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Daboll's preferred offense and QB.


Logic

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My hope is for the OL  to stay more with the Kromer scheme. Glenn to be healthy , try Dawkins at RT , Miller back at RG.

 

If the OL can pass protect, Peterman in his 2nd season just might be the guy. So many positions to fill would hate to trade up in the next draft.

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2 hours ago, ALF said:

My hope is for the OL  to stay more with the Kromer scheme. Glenn to be healthy , try Dawkins at RT , Miller back at RG.

 

If the OL can pass protect, Peterman in his 2nd season just might be the guy. So many positions to fill would hate to trade up in the next draft.

I absolutely agree with you.  I really think Peterman will be the guy.  Build the lines through this draft.

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7 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

Well, yes, this sounds essentially like a dumbed down offense that can be spiced up depending on players and QB.

 

No, it's not dumbed down at all, though it can be simpler for the QB.  It can be very sophisticated, but also very flexible.  The Pats E-P offense thrives on WC-like short pass plays that turn into big gains with RAC and if the teams try to smother the middle of the field without adequate pressure they exploit the run and hit deep shots. The Giants offense under Gilbride in the SB years thrived on play action and looking for big chunks of yards down the field.

 

Someone else in one of these threads pointed out that to some extent, it shifts some of the responsibility of knowing what's going on from the QB to the other players.  In a West Coast play call, what route each receiver will run is explicitly called out and sometimes to what depth (like Air Coryell).  In E-P, they know where to line up and what they play call is, they need to know for themselves what to do.  That's where Fitz threw a bunch of INTs here, when the DB opposite knew more about what route they were supposed to run (from film study) than our WR did (NB I'm not saying it's all on that, just you could see sometimes he expected shuck and he got jive).  That's why Ochocinco was being called out by ex-Pats in the media for not "getting his head in the playbook"

 

Anyway the shift in responsibility is why IMHO it will be important for Daboll to bring in the right assistants who can really teach the system.  If he doesn't have position coaches who really understand the system and how it should work and are good at teaching, it will not look pretty.

 

There was a good article on Gilbride and the Giants running this offense back in theSuperbowl days, I'm still looking for it.  Will share link when I find.

33 minutes ago, AmishRifle said:

I absolutely agree with you.  I really think Peterman will be the guy.  Build the lines through this draft.

 

I do not understand the factual basis for this belief in Peterman.  I'm not saying he's crap or doesn't belong in the NFL, don't get me wrong.

But what on earth has he shown that makes you think he should be counted on as a QB in any regard?

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

I do not understand the factual basis for this belief in Peterman.  I'm not saying he's crap or doesn't belong in the NFL, don't get me wrong.

But what on earth has he shown that makes you think he should be counted on as a QB in any regard?

 

Plus his biggest advocate just got fired...

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2 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

I do not understand the factual basis for this belief in Peterman.  I'm not saying he's crap or doesn't belong in the NFL, don't get me wrong.

But what on earth has he shown that makes you think he should be counted on as a QB in any regard?

Personally, I love Peterman's quick release and anticipation.  I think he could do well in a timing based offense.  He was thrown to the wolves last year.

 

Still need to draft one and pick one up in free agency though.

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On ‎1‎/‎17‎/‎2018 at 11:05 AM, BeefCurtns said:

One thing for sure Tyrod is as good as gone. He's too stupid for this offense.

 

This is an idiotic post.  What evidence do you have that Taylor is stupid? 

 

Besides, these articles really emphasize how QB friendly they are. 

 

To me, looks easier for the QB to grasp and harder for the other players to grasp.  So, I wonder if the Bills, having brought Dabol in, will try to get one of NE's UFAs at one of the skill positions to be there to help teach the other Bills skill players. I see that NE has 3 UFA RBs in Burkhead, Lewis, and Bolden and 2 UFA WRs in Slater and Amendola.  I wouldn't be surprised if one of those 5 guys are in a Bills uniform next year.

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On 1/17/2018 at 7:25 PM, 26CornerBlitz said:

to only 5 INTs (two coming from drops by his receivers Charles Clay),

 

18 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

He has not said a word, but it's the only offensive system he's worked in.  It would be bizarre indeed for a new OC to install a system he's never before used.

 

What used to drive me bug!@#$ about Gailey was his play selection.  He would move away from that unmatched running and screen game, and call plays that could utilize Aaron Rodgers when he had Ryan Fitzpatrick instead.

 

I always liked the 5WR/empty backfield on 3rd and 1.

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15 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

I don't know why people feel like the system would be a fit for Tyrod? The E-P requires quick and sharp decision making at the Quarterback position more than almost anything else. Tyrod doesn't make quick decisions. 

 

I disagree with your assessment, at least based on what I read in these articles.  It seems like the E-P system is designed for success for just about any capable QB.  But I also disagree that people are saying anything like "Tyrod is a fit" for this system in the sense that other QBs aren't.

 

I think the point of the system is that it's designed to work for any QB but seems to require more intelligent skill position players who need to know all the formations, which is why I said it wouldn't surprise me if the Bills go out and try to get Burkhead, Lewis, Bolden, Amendola, or Slater when the Patriots inevitably let one or two of those UFAs walk in FA in a couple months.

 

But regarding the QB specifically:

 

http://grantland.com/features/how-terminology-erhardt-perkins-system-helped-maintain-dominance-tom-brady-patriots/

In essence, you’re running the same play,” said Perkins. “You’re just giving them some window-dressing to make it look different.”

 

The biggest advantage of the concept-based system is that it operates from the perspective of the most critical player on offense: the quarterback. In other systems, even if the underlying principles are the exact same, the play and its name might be very different. Rather than juggling all this information in real time, an Erhardt-Perkins quarterback only has to read a given arrangement of receivers. “You can cut down on the plays and get different looks from your formations and who’s in them. It’s easier for the players to learn. It’s easier for the quarterback to learn,” former Patriots offensive coordinator Charlie Weis said back in 2000. “You get different looks without changing his reads. You don’t need an open-ended number of plays.”

 

This simplicity is one of the reasons coaches around the league have been gravitating to the Erhardt-Perkins approach.

 

and

 

For many years, the Erhardt-Perkins offense was known as the original ground-and-pound, a conservative, run-first offense summed up by Erhardt’s mantra, “You throw to score and run to win.”

 

The theory here is that no matter the formation, there is an outside receiver, an inside receiver, and a middle receiver, and each will be responsible for running his designated route. For the quarterback, this means the play can be run repeatedly, from different formations and with different personnel, all while his read stays effectively the same. Once receivers understand each concept, they only have to know at which position they’re lined up. The personnel and formation might cause the defense to respond differently, but for New England those changes only affect which side Brady prefers or which receiver he expects to be open.

 

 

 

I don't know what happens, but I think cover_1.net pretty much nails my feelings about what's going on at OBD and what's going to unfold this season with Taylor:

 

http://www.cover1.net/should-he-stay-or-should-he-go-qb-tyrod-taylor/

...after the hire of Daboll as the team’s new OC, I think Tyrod’s odds to come back for his 4th year with the Bills just got higher.

 

Tyrod clearly wasn’t a fit for Dennison’s scheme since the beginning. His struggles with the quick 3- and 5-step dropback passes were clear from the preseason. Dennison made adjustments during the season, using a lot of play action roll out plays to put Tyrod in space, but his offense never fully worked with Taylor as the QB. Now with Daboll, everything seemingly changes. Daboll likes to run the ball with power concepts, has experience working with a top college dual-threat QB in Jalen Hurts, and will surely know how to maximize Taylor’s skill set. Greg Roman and Anthony Lynn showed the Bills can have a top-10 offense with Taylor at the helm, and Tyrod surely showed Sean McDermott and GM Brandon Beane that he’s a model of a pro, a true blue collar presence in the locker room, always working hard and being a good soldier, even when things didn’t go well for him. He can be a limited passer, but it’s obvious a rookie QB can benefit a lot having a true pro like Taylor around. To this regime character matters, and Tyrod is impeccable in this department.

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On 1/18/2018 at 2:09 PM, BringBackFlutie said:

 

Exactly.  This is not new.

 

https://www.ganggreennation.com/2015/1/14/7545199/everything-you-need-to-know-about-chan-gaileys-offense

 

"What Gailey does instead is to change the formation and personnel, but running the same core concepts from each, to give you fifteen different looks of what is, at its most basic function, the same play. For further reading, I suggest you take a look at BuffaloRumblings."

 

And

 

https://www.buffalorumblings.com/2012/6/21/3105714/buffalo-bills-offense-chan-gailey-spread

 

"Gailey's offense is complex only in the sense that it uses a variety of different personnel groupings, formations and motions to execute the same play calls."

 

Gailey's offense was also often compared to the Pats' offense in that it ran a lot of stacked sets of WRs and rub routes.   His offense was better, in some ways, though.  His running and screen game was unmatched.  Nothing could stop his offense if he had a Ryan Fitzpatrick that could throw past 15 yards.  I always believed that's why we had so much trouble scoring points after the first half of the season- Fitz's arm was dead.  I don't think it had much to do with the offense being "figured out."

there were a lot of things i loved about Chan's offense. i loved the cast of characters running it also. they were a bunch of lovable underdogs, most of which had more heart than talent. i always said that fitz played the position the way i wanted it played...with lots of guts and gusto. unfortunately he didn't have the best arm, accuracy, or judgement. but i always wondered what that offense would look like with a bit more talent. still have a soft spot for Chan and the boys.

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7 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

 

This is an idiotic post.  What evidence do you have that Taylor is stupid? 

 

Besides, these articles really emphasize how QB friendly they are. 

 

To me, looks easier for the QB to grasp and harder for the other players to grasp.  So, I wonder if the Bills, having brought Dabol in, will try to get one of NE's UFAs at one of the skill positions to be there to help teach the other Bills skill players. I see that NE has 3 UFA RBs in Burkhead, Lewis, and Bolden and 2 UFA WRs in Slater and Amendola.  I wouldn't be surprised if one of those 5 guys are in a Bills uniform next year.

Hmmm let's see... he can't get past 1 receiver in his progression  but most of all he steps to the line and can't read a defense and check out of a play you know like a SMART QB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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On 1/15/2018 at 2:26 PM, Logic said:


Fair enough. I combed through about 20 pages of the Daboll thread and didn't see it, then got frustrated by the whining and backed out to the main forum. Apologies for re-posting something that was already covered.

Thank you for posting this. I get it. Going through 10 pages of a thread to see if someone posted any new information on a point is kind of a pain. Unless of course its a 100 page thread on the Dunkirk Don- Chad insider info spectacle. 

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4 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

 

I disagree with your assessment, at least based on what I read in these articles.  It seems like the E-P system is designed for success for just about any capable QB.  But I also disagree that people are saying anything like "Tyrod is a fit" for this system in the sense that other QBs aren't.

 

 

None of what you quote after this does anything but agree with my assessment. There might be fewer plays but the system requires quick reads. Quick reads are exactly what Tyrod struggles with.

 

As for cover 1... look I think the guys there do a great job and I listen to their podcast regularly when I am on the treadmill at the gym but as recently as the pre-season they were saying Dennison's system was a really good fit for Tyrod and I was saying "no it isn't". I had a pretty detailed x and o conversation with Erik about it on this forum. 

 

Does this hire increase Tyrod's chance to be back? I have no feel for that really.... but it shouldn't. I see him having no more success in Daboll's system than in Dennison's. We HAD the perfect coordinator for Tyrod Taylor who had an offense he played his best ball in. He was fired as a scapegoat for his boss. 

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28 minutes ago, GunnerBill said:

 

None of what you quote after this does anything but agree with my assessment. There might be fewer plays but the system requires quick reads. Quick reads are exactly what Tyrod struggles with.

 

As for cover 1... look I think the guys there do a great job and I listen to their podcast regularly when I am on the treadmill at the gym but as recently as the pre-season they were saying Dennison's system was a really good fit for Tyrod and I was saying "no it isn't". I had a pretty detailed x and o conversation with Erik about it on this forum. 

 

Does this hire increase Tyrod's chance to be back? I have no feel for that really.... but it shouldn't. I see him having no more success in Daboll's system than in Dennison's. We HAD the perfect coordinator for Tyrod Taylor who had an offense he played his best ball in. He was fired as a scapegoat for his boss. 

 

Still disagree.

 

The biggest knock regarding Taylor has been going through his progressions post snap. This system makes all the post snap stuff much easier for the QB because it sets the QB up with knowledge pre snap of precisely where his guys will be on every play and the system seems largely predicated on knowing where you're going with the ball before the snap. When Taylor has known where he's going with the football before the snap, he's been pretty decisive and accurate. When that 1st read is taken away, as that first article discusses, the WCO and Coryell systems might have different routes in different places on any given play whereas this system seems to set it up so guys are consistently in the same places depending on the passing concept, for which there can be as few or as many as an OC wants to include.

 

That's the way I understand it, at least.

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13 minutes ago, transplantbillsfan said:

 

Still disagree.

 

The biggest knock regarding Taylor has been going through his progressions post snap. This system makes all the post snap stuff much easier for the QB because it sets the QB up with knowledge pre snap of precisely where his guys will be on every play and the system seems largely predicated on knowing where you're going with the ball before the snap. When Taylor has known where he's going with the football before the snap, he's been pretty decisive and accurate. When that 1st read is taken away, as that first article discusses, the WCO and Coryell systems might have different routes in different places on any given play whereas this system seems to set it up so guys are consistently in the same places depending on the passing concept, for which there can be as few or as many as an OC wants to include.

 

That's the way I understand it, at least.

 

Tyrod's issues reading defenses are pre and post snap. He just isn't very good at it.

 

Believe me in the Dennison offense he knew where guys were going to be. That offense is as close as it gets in the NFL to paint by numbers. The receivers' routes are linked to the Quarterback's feet. It is all rhythm and timing if your footwork is right and the ball is out on time the receiver will be in a spot. Now the failure in that scheme wasn't all on Tyrod. Our receivers were bad (I'd have fired the WR coach before anyone) at hitting their spots but the ball wasn't out on time too often anyway. Tyrod's best game was week 3 vs Denver.... he was getting the ball out on time that day in the rhythm of the offense and everything was clicking. The rest of the year he would have known where receivers ought to be but he still wasn't decisive. 

 

The E-P will not provide greater certainty on where receivers will be. It allows receivers to make adjustments by reading the coverage themselves. You need a Quarterback and receiver in sync and on the same page so that those quick decisions become 2nd nature. Think Brady and Welker / Edelman.

 

You are entitled to disagree, of course, but I was right about Tyrod's fit with Dennison. If we get chance to see it I suspect I will be right about his fit with Daboll too.

 

Edited by GunnerBill
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