+ Reply to Thread
Page 3 of 7 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 LastLast
Results 31 to 45 of 96

Thread: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

  1. #31
    The Field Goal Team
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Gaithersburg, MD
    Posts
    471

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by glongest View Post
    it was interesting to hear alot of the radio talking heads talk on Sunday about how the defense played pretty well but when the game was on the line could not make a critical stop. To me alot of that falls on the offense. When you are 1 for 9 on third down conversions, there are no sustainable drives and your defense spends alot of time on the field. That is exactly what happened on Sunday. Compounding that issue, when you have a defense that has depth issues like this defense, they are not going to be up to the task of critical stops at the end of the game when the game is on the line. Unless they solve this 3rd down conversion issue and have some time consuming sustainable drives, the result is going to be the same. As someone else mentioned, that starts with receivers catching the balls that are thrown to them and if they cant then regardless of how big of a free agent contract they signed. sit their ass on the bench until they learn how to make catches in critical situations.
    I thought our gameplan would be to make sure falcons high powered offense stay off the field and we would own time of possession, but it seem like the Falcons implemented that plan against us. They dominated the time of possession by minimizing the big plays gaining consecutive first downs to let the time run. After RG3 went down, that is when I felt Falcons put the nail in the coffin because they didn't have to worry about Kirk Cousins winning the game for them. They put up 17 points in the 4th quarter and called it a day.

  2. #32
    Ring of Fame darrelgreenie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Age
    36
    Posts
    12,352

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by skins4eva View Post
    One thing I have noted, and it's more observational than anything else and was really glaring vs. Atlanta is that even when we have a short distance on 3rd down--like 3rd and 4 or less, we seem unable to convert consistently or even semi-consistently.
    I wonder what the numbers are for 3rd and less then 6.
    I looked at 3rd + 6.
    Maybe you could look those numbers up to see if they support your hunch?
    It would be interesting and weird to find out that we're not good at converting 3rd and less then 6.

    ---------- Post added October-9th-2012 at 06:02 PM ----------


    ...but I think that getting a defense in 2 down and 5 or less gives generally gives an offense the best chance for an explosive play. 2nd and 1, 2 and 3 are really dangerous downs for a defense because the entire playbook is open.
    I don't disgaree with the above but I didn't mean that 1st down is better then those downs listed above.
    But, 1st down of the down and distances that happen most often over the course of a game are usually the best down for an offense to be unpredictable and therefore explosive.

  3. #33
    Ring of Fame
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Back in the old Country unitil the New Year- darn frustrating Government B/S.
    Age
    38
    Posts
    16,084

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by skins4eva View Post
    I've made the point extensively in other threads that some of the blame for our exceedingly poor third down conversion rate should fall at the feet of Kyle. There are many members who feel that he really shouldn't be accountable for our horrendous numbers. I guess in my mind I'd be interested in seeing a breakdown of seeing how many third down conversions would have been made but for a player mistake--dropped pass, penalty, etc..... .
    Well given we've only converted 156 out of a possible 487 third down situations (32%) through the 36 games Kyle's been in control of the O; if the figures where to show a large percentage of the failures have been from player mistakes/ penalties; that would lead onto an even bigger concerns.

    A consistent lack of bad teaching/ preparation form the Coaches far above play calling. And bad talent evaluation to start with.

    Hail.

  4. #34
    The Cover Corner skins4eva's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    NYC
    Age
    32
    Posts
    5,406

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gibbs Hog Heaven View Post
    Well given we've only converted 156 out of a possible 487 third down situations (32%) through the 36 games Kyle's been in control of the O; if the figures where to show a large percentage of the failures have been from player mistakes/ penalties; that would lead onto an even bigger concerns.

    A consistent lack of bad teaching/ preparation form the Coaches far above play calling. And bad talent evaluation to start with.

    Hail.
    True--but I'm not sure how you separate bad teaching/preparation/coaching from play-calling. Don't they go hand in hand? If someone has been poorly prepared and/or coached, how can they be expected to execute well?

  5. #35
    The Run Stopper
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Nowhere
    Posts
    5,920

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gibbs Hog Heaven View Post
    Well given we've only converted 156 out of a possible 487 third down situations (32%) through the 36 games Kyle's been in control of the O; if the figures where to show a large percentage of the failures have been from player mistakes/ penalties; that would lead onto an even bigger concerns.

    A consistent lack of bad teaching/ preparation form the Coaches far above play calling. And bad talent evaluation to start with.

    Hail.
    Would you consider the teams we fielded the last two years super talented?

    Not excusing the third down conversion rate this season, I'm just saying. Coaching and preparation can only do so much when you have a bad quarterback with a bad o-line with bad receivers and bad running backs your first year, and then you have a bad quarterback with a barely mediocre o-line (and then you lose your left tackle) and barely average receivers (and then you lose your best offensive player the tight end) and only okay running backs.

    I'd also like to say most aren't absolving Kyle of any and all criticism and are trying to be fair and even handed coaching and players wise. Others aren't...

  6. #36
    Ring of Fame
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Back in the old Country unitil the New Year- darn frustrating Government B/S.
    Age
    38
    Posts
    16,084

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by darrelgreenie View Post
    I wonder what the numbers are for 3rd and less then 6.
    I looked at 3rd + 6.
    Maybe you could look those numbers up to see if they support your hunch?
    It would be interesting and weird to find out that we're not good at converting 3rd and less then 6. .....
    Apologies for butting in, but in the Falcons game, which appears to be the one you guys are referencing, we were 0-3 from third and short downs. (There was no medium. It was either third and short, or third and long.).

    We had two 3rd and 2'. And a 3rd and 3.

    The 3rd and 2's where two Morris runs for -2 and 1 yard respectively. The former resulting in the missed 31 yard FG to go up by 10, which become 7-7 when Atlanta scored on their next possession. So a massive early swing there that cost us dear. The later resulting in a punt from the Atlanta 44.

    The 3rd and 3 was the play Griff got taken out with the sack for a loss of 2 yards from the Atlanta 3, resulting in 3 and not 7 points to go up 10- 7 early in the second half. Another big swing.



    ---------- Post added October-9th-2012 at 07:52 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by NLC1054 View Post
    Would you consider the teams we fielded the last two years super talented?

    Not excusing the third down conversion rate this season, I'm just saying. Coaching and preparation can only do so much when you have a bad quarterback with a bad o-line with bad receivers and bad running backs your first year, and then you have a bad quarterback with a barely mediocre o-line (and then you lose your left tackle) and barely average receivers (and then you lose your best offensive player the tight end) and only okay running backs.

    I'd also like to say most aren't absolving Kyle of any and all criticism and are trying to be fair and even handed coaching and players wise. Others aren't...
    Are you suggesting I'm putting ALL the blame on the OC here man? Or did I read that wrong? (Which is entirely possible, and if so I apologise.).

    Of course we've not had superior talent the last two years here. Or even this year in many positions come to that. But if the vast majority of those 331 failed third downs are indeed on player mistakes/ penalties; then you've got to start asking questions of what happens in practice regardless of sub standard talent.

    That's a heck of a high number of fundamental mistakes and ill discipline if that is indeed the case. Both coaches and players would need to take a long hard look at themselves in that instance.

    That said, without those figures, as much as certain players have to be held accountable for their own mistakes (some of the drops this past Sunday for example were inexcusable at this level); the main bulk would fall on the man the buck stops with IMHO. The one who designs the plays, and determines what we run in any given situation. Obviously to date he's consistently failed at finding a way to convert on crucial third downs through whatever reason. It might not seem fair, but the buck stops with him.

    Hail.
    Last edited by Gibbs Hog Heaven; October-9th-2012 at 07:54 PM.

  7. #37
    Ring of Fame darrelgreenie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Age
    36
    Posts
    12,352

    Default Looked up the numbers for 3rd + 6

    Quote Originally Posted by NLC1054 View Post
    When it comes to Luck and Tannehill, I don't think it's a matter of not attacking on 3rd and long.

    I think that those two teams do a better job of staying out of third and long.
    Well here's the numbers for 3rd and 6+ yards from espn:

    Tannehill......37 attempts/24 comp 64.9% 257 yards 7.3 YPA
    Griffin...........25 attempts/16 comp 64.0% 145 yards 5.8 YPA
    Luck.............21 attempts/8 comp 38.1% 125 yards 7.1 YPA


    Its not that Griffin faces more 3rd and longs then Luck or Tannehill.
    Tannehill has actually faced more then both Griffin and Luck by a good margin.
    Griffin has only faced 4 more 3rd and longs then Luck.

    I think the numbers reflect what I see with my eyes.
    Kyle calls high percentage no-read completions like RB or TE screens where the onus for converting the yardage is not on the distance of the pass downfield but rather on the receiver to gain RAC, even if its unrealistic.
    Calling a screen on 3rd and long is indicative of a careful mindset which probably carries over to the other 3rd and long playcalls.
    So even on the non-screens I would wager that either the design of the play or the pre-play instuction to Griffin conveys 1 message: be careful.
    Consequently Griffin takes checkdowns as opposed to attacking like this 3rd down call from the Bucs game:
    Quote Originally Posted by darrelgreenie View Post
    This is a throw I would like to see Griffin makes.
    We can only speculate on Kyle's intent or instructions to Griff on this play.
    Maybe Griff was instructed to play it safe with the checkdown trying to gain some yards for a FG attempt? or Maybe it was Griff's on decision after going through his progressions.

    But, my take on this play is:
    there was a clean pocket and Griff had clear field vision, he should know they're in tampa-2
    Ronde is the key zone defender along with the MLB
    But Ronde breaks on Hankerson's route prior to Griffin releasing the ball:

    If Griffin waits a couple of nano seconds longer he has a nice alley to throw to Davis-

    My speculation is that if Griffin begins his progression with his eyes to the left reading/glancing quickly from the go route to Moss to Paul to Hankerson it would help get Davis more open against that coverage
    I think this mindset is reflected and supported by the YPA attempt on 3rd and long of 5.8.

    In the games I've gone back and watched with Luck, I don't think he faces a lot of third and longs, and on those down I don't think Arians attacks defenses any better or worse than Kyle.

    I think Tannehill is the same way.
    I would have agreed last year, where I thought Kyle's offense did a good job of creating open WRs.

    But right now I think that both Arians and Sherman/Philbin do a better job of allowing their QB to attack or be aggressive in the passing game and there is a carry over to 3rd and long.

    I've regularly see these QBs attack the weak areas of Cover-2 and in general throw into tighter coverage then Griffin.
    Griffin is tightly managed and often has well defined and open reads within the passing game due to the action of the play design.
    As a result he doesn't do a lot of rhythm drop back passing and imo doesn't find a rhythm.
    But, we've seen him move the ball quite well in those rare instances like the end of the Bengals game.

    I don't want to re-peat my whole thought but its right here:
    http://www.extremeskins.com/showthre...=1#post9186015



    I'd actually want to see Robert just drop back from center instead of being in the pistol or the gun so much a little more often than we do, since I feel like it's a tell that either a run or a play action pass is coming when he's under center. I feel like that's what hurts us on the boots and rollouts; seems like teams don't completely commit to it with Robert comes under center.
    I agree that there's a certain element of predictability while under center and defenses should expect an action pass or a zone run.
    But, imo even that simple dichotomy still creates enough indecision when we're running the ball well to create effective play-action.
    However if teams are over playing the boot-action then maybe there are ways to exploit those tendencies in the drop back passing game?

    I think Kyle and Mike are still trying find their balance with Griffin.
    The irony is that Griffin is so freakin gifted that even while they're experimenting the offense is still top 4 in points and yards.

    I don't think Griffin needs to pass more, I like our balance but I think the formations and type of passing (rhythm drop back vs action) needs to be looked at going forward.
    I still believe spread shotgun 2x2 with Posse personnel in an up-tempo offense is the ultimate and hopefully eventual direction this offense is moving.

    I still think this offense has only scratched the surface of the possibilities.
    Last edited by darrelgreenie; October-9th-2012 at 08:36 PM.

  8. #38
    The Run Stopper
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Nowhere
    Posts
    5,920

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gibbs Hog Heaven View Post

    Are you suggesting I'm putting ALL the blame on the OC here man? Or did I read that wrong? (Which is entirely possible, and if so I apologise.).

    Of course we've not had superior talent the last two years here. Or even this year in many positions come to that. But if the vast majority of those 331 failed third downs are indeed on player mistakes/ penalties; then you've got to start asking questions of what happens in practice regardless of sub standard talent.

    That's a heck of a high number of fundamental mistakes and ill discipline if that is indeed the case. Both coaches and players would need to take a long hard look at themselves in that instance.

    That said, without those figures, as much as certain players have to be held accountable for their own mistakes (some of the drops this past Sunday for example were inexcusable at this level); the main bulk would fall on the man the buck stops with IMHO. The one who designs the plays, and determines what we run in any given situation. Obviously to date he's consistently failed at finding a way to convert on crucial third downs through whatever reason. It might not seem fair, but the buck stops with him.

    Hail.
    I'm not saying the coach should be absolved. I'm saying that both go hand in hand, and people make assumptions based on little available evidence. (Not you, just saying in general.)

    Strictly putting it on the playcaller, I think, is what I have an issue with.

    Sometimes, of course it's just a bad call. It's only natural. Bad play calls happen.
    But sometimes it's a bad quarterback decision or error.
    Sometimes it's a sack.
    Sometimes the back whiffs on a block, or gets stuffed in the backfield.
    Sometimes a receiver drops a ball or runs a bad route.

    It all works in concert is what I'm saying. And since we don't have the bulk of the necessary information to discern what happened on any given Sunday or any given play (mostly by virtue of not having every game from the last two years), I'm just arguing that we shouldn't rush to blame any one person.

    ETA: I'm also not saying you're pinning all the blame on Kyle. Sorry if I didn't make that clear enough.
    Last edited by NLC1054; October-9th-2012 at 08:08 PM.

  9. #39
    Ring of Fame
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Back in the old Country unitil the New Year- darn frustrating Government B/S.
    Age
    38
    Posts
    16,084

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    NP NLC. It's easy for things to get misunderstood on a message board.

    And yeah, without all the info to hand, your right you can't pin all the blame on one person. Even if we did have, you probably would be foolish to as there's 11 players out there trying to execute what the coaches want to run. And human error is human error.

    Some of the other threads and posts since the weekend laying everything at the door of the OC have been ridiculous in the extreme.

    Hail.

  10. #40
    The Run Stopper
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Nowhere
    Posts
    5,920

    Default Re: Looked up the numbers for 3rd + 6

    Quote Originally Posted by darrelgreenie View Post
    I still think this offense has only scratched the surface of the possibilities.
    Fair enough.

    I'm working my way through the Colts versus Packers game, and I think the biggest difference is that Luck will try to make a throw on third down that Robert wouldn't. I'll agree with you on the screens on third down and what not; those are safe calls.

    But I think what I see from Luck in pretty much every game I've watched of him is that he's willing to make some throws that he probably shouldn't. On third and long, I don't think the route combinations are that much different than what we run. Slants, in routes, crossing routes, comebacks. I think the difference is Luck throws those passes and Robert doesn't. I don't think the offense is more designed to attack; I just think Robert's a little more willing to check it down than Luck. Oddly enough.

    I mean, here's what I've got as I was watching the Colts-Packers game (I haven't finished yet.)


    Colts:
    1st Quarter
    3rd and 7: GUN. Luck throws underneath crossing route to T.Y Hilton. Tackled before the first down.

    2nd Quarter
    (10:42) 3rd and 12: GUN 2x2 set. Luck throws into double coverage. Stares it down. Nearly picked by Woodson.

    (1:26) 3rd and 19: GUN Trips Right. Deep Comeback to Avery. Incomplete. Corner blankets Avery, route is short of the sticks by 5 yards.

    3rd Quarter
    (7:50) 3rd and 10: GUN: 2 WRs Stack Left, Wayne and TE Right. Luck sacked.

    4th Quarter:
    (8:08) 3rd and 8: GUN Empty Set, 4WRs and TE. Stick route to Fleener incomplete, almost pickked off.

    (5:22) 3rd and 8: 2WR stack right, Hilton wide left, Fleener tight end, 1 RB. Incomplete on corner route. T.Y open. Ish.

    (4:03) 3rd and 9: GUN, 3WR, 1TE, 1RB: Complete to Reggie Wayne on Deep crossing route.


    Ultimately I think the question to ask is, "Is Robert being told not to make certain throws, or is that just the way Robert plays?" Robert didn't throw a lot of interceptions in college either. I think it's a bit of combo of both; Kyle trying to manage a rookie quarterback, and Robert trying to work within the system and not make a bad throw.

  11. #41
    Ring of Fame darrelgreenie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Age
    36
    Posts
    12,352

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gibbs Hog Heaven View Post
    Apologies for butting in, but in the Falcons game, which appears to be the one you guys are referencing, we were 0-3 from third and short downs. (There was no medium. It was either third and short, or third and long.).

    We had two 3rd and 2'. And a 3rd and 3.

    The 3rd and 2's where two Morris runs for -2 and 1 yard respectively. The former resulting in the missed 31 yard FG to go up by 10, which become 7-7 when Atlanta scored on their next possession. So a massive early swing there that cost us dear. The later resulting in a punt from the Atlanta 44.

    The 3rd and 3 was the play Griff got taken out with the sack for a loss of 2 yards from the Atlanta 3, resulting in 3 and not 7 points to go up 10- 7 early in the second half. Another big swing.

    Hail.
    What apologies? These types of discussion are why I joined ES.
    I have the game DVR but I don't have time to check right now, but I wonder what type of formation we were in for these 3rd and shorts?

    I don't think our OL should or can be counted on to control the LOS in a tight formation on these types of downs and distances.
    Imo these 3rd and shorts are where we should use the Griffin as a run threat in some type of read option play from a spread formation.

    The second play I remember, I thought Griffin had Garcon on the initial hitch portion of his route, but I'm not sure if Griffin wasn't ready to throw because of a colapsing pocket or was he not ready to throw because he bailed on the pocket too early or did he simply just miss the progression?

    I remember thinking that play didn't have a whole bunch of options and it lacked the creativity showed in the RZ in previous weeks.

  12. #42
    Ring of Fame
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Back in the old Country unitil the New Year- darn frustrating Government B/S.
    Age
    38
    Posts
    16,084

    Default Re: One of the Redskins BIGGEST continued failings, both sides of the ball: 3rd down conversions/ stops.

    I don't have the game to hand sadly dg, or else I'd of looked and been more specific.

    I only garnered that info from the game log.

    Hail.

  13. #43
    Ring of Fame darrelgreenie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Age
    36
    Posts
    12,352

    Default Re: Looked up the numbers for 3rd + 6

    Quote Originally Posted by NLC1054 View Post
    On third and long, I don't think the route combinations are that much different than what we run. Slants, in routes, crossing routes, comebacks. I think the difference is Luck throws those passes and Robert doesn't. I don't think the offense is more designed to attack; I just think Robert's a little more willing to check it down than Luck. Oddly enough.
    Take a look at LL threads from last week about the 3rd and longs from the Bucs.
    There were a couple of 3rd down calls that only have 1 receiver running a route that would yield a 1st down without significant RAC.
    And all the Bucs we're doing was running Cover-2/Tampa-2 which had known beaters plays and throws that were not called or attempted.


    Ultimately I think the question to ask is, "Is Robert being told not to make certain throws, or is that just the way Robert plays?" Robert didn't throw a lot of interceptions in college either. I think it's a bit of combo of both; Kyle trying to manage a rookie quarterback, and Robert trying to work within the system and not make a bad throw.
    Like I said in the previous thread the RB and TE screens Kyle calls on thread down imo are indicative of his mindset on 3rd downs.
    Some of the 3rd and long calls from the Bucs game imo are also an illistration of this mindset.
    And if the OC has that mindset then I'm sure that mindset is going to be echoed in the QB room.
    I can't imagine Griffin being gun shy, not in the slightest.

    ---------- Post added October-9th-2012 at 10:00 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by Gibbs Hog Heaven View Post
    I don't have the game to hand sadly dg, or else I'd of looked and been more specific.

    I only garnered that info from the game log.

    Hail.
    If I get a chance manana I'll post it, but right now the wife calls and I gotta go.

    HTTR

  14. #44
    The Run Stopper
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Nowhere
    Posts
    5,920

    Default Re: Looked up the numbers for 3rd + 6

    Quote Originally Posted by darrelgreenie View Post
    Take a look at LL threads from last week about the 3rd and longs from the Bucs.
    There were a couple of 3rd down calls that only have 1 receiver running a route that would yield a 1st down without significant RAC.
    And all the Bucs we're doing was running Cover-2/Tampa-2 which had known beaters plays and throws that were not called or attempted.


    Like I said in the previous thread the RB and TE screens Kyle calls on thread down imo are indicative of his mindset on 3rd downs.
    Some of the 3rd and long calls from the Bucs game imo are also an illistration of this mindset.
    And if the OC has that mindset then I'm sure that mindset is going to be echoed in the QB room.
    I can't imagine Griffin being gun shy, not in the slightest.
    The downs and distances of those plays are as follows---

    3rd and 10
    3rd and 13
    3rd and 17
    3rd and long on the goal line
    3rd and 20
    3rd and 10 (he runs a draw, fumbles, Pierre recovers for a touchdown)


    LL's article also says what I've been trying to say repeatedly; generally speaking, teams don't blitz Robert. They drop into heavy zones and force him to make throws into tight windows. I'm not implying that Robert is gun shy or "afraid". I'm saying Robert is smart.

    The one throw you point out that you feel he could've/should've made is not an easy one to make. Is it one he could make? Yeah.

    But it seems the only reason the linebacker falls off the coverage is because Robert's arm is cocked to make the throw, and the linebacker is coming to make the tackle on Hank. You could make the argument that maybe if Robert pump fakes and get the linebacker to bite he could make the throw, but then you're counting on the safety not getting over to break up the pass.

    Also, when you watch it back in real time, Robert went through his progression exactly the way he's supposed to; from deep to short. He's supposed to go from Pierre on the GO, to Santana on the Post, to Paul on the OUT, and Fred and Hankerson are his last reads on the play.

    If Robert does wait the "extra nanosecond", the linebacker likely plays his coverage (because he's only creeping up because Robert's arm is cocked), and Hank draws attention on the slant, which would leave Robert with nowhere to go with the ball.

    Robert made a good decision instead of trying to force a pass into coverage. That's what I've been trying to tell people.

  15. #45
    Ring of Fame darrelgreenie's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Age
    36
    Posts
    12,352

    Default Re: Looked up the numbers for 3rd + 6

    Quote Originally Posted by NLC1054 View Post
    LL's article also says what I've been trying to say repeatedly; generally speaking, teams don't blitz Robert. They drop into heavy zones and force him to make throws into tight windows. I'm not implying that Robert is gun shy or "afraid". I'm saying Robert is smart.
    I'm curious what the numbers are that make you sure that teams don't blitz Griffin?
    I agree that Griffin is smart but I'm not understanding what are you saying about the 3rd down conversions? That Griffin should check it down against heavy zone coverage?

    The one throw you point out that you feel he could've/should've made is not
    an easy one to make. Is it one he could make? Yeah.
    Never said it was easy.

    But it seems the only reason the linebacker falls off the coverage is because
    Robert's arm is cocked to make the throw, and the linebacker is coming to make
    the tackle on Hank.
    The linebacker is Ronde Barber and he's jumps Hankerson before Griffin loads to throw.
    Ronde jumps Hankerson route because he's reading Griffin's helmet/eyes.

    Also, when you watch it back in real time, Robert went through his
    progression exactly the way he's supposed to; from deep to short.
    We can only guess as to the progression.

    Robert made a good decision instead of trying to force a pass into
    coverage
    That's your opinion.
    And while that throw and those types of throws are difficult for a rookie QB, I've seen other rookie QBs attempt and make those types of throws.
    And spinning it forward, imo those types of throws are routine Cover 2/Tampa-2 beater for a top 10-15 NFL QB.

    ---------- Post added October-9th-2012 at 11:19 PM ----------

    And imo those types of throws are going to be critical to improving our 3rd down conversion percentage.

    For a team that can run the ball and pass the ball well, our 3rd down conversion % is an outlier that we have the talent to improve.

    ---------- Post added October-9th-2012 at 11:20 PM ----------

    And imo those types of throws are going to be critical to improving our 3rd down conversion percentage.

    For a team that can run the ball and pass the ball well, our 3rd down conversion % is an outlier that we have the talent to improve.

+ Reply to Thread

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

     

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 2
    Last Post: January-4th-2011, 11:24 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts