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Einstein

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Everything posted by Einstein

  1. Love this play calling by Daboll.
  2. This may be clearer.
  3. You don’t see Hutchinsons ankle/foot snapped and wrapped around another humans knee?
  4. Mods can delete if this is deemed too gruesome.
  5. Ben Johnson is a savant of offense.
  6. This thread may interest you: https://www.twobillsdrive.com/community/topic/256487-chris-simms-good-and-detailed-breakdown-of-allen’s-struggles-vs-houston/page/15/ We discuss most of what you questioned. As for Maye, I watched that game… he had so much more time than Allen had, he could have built a hammock and relaxed compared to what Allen went through.
  7. Feels like Dalton has been in the league forever
  8. It is in this case. I posted this after a game last year where Gabe got hurt. Before Gabe was hurt Allen: 4/8 (50%), 67 yards, 0 TD, 2 INT AFTER Gabe left the game Allen: 26/30 (87%), 360 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT Did you know? Over the past two seasons, a little under 40% of Allen's interceptions occur when targeting Gabe Davis? Yet, Davis is not targeted very much… Allen played his absolute worst when targeting Gabe.
  9. True. Not our kicker, of course. But teams with good kickers will only need to get a couple first downs to nab 3 points.
  10. The math wasn’t the joke! Math is never a joke! I was joking that Gunnar was softening. Because he never softens. He digs in (I do too). But he didn’t get it. I’m bad at jokes.
  11. Goodness - I really have to work on my humor. People never seem to get it.
  12. Yeah, that’s called acceleration and was all explained in the kinematics. He would have caught Cook in 0.9 seconds. What you’re experiencing is why we don’t judge acceleration and speed by eye.
  13. There was no forward momentum. Coleman (and the defender), came to almost a complete stop. I think Coleman thought he finished his job for that play. Thats not true. Starting from rest, he would have reached Cooks speed in 0.9 seconds. I broke down the math of this here. That defender is why Allen didn’t throw the ball. He stares right at him.
  14. The PFF question is irrelevant to the conversation. No person, scout, coach, service or otherwise is right 100% of the time. What separates the good from the bad is their track record over time.
  15. Lol this is the first time i’ve seen someone reference another poster here as a source. And i’m not sure if you’ve noticed, but Gunnar has begun to soften his stance on this topic. Give me a few more days and I may have him completely converted. As for Simms, it’s pretty clear he didn’t analyze the play because he completely misrepresented it. He didn’t even mention Coleman not clearing his defender. Or the missed run.
  16. I do. Because his analysis was lazy and wrong and he is too smart for it to be so.
  17. If Simms actually analyzed the film, he wouldn't have said what he said. The problem is that he has to talk about 32 teams so he went with what the intern gave him. I said it before - but notice how most of the plays he showed was beginning of the game? That's because they started the game film and just grabbed the first 3 or so plays they saw an open player on. This is cut and paste journalism. 31 other teams to get to. So its not that Simms is dumb. He is smart. He knows football. The problem is that he didnt actually analyze the play.
  18. He doesn't need to! He covers Coleman until Allen begins his throw and then he leaves Coleman. He doesnt need to cover the low when the low is no longer a threat. This is not rocket science. It happens all the time in the NFL. And because of the positioning (Coleman not slanting deep enough), he was in perfect position to intercept Cooks route.
  19. This is where math can help us figure out what will actually happen. That way we wont have to guess. - Let's say Cook is running West at 4.5 yards per 40 yards (8.89 yards per second) - Defender on Coleman is is 8 yards further west of Cook and 4 yards North and lets say he starts from rest (he isnt moving) - Both players run at the same speed: 4.5 seconds per 40 yards (8.89 yards per second) When do they reach the same position? Well, we have a kinematics equation we can use to start that process. v^2 = v0^2 + 2(a)(x) First let's figure out acceleration... 8.89^2 = 0 + 2a * 4 ... 79.08/8 = that's 9.88 yards/second accel Then we have to figure out how fast Defender on Coleman can accelerate the 4 yards South to meet the same axis as Cook ... v = v0 + (a)(t) 8.89 = 0 + 9.88 (t) = 0.9 seconds. During the 0.9 seconds that Defender on Coleman takes to go from standing still to reaching the axis of X, Cook who as you said is already running at full speed will cover 8.89 × 0.9 = 8.0 yards. Cook started 8 yards back from the Defender on Coleman. So even though Cook makes up 8 yards in the time it takes the Defender on Coleman to go from standing still, to accelerating to the X axis that Cook is running on, they will reach intersection at approximately the same time and about the same speed. In other words, the Defender would have absolutely caught up to Cook IF he leaves the second Josh decides to throw the ball. Obviously there are some other variables involved. For example, stumbles, slips, yada yada. The "eye test" for judging time and distance is notoriously unreliable. Always turn to math when possible. .
  20. If Josh throws the ball, the defender leaves Coleman. That's how it works. As soon as he starts his throwing motion, that defender is leaving Coleman. This happens all the time in the NFL. And Josh has to make that determination in a fraction of a second. Josh from a couple of years ago, throws that ball. And Josh from a couple of years ago, maybe gets picked off. You can literally see Josh, on tape, stare at that defender before moving on. Yeah, I find it surprising that anyone thought one would need to be Usain Bolt to beat someone in a foot race with a head start. I think my fat butt may have had a chance.
  21. Yes, he was. And I'm a Simms fan saying that. It was not his finest hour. But I can understand why he screwed up. The issue resolves around people not understanding that these analysts have to talk about 32 teams each week. A fan only watches the clip the analyst makes for their team. But the analyst still has 31 other teams to analyze. Its simply not possible to review tape for them all. So... They just take what the interns give them and try to make lemonade out of it. Example: Clueless intern sees Josh was 9 of 30 or whatever it was, concludes he was bad, takes a few clips of footage, circles open guys, and marks it ready for production. Notice how most of the plays were at the beginning of game? It's because the intern takes the first things he sees (beginning of the game), and moves on to the next team.
  22. In what world do you need to be Usain Bolt to run less distance than another person? The defender is 7 yards further downfield than Cook. He has a 7 yard head start, AND the angle. If you think it takes Usain Bolt to run the black line, faster than Cook runs the red line, then there is no point in discussing further. This is correct. It's actually the entire design of the play. Brady has 2 clear out routes - one on each side of the field. The problem is that both failed. Coleman didnt slant far enough and Knox whiffed on his rub. There may have been. No argument there. But you have to remember that Allen has to make a risk/reward choice here. He chose to move on to the rub on the other side. I don't blame him for that. It's only a lower percentage play because Knox missed his assignment. Ding! Ding! Ding! Winner! Winner! Winner! Bingo.
  23. Ok, let me explain what happened here, since it appears that Chris Simms really confused you. Here is the route tree for this play: The red routes are not actual progressions. They exist only to clear out defenders. At the bottom of the screen, Coleman is clearing out for Cook, who is running the wheel route. At the top of the screen, Knox is clearing out for Kincaid, who is running upfield. The problem? Knox fails MISERABLY on the rub route. As seen in the picture below, Knox's job is to delay Kincaid's defender, so Kincaid can turn up field for a big gain. But instead of boxing Kincaid's defender out temporarily, he whiffs (with the help of a little tug by the CB on him) and lets the defender go right past him and stick to Kincaid like glue. Because of this one whiff on the rub, the ENTIRE right side of the field is blanketed. Now let's bring it back to Cook. Allen knows that he has 3 options on this play. Cook on the wheel, Kincaid on the out and up with a rub from Knox, or a checkdown to Samuel. He snaps the ball and looks to Cook. At this time in his progression, Cook has not yet beat the LB. Your point is that Josh should just anticipate that Cook will beat the LB and throw it up. Problem with that? Allen also knows there is a deeper defender (the DB on Coleman), who Coleman didn't take far enough inside to clear him out from the play. Allen knows that as soon as he throws this ball, the deeper defender has the chance to beat Cook to the ball, as he is not only further downfield than Cook, but also has the angle. If you look at Allen’s head here, it’s not looking at Cook - he’s looking at the deep defender who could break off and nab the ball if the throws it. In other words, Allen sees an INT happening if he throws this ball here. As mentioned above, what likely happened here is that Coleman didn't take his slant deep enough inside. He didn't do a good enough job of clearing out, which left his defender in position to possibly make a play on the ball to Cook. So Allen is likely thinking.... "I can throw this up to Cook, hope he beats the LB, AND hope the backside defender doesn't go and INT it. Orrrrrr... I could move on to my rub route on the other side of the field which has one of my most sure handed receivers." So he moves on to his next progression. Of course, Allen doesn't know that Knox whiffed on his rub route responsibilities and that the play is blown up over there. The above is what actually happened on this play. It was extremely lazy analysis by Simms, who I typically like. But here's the thing - all these talking heads who played pro ball - they know this stuff. They're not stupid. But they don't actually have time to analyze these plays because they're talking about 32 different teams each week. So instead, its probably just an intern grabbing screenshots and giving them talking points and guys like Simms have to talk about it, perhaps on the fly, while looking at the the play for only the first or second time without breaking it down themselves. If you want someone to blame on this play: 1) Knox, who doesnt complete the rub. 2) Coleman, who didnt take his route far enough inside to clear the DB from peeling off and helping with Cook if Allen throws it. Agreed. We have a disaster class happening at WR, TE, and O-line and people are pointing at Allen. Lineman not picking up blocks, WR's dropping balls, TE's missing rub responsibilities. But it's Allen... Boggles my mind.
  24. I didn’t know people actually enjoyed the taste of whole wheat. I thought they just ate it because they had to.
  25. Yes. And it’s evident all over the All-22 if anyone cares to look. Some of it comes down to what the Texans did on defenses - they squatted on all the short stuff and that really made it hard because of the way Brady runs the offense with small ball. There was absolutely nothing easy for Josh to take. And the few times someone would finally get open, he was being flushed from the pocket by an unblocked blitzer. Now, one criticism that I think is fair, is toward the end of the game, he started to flush himself from the pocket when he didn’t need to. But I think this is just the natural result of him being pressured relentlessly the first 3/4 of the game.
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