not call plays regardless of what some say.
Chop Buster
January 23rd, 2013
10:26 am
Unca’ Bob, I agree Smitty doesn’t per say call plays, but I’m sure he can direct his coordinator when to go into milk the clock mode. Who knows, it’s speculative on what Smitty actually does as far as game planning–but you can’t deny some of the same tendencies still exist even though Mularkey left.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
10:26 am
If nothing else, I’ll just say that the offense and defense were EQUALLY responsible for the loss. The defense was close to as bad as The Debacle in the Dome for 3 quarters and the offense was in full-on pitiful self-destruction mode.
Chop Buster
January 23rd, 2013
10:35 am
D3, I agree it’s a TEAM sport and you have to receive equal play on both sides of the ball. Ryan was still moving the ball in the second half despite not scoring anymore points (we were on the 10 yard line and the game in our hands).
Defense stayed in the zone giving too much respect to Kaepernick. We should have at least allowed the nickle corner to break off with the TE occasionally, if for nothing else, to throw the QB off.
Arno
January 23rd, 2013
10:35 am
I weigh the loss toward the D because of the PF penalties.
Geo
January 23rd, 2013
10:39 am
“they gained a full 100 yards less than we did…” yet they won.
I think this just shows that they are a better coached, more disciplined team. When you are lacking in fundamentals and focus, that’s a coaching problem.
Remember when Ryan asked for extra prep before the NY game? And how well the team played that Sunday? Who led that effort, Smitty? or Matty? Seems like Smitty is just not demanding enough — he’s all attaboy and then he blows up on occassion. That will get tuned out sooner or later.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
10:46 am
When you are lacking in fundamentals and focus, that’s a coaching problem. — Geo
Couldn’t agree 100% more with you on this. The entire coaching staff got their tails handed to them in the second half and Smith should be embarrassed. Harbaugh made him look like a chump.
Greg Mendel
January 23rd, 2013
11:23 am
The old saying “can’t see the forest for the trees” is valid, but, frankly, it’s an easy mistake to make. Rehashing individual plays within a single game can tell us something, but identifying patterns (positive and negative) that appeared throughout the season is most valuable.
I can’t see those patterns as well as other Cagers, so I’m not even gonna try to go there. There were, however, some things I couldn’t help noticing again and again (along with everybody else).
1. Weak running game. Turner, almost exclusively, WAS our running game. Over the season, he had a few good runs, but he was stuffed on most attempts, and could not be depended on for short, critical yards. That Quizz (and Snelling, when he was occasionally taken out of the garage) consistently did a better job tells me that replacing Turner with almost any decent young RB would be a 200% improvement.
2. Pass rush. We just don’t have one, and as others have said, a good pass rush improves the secondary.
I won’t get into the O-line. IMO, if we could significantly improve our pass rush and run game, we’d significantly improve the team. We can’t afford all the improvements we want or need, but investing in those two components would make a huge difference.
I could be wrong, of course. Along with death and taxes, it’s one of life’s certainties, according to my wife.
Matty Bicep
January 23rd, 2013
11:56 am
We are a flawed team, but guess what so it ever other team in the NFL, except 1.
But the fact is, we moved the ball at will in the 2nd half. We only punted once, and that was where we were a yard short. Like I said, I evaluate what happened in the game. If we were getting crashed though the A gap, or running Turner into a stacked box, I would say, yes, or tendencies were exposed.
But what we did was turned the ball over, THAT is how we put up 100 more yards, because when you drive the ball for 9 plays and fumble the snap, those are the kind of stats you put up. On offense, I did not see any tightness, other than Ryan. So all you folks how called for more Ryan, for more passing, for a change away from Smitty ball, you got exactly what you wanted. I don’t see how you can really complain about play calling or coaching.
But all that said, it is not fair to Ryan, to say it is all up to you, that you got to keep the throttle down, play 11-1 mentally, throw into teeny window all day while matching wits with the top NFL defense….That just ain’t right….but don’t blame Smittyball, a lot of you got what you wanted.
D3
January 23rd, 2013
12:30 pm
Greg — Excellent points. I’ll add in the OL too. Yes, they played good in the playoffs in terms of pass protection and and did both well vs. the Seahawks. But their run blocking is still very weak. I think one of the problems is obviously Turner and getting a new back will help that. However, we’re still especially weak up the middle. McClure’s done. Konz should move to C and we need to add a new RG in some fashion. Whether that’s moving Clabo inside or just drafting one, it’s gotta get better.
elephanthead
January 23rd, 2013
12:56 pm
I think that if Barrett Jones from Alabama is on the board when our pick comes, you have to jump on him. He gives you options since he was an award winner at center and tackle.
Jones – C Konz – RG Clabo – RT or…Konz – C Jones – RG Clabo – RT or…Konz – C Clabo – RG Jones – RT.
After solidifying the middle of the O-line (where we had the most problems w/ penetration), they can spend all the other picks they want for defense. Also, I would consider dealing 2 guys for draft picks – Grimes and Harry Douglas. I really like Harry, but they dont seem to utilize him much, and I would prefer to have another 2nd round pick for him and grab a LB or FS that can tackle and cant dance.