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Allen not showing progress


PayDaBill$

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1 hour ago, Wayne Arnold said:

But a bigger problem this game was conservative play-calling and receivers not being talented enough to get YAC and/or make plays on the ball down the field. 

 

The bomb down the field that was called back thanks to Captain Dimarco was a thing of beauty. There aren't many quarterbacks able to juke JJ Watt out of his shoes and get away from him then throw a completion 40+ yards on the field on the run.

 

 

 

 

Your YAC comment is spot on.  I think back to the quick pass he made to Bengimen in the flat after Allen made an audible.  How many times do you see a big WR shrug off the tackle of a DB coming in fast and gain another 10 - 15 yards  Not to mention KB had 50 pounds on that DB.

 

The throw that came back on the illegal formation was a thing of beauty as you noted.  First he got away from the best pass rusher in football and 2nd the pass was perfect. 

 

Allen still has a lot to work on to get better but it's clear that he's showing steady improvement.  The FACT that he has played against the best defenses of the 4 rookie QB's is a big deal and has impacted his development relative to those other guys. 

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1 hour ago, Wayne Arnold said:

Just watched the game over again (offense). It further confirmed my initial thought that Allen played much better than the stats showed.

 

The Watt sack was bad - 100% his fault. Two or three misfires (first pass attempt to Clay and deep throw on first possession down left sideline to Benjamin) as all quarterbacks have. He still has an issue of not trusting what he sees and holding the ball too long rather than just rocking-and-firing.

 

But a bigger problem this game was conservative play-calling and receivers not being talented enough to get YAC and/or make plays on the ball down the field. 

 

The bomb down the field that was called back thanks to Captain Dimarco was a thing of beauty. There aren't many quarterbacks able to juke JJ Watt out of his shoes and get away from him then throw a completion 40+ yards on the field on the run.

 

Allen was pretty streaky in college so I really would've liked to have seen how he did after that beautiful completion to Benjamin. Maybe the light went on and he finally decided to let 'er rip. But we'll never know.

 

Here's hoping The Franchise is healthy enough to play at home against the Bears.

 

 

If he puts the Benjamin pass on target, it’s most likely intercepted. Going long with the slowest receiver we have is foolish, he was double covered and he doesn’t fight for the ball. The Watts sack was his fault, I thought he could have stepped up on the other 3rd down sack if he would have trusted the line. By far his best appearance since Minnesota, definitely improving...

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1 hour ago, Fred Clause said:

If he puts the Benjamin pass on target, it’s most likely intercepted. Going long with the slowest receiver we have is foolish, he was double covered and he doesn’t fight for the ball. The Watts sack was his fault, I thought he could have stepped up on the other 3rd down sack if he would have trusted the line. By far his best appearance since Minnesota, definitely improving...

One of my pet peeves is talking about plays like this without context. I think you're absolutely right about the Benjamin pass.

 

The Watt sack, while yes, it is on Allen, context is needed here, too. Sure, he could have thrown it earlier and avoided the sack. But what he couldn't have done is thrown it earlier and likely got a first down. It was 3rd and 12. I want him trying to step out of that sack on 3rd and 12 and not giving up the possession. If it's second and 12 or 3rd and 6 it's a different story. He thought he could escape and he almost did. But I don't think that is such a bad attempt or decision. I hate giving up on a play on 3rd and 10+ unless you are in FG range.

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9 hours ago, Kelly the Dog said:

One of my pet peeves is talking about plays like this without context. I think you're absolutely right about the Benjamin pass.

 

The Watt sack, while yes, it is on Allen, context is needed here, too. Sure, he could have thrown it earlier and avoided the sack. But what he couldn't have done is thrown it earlier and likely got a first down. It was 3rd and 12. I want him trying to step out of that sack on 3rd and 12 and not giving up the possession. If it's second and 12 or 3rd and 6 it's a different story. He thought he could escape and he almost did. But I don't think that is such a bad attempt or decision. I hate giving up on a play on 3rd and 10+ unless you are in FG range.

 

What you say is correct, though in defense of those that get on Allen for that play I'll say that his #1 problem in college was that he was constantly trying to do too much, and plays like the above really stick out to people that watched him at Wyoming as a continuation of a trend.

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There is a real absurdity to some of the hot take conclusions here.

 

I feel like we’re only a few years away from measuring progress from one play to the next, and if a QB has a good throw but follows it up the next play with an overthrow, we’ll see threads that “he’s regressing!”

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On 10/14/2018 at 4:05 PM, PayDaBill$ said:

Is he really the answer? Looks like the least competent and ready of all the top 18 QB’s.  He’s really a raw talent almost makes we wonder if he’ll ever develop.

Well that is the exact scouting report on him coming out of college. We shouldn’t expect anything less. He is a rookie and as raw as they come. It’s up to him and the coaching staff to put in the work to fix his issues and to help him grow 

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i'm on record saying allen is gonna be favrelway, and i still think he will be (of course, a serious throwing arm injury may change that, so here we are).

 

While i totally agree only having a rookie (let a lone a raw one) and WOAT peterman on the roster at qb is inexcusable, if allen doesn't get dinged up we are 3-3 after a tough stretch of opponents and 4 on the road, and that's after peterman gift wrapped us our first loss (heck, he even delivered the 4th loss) and the d was woat for 6 quarters.  this shows that the coaching we have as a complete organization is at least decent.  i can see dabol just not being good enough (lining up wrong is disgusting) and our special teams leave me wanting much more as well.

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13 hours ago, The_Dude said:

Thing with Allen is I believe he can be good but that he never will be and that’s why he was a dumb pick. 

 

I think Allen will run out of runway before the towel is thrown in because McBeane planned this thing so freaking poorly that they’re playing him before he’s ready. McBeane’s dumbasses are gonna get canned because of how atrociously they butchered this. 

 

Nobodys forgetting McDermott processed Mahomes to Kansas City. 

 

Then, gambling on a risky pick when a safer option was on the board — those are the moves that get guys canned. 

 

You dont draft Josh Allen unless you Pittsburgh, or LAC....and if ya do it, when you’re Buffalo, ya gotta have a better plan than ‘last girl to get asked to the dance’ in free agency, and the 5th round pick from the year before with a popgun arm, and fearless recklessness. 

 

And my god with, McDermott, I get it — he’s a defensive guy. That said, if ya wanna impress me, bolster your weakness with the talent when building and use your coaching/scheming ability to make the most out of the defense....but dude went balls to the wall on D, and left any/every QB on this team exposed. None of the 3 QBs when camp opened were solid ideas. And McDermott decided to surround those dudes with no help because he wanted to spend on defense? 

 

I cant believe he didn’t use one of the first two picks following Allen to get Allen a weapon. 

 

This is bad bad planning on McDermott and I think it causes Allen issues, and I think pressure mounts, and if McBeane get canned it may be a concession to the new coach that he doesn’t have to take Allen, and Allen gets released, and his career suffers, maybe flatlines. 

 

McDermotr’s offensive plan has been so idiotic from the get go. Which is another reason that makes me believe Allen’s screwed anyways, because Allen probably doesn’t have the coaches he needs around him. I could be wrong. Daboll could be great....it could all just be Allen starting too soon, or his just not being good. I don’t know. 

 

But I think McDermotts idiotic process has doomed him and Josh Allen to failure. 

 

We’ll see. Josh Allen will needa get good, real quick. 

I want to know how a guy who never threw for more than 250yds consistently in college is somehow going to do it in the pros.  I want to believe he can be developed.  But the odds are against him and the Bills to do it.  

 

When I watched Wentz his rookie year he was throwing the ball and making mistakes but you could see he was figuring things out.  He looked like he knew what he was doing just hadn't figured out how to do it consistently yet.  I don't see that from Allen yet.   

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On 10/14/2018 at 5:07 PM, MAJBobby said:

 

I never did. I always said and will continue to Maintain the Bills did EJ wrong. 

 

But then again making the same development mistakes with Allen 

If you watched EJ in college he wasn't really anything to get excited about and was not a project - he was well coached, played many college games, and was exactly who he was in college - a guy that was wildly inconsistent with many different things that could drive a coach crazy (e.g., footwork, accuracy, not keeping his eyes down the field/not seeing things fast enough) but had been addressed year after year.  He wasn't raw - he just wasn't very good.   That's why he really never got better with experience - he was as ready as he was going to be when they started him.  

 

It was no surprise to me that people would get excited about his promise in a couple of games and then he would never deliver with consistency.  It was a bad pick and bad scouting - they had so many opportunities in the drafts before and after to address the position with better prospects, and failed to.  To me that is the Nix/Whaley legacy - they got talent on the team, but had no idea what they were doing with the QB position.  This regime looks like they are about equal in QB talent evaluation, but early results suggest that they may even be worse, although they are certainly more focused on the position.  Nix/Whaley loved drafting WRs, but none really materialized into top shelf talent. 

 

Now I think Allen is a rawer prospect than EJ, but he is also in a much worse situation with the lack of talent around him.  But I also think this "raw" title is only appropriate for guys who haven't been playing QB for long or came from systems that were drastically different than pro Offenses - I don't think either really apply to Allen, and he has really not shown many flashes at all of putting things together.  He is having a tough time making simple reads and throws, and his pocket presence leaves something to be desired.  Not saying he can't improve, but he has a long way to go and the odds aren't exactly in his favor.

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25 minutes ago, Ayjent said:

If you watched EJ in college he wasn't really anything to get excited about and was not a project - he was well coached, played many college games, and was exactly who he was in college - a guy that was wildly inconsistent with many different things that could drive a coach crazy (e.g., footwork, accuracy, not keeping his eyes down the field/not seeing things fast enough) but had been addressed year after year.  He wasn't raw - he just wasn't very good.   That's why he really never got better with experience - he was as ready as he was going to be when they started him.  

 

It was no surprise to me that people would get excited about his promise in a couple of games and then he would never deliver with consistency.  It was a bad pick and bad scouting - they had so many opportunities in the drafts before and after to address the position with better prospects, and failed to.  To me that is the Nix/Whaley legacy - they got talent on the team, but had no idea what they were doing with the QB position.  This regime looks like they are about equal in QB talent evaluation, but early results suggest that they may even be worse, although they are certainly more focused on the position.  Nix/Whaley loved drafting WRs, but none really materialized into top shelf talent. 

 

Now I think Allen is a rawer prospect than EJ, but he is also in a much worse situation with the lack of talent around him.  But I also think this "raw" title is only appropriate for guys who haven't been playing QB for long or came from systems that were drastically different than pro Offenses - I don't think either really apply to Allen, and he has really not shown many flashes at all of putting things together.  He is having a tough time making simple reads and throws, and his pocket presence leaves something to be desired.  Not saying he can't improve, but he has a long way to go and the odds aren't exactly in his favor.

Go back and really watch his plays last game.

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The book on Allen is far from closed. 

 

But is anyone surprised that an Honorable Mention from the Mountain West who had documented red flags is playing a lot like his Scouting Reports?

 

He's been scatter shot on the accuracy, can't consistently read a defense, feels some phantom pressure, etc. 

 

He had 650 passing attempts in college. Baker Mayfield had 1500.

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1 hour ago, Soda Popinski said:

I want to know how a guy who never threw for more than 250yds consistently in college is somehow going to do it in the pros.  I want to believe he can be developed.  But the odds are against him and the Bills to do it.  

 

When I watched Wentz his rookie year he was throwing the ball and making mistakes but you could see he was figuring things out.  He looked like he knew what he was doing just hadn't figured out how to do it consistently yet.  I don't see that from Allen yet.   

If you are making this point, you didn’t pay attention to his college team which was run first and put him in a lot of bad situations of third and long. They were never a winning team before he came and with limited talent he had them well above 500. Context matters...

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Just now, Fred Clause said:

If you are making this point, you didn’t pay attention to his college team which was run first and put him in a lot of bad situations of third and long. They were never a winning team before he came and with limited talent he had them well above 500. Context matters...

I understand the context but if you haven't seen it at the college level what makes you think it's going to magically happen at the pro level?   There was little to no film of him throwing the ball to analyze.   There were guys from bigger school with more tape out there to look at.   I still hope Allen becomes what we need him to be, I just never did understand what it was they fell in love with other than a big arm and a positive attitude.   

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2 hours ago, thebandit27 said:

 

What you say is correct, though in defense of those that get on Allen for that play I'll say that his #1 problem in college was that he was constantly trying to do too much, and plays like the above really stick out to people that watched him at Wyoming as a continuation of a trend.

Why is trying to escape a sack on third and 12 to try to get a first down instead of giving up possession by throwing it away or 8 yards short of the first down “trying to do too much?”  I agree with the criticism in general but don’t at all agree to use that play or plays like it as an example. 

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2 minutes ago, Kelly the Dog said:

Why is trying to escape a sack on third and 12 to try to get a first down instead of giving up possession by throwing it away or 8 yards short of the first down “trying to do too much?”  I agree with the criticism in general but don’t at all agree to use that play or plays like it as an example. 

 

If I were someone that was predisposed to believing that Allen will fail (and there are a significant number of them on this board), I would see a guy that scrambled and took an unnecessary hit instead of getting rid of the ball for a completion and at least giving my WR a chance to turn it into a first down.

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2 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:

 

If I were someone that was predisposed to believing that Allen will fail (and there are a significant number of them on this board), I would see a guy that scrambled and took an unnecessary hit instead of getting rid of the ball for a completion and at least giving my WR a chance to turn it into a first down.

He backpedaled and it was barely a hit. More like a shoestring tackle. ;)

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38 minutes ago, Soda Popinski said:

I understand the context but if you haven't seen it at the college level what makes you think it's going to magically happen at the pro level?   There was little to no film of him throwing the ball to analyze.   There were guys from bigger school with more tape out there to look at.   I still hope Allen becomes what we need him to be, I just never did understand what it was they fell in love with other than a big arm and a positive attitude.   

Soda,

 

When he had guys that could actually play in the NFL to throw to he did put up some numbers.....when he was throwing to undraftable players he did not.....

 

Hasnt horse been beaten to death?

25 minutes ago, thebandit27 said:

 

If I were someone that was predisposed to believing that Allen will fail (and there are a significant number of them on this board), I would see a guy that scrambled and took an unnecessary hit instead of getting rid of the ball for a completion and at least giving my WR a chance to turn it into a first down.

WR's have not been doing a lot of that this year......

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