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NFL play calling tendencies through 3 weeks
Richard Noggin replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
My point was that I 100% agree with you. -
I'm curious about the demographics of posters actively commiserating in this thread. Has to skew older, right? (I, too, have struggled with Ticketmaster at inopportune times, to be clear.)
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NFL play calling tendencies through 3 weeks
hondo in seattle replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
My point was that Josh was more effective in play-action than most QBs. Therefore, you'd think we'd do more play-action than other teams, not less. Here's what I got from AI: Josh Allen’s Play-Action Performance (2024) Completion Percentage: 70.1% Yards per Attempt: 9.2 Touchdown Rate: 7.8% Passer Rating: 117.6 These numbers reflect his ability to leverage play-action for chunk gains and red zone efficiency. His passer rating on play-action was among the top five in the league. NFL Average Play-Action Stats (2024) Completion Percentage: 65.3% Yards per Attempt: 8.1 Touchdown Rate: 5.4% Passer Rating: 102.3 -
NFL play calling tendencies through 3 weeks
Richard Noggin replied to DJB's topic in The Stadium Wall
Has me worked up each week, how little Brady and/or Allen are staying a snap ahead of defenses with aggressive PA calls. Instead, the Bills appear to simply continue running the ball where others (ME) might leverage that rushing success and call a PA shot play WITHOUT LETTING THE DEFENSE CATCH UP FIRST AND SHUT DOWN THE RUN PLAY THAT WAS WORKING. Preach. Ravens aren't worthy of unleashing PA against? That's bonkers, if true. I thought I heard/saw a stat that QBs are mostly always "super-effective in play action." And with a QB who can move and has an elite arm, one should reasonably expect a high % of play action for a variety of reasons. Bills running a nice, high % of motion has been encouraging, seeing Allen use a variety of motions to diagnose and adjust pre-snap with more and more comfort and command. Combining that with PA calls on tendency-breaking down and distances would be cool. Taking shots when defenses are expecting runs should be something the Bills do once or twice a half imho. Gotta threaten ALL quadrants of the field, especially when your QB has one of the greatest arms of all time. -
The game catches up to every single coach.. especially the X's and O's guys Someone is always going to reinvent the wheel in football Pure motivators like Pete Carroll can coast a little bit longer like a marv Levy.. terrific coach more of a players coach a motivator.. not necessarily a tactician Not that their Xs and O's are bad.. but Pete Carol doesn't rely on scheme.. he's a motivating developer Peyton helped bring a spread WC coryell system to the NFL at a successful level.. but there's people who are pushing it past him now
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Name a Right Wing Position
Homelander replied to Backintheday544's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
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See, this is where I'm a pessimist. I don't think that's a real possibility as long as McDermott is the coach. He's been great at building this team & culture, but defense is his baby. A lot of people think if we just get better players than things will improve, and while I think that's partly true, I don't think it'll look any different come playoff time. Like were prime Hyde & Poyer better than Rapp & Bishop? By a mile, yet the D still looked just as bad against the Chiefs/Bengals in the playoffs. Maybe prime Tre White & Milano? They didn't move the needle either. Then you look at all the draft picks invested in the D, you'd expect better results. Unfortunately, they've gotten worse the last few years, all while "offensive-minded" Andy Reid has managed to build a strong D before us. Josh will have to be exceptional, and we'll have to continue surrounding him with good weapons. That's how I think they can overcome the McDermott playoff defense.
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Actual Nazis, not imaginary ones.
Homelander replied to Unforgiven's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
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Trump - for the good of the nation, resign.
Homelander replied to Homelander's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
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Sean Payton was once one of the most cutting edge play designers and play callers in football but this tells you two things: 1. It's easier to look like an innovator when your QB is a HOF talent; and 2. Eventually the league passes everyone by. No matter how good you have been. To be running just 26% motion in 2025 is unforgiveable.
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Denver's results immediately stood out. All of those options only amount to 72.4% of their plays. There's still another 27.6% unaccounted for 😅 Meanwhile, those options account for 91.7% of the Bills plays. Denver is just out there calling plays via dice roll. But good for Washington - keeping the No Huddle offense alive!
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Your 2025 Democrat Party - the New Red Guard
Big Blitz replied to Big Blitz's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Sounds like leftists hate free speech and thought -
Not sure if I ever agreed with a post more! I was nodding my head in agreement with each and every line. Yes to everything!
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Problem for me is that I don't think you need to STEAL anything in order to predict the Bills offensive and defensive play calls...I've been doing it as an amateur at a high level for decades lol. But for real, I effing HATE when ruthlessness is rewarded. You can often see it when a team/organization is pushing it past gamesmanship to the point of cheating, but it's rarely prove-able in the absence of rigorous reporting or snitches. No one gets upset about teams who study and chart opponents' tendencies and circumstantial idiosyncrasies; but when that legitimate statistical analysis is supplemented with more ill-begotten and private intel...and only perpetrated by a connected cohort of coaches...we find ourselves watching contests of questionable legitimacy. Imagine how much better your DL's/OL's film will be if you're able to provide them with the opposing line's protection/pressure calls/signals in real time...the cheater-era Patriots were SUPER focused on DL/OL calls/signals to my recollection.
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Absolutely... Three concussions is all it would take.. not counting all the other repeated head banging ... Had four in a short time span in college which ended my football playing but I always rushed back Yeah we would basically call that a braveheart drill now or shark tank or something similar.. it's great for getting used to contact But there's always ramifications