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Can WR separation be coached?


ChicagoRic

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To me it’s strictly down to the quarterback, all 3 have missed wide open guys. 

I think Daboll has actually done a decent job scheming guys open as well, generally the quarterback never sees it or the pressure is on so fast they can’t get the ball out. 

There isn’t a lot of talent but still, plenty of times guys are running open. The games Allen played he could of put up really good numbers he just couldn’t make the reads and progressions fast enough and started getting happy feet wanting to run all the time (which is understandable) 

As a whole the group is bad, but if the quarterback play was better we wouldn’t be talking historically bad 

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As Augie notes, talent matters.

 

but you can coach skills like crisp route running, throwing with anticipation, making good reads, and even have a coach with great play design and sequencing. 

 

But if its me throwing to augie... well... I guess honestly..... it’s probably not THAT much worse than peterman to benjamin. 

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Good route runners get separation. Route running can be taught (and therefore learned). But it's also a talent and ability the components of which some guys are blessed to have more of than others. It is a large part of the art of wide receiving, especially at the NFL level, and when it's done well it's nice to see. 

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Inside Leverage over the middle; outside leverage on the sideline; accelerating through cuts; crisp edges on cuts whether slants or outs and using your body (not hands) to gain a throwing window are all keys to a good separation WR.   The Bills WR and TE crew as a whole are really lacking in game speed and technique.  A good example is Croom's near TD.  He had outside leverage but was more concerned with fending off the defender with his hand than getting this hand up for the catch.  There's no excuse for this.  He could have used his torso better to gain the edge and employed two hands on the catch.

 

All this said another essential element of separation is anticipatory throws.....Bills have no QB right now who makes consistent anticipatory throws.  Every NFL QB can make these throws sometimes but its doing it with Aaron Rodgers or Tom Brady 80% consistency that's the key.  The windows in the NFL are really small....they get even smaller if a QB can't make anticipatory throws.

Edited by JoeF
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6 minutes ago, RussellDopeland said:

Another question- Can WR intelligence be coached? Every week we see Benjamin lining up on the wrong side of the formation, and we all remember Corey Coleman. 

 

If nothing else, can we start scouting it better? Those two dudes are taking up like 12m this year and 2 draft picks 

 

probably Whaley’s fault  

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36 minutes ago, NoSaint said:

As Augie notes, talent matters.

 

but you can coach skills like crisp route running, throwing with anticipation, making good reads, and even have a coach with great play design and sequencing. 

 

But if its me throwing to augie... well... I guess honestly..... it’s probably not THAT much worse than peterman to benjamin. 

 

The only question there is.....who is the weak(est) link? 

 

 

 

But for the paycheck, are you in? 

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3 hours ago, ChicagoRic said:

I'm constantly hearing that our wide receivers can't get separation. I know that speed is a factor but it can't be the only thing. Is it scheme? Is it coaching? Is it really just a lack of talent? Enlighten me.

 

Of course it can. Speed is a factor but only one of many. Watch some old tape of stevie johnson. 

 

Jesus. What a question

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One of my personal bug bears..... the most important skill for a wide receiver in the NFL is route running. It can be coached and it can be improved but it requires talent too. From what I see the Bills lack talented route runners. 

 

It is why I would have been in on Demaryious Thomas. He was someone that came into the NFL raw as a route runner and improved massively once in the league. Not only would he improve the talent level of the room he would be a real lead by example type for guys to learn from. 

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3 hours ago, JoPar_v2 said:

 

Of course it can. Speed is a factor but only one of many. Watch some old tape of stevie johnson. 

 

Jesus. What a question

 

SJ under Gailey is probably not a great example because Gailey taught "beat your man, get to the spot" rather than crisp route running.  Stevie struggled when he moved to teams where the latter was expected.

 

But the principle is sound, the WR ideally needs to "sell" the defender that he's running a different route than he actually is.  Our guys are poor salesmen.

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8 hours ago, ChicagoRic said:

I'm constantly hearing that our wide receivers can't get separation. I know that speed is a factor but it can't be the only thing. Is it scheme? Is it coaching? Is it really just a lack of talent? Enlighten me.

You can scheme all you want, but if they don’t run good routes or make clean cuts in routes they won’t get separation. If they are doing a straight go route that is all speed, but if it’s a double move you got to sell the short route first.  Can it be taught? Yes but by the time they make the pros they should have it Down to a science I would think.

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

SJ under Gailey is probably not a great example because Gailey taught "beat your man, get to the spot" rather than crisp route running.  Stevie struggled when he moved to teams where the latter was expected.

 

But the principle is sound, the WR ideally needs to "sell" the defender that he's running a different route than he actually is.  Our guys are poor salesmen.

 

Agreed - the issue is once you sell - then speed helps increase the separation and we lack speed.

 

KB is not going to get separation hardly ever - no matter how good the teaching is.  He is to slow and deliberate, but he makes up for that with height (just needs hands).  

 

Zay has better body control and tends to get open on his breaks, but that requires a QB to trust that he is going to get open and get the ball to him.  Shortly after that the defenders are back on him.

 

Holmes actually seems has the best ability to get open, but he seems better on outbreaking routes and our QBs struggle with that route.

 

The youngsters are all still learning and some plays are better than others.

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5 minutes ago, PatsFanNH said:

You can scheme all you want, but if they don’t run good routes or make clean cuts in routes they won’t get separation. If they are doing a straight go route that is all speed, but if it’s a double move you got to sell the short route first.  Can it be taught? Yes but by the time they make the pros they should have it Down to a science I would think.

 

I think you can improve in the pros and plenty do, but I agree scheme is pointless if people run bad routes.

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

SJ under Gailey is probably not a great example because Gailey taught "beat your man, get to the spot" rather than crisp route running.  Stevie struggled when he moved to teams where the latter was expected.

 

But the principle is sound, the WR ideally needs to "sell" the defender that he's running a different route than he actually is.  Our guys are poor salesmen.

This is exactly right. When was the last time you saw one of our wide receivers fake a db out of his shoes? or even make them turn the wrong direction on a cut?  They don't seem to be able to juke or double move in any deceptive way at all. Which is bizarre to me. Some of these guys have been playing the position for more than a decade from pop warner on, yet there is little in the way of expertise shown!

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There are basically three different ways to get separation:

 

Speed - This obviously cannot be taught.

Scheme - This has more to do with the coordinator/playcaller than the receiver.

Route Running - This is a combination of physical skill and technique, which can certainly be taught and improved.

 

 

The Bills don't really have much speed at the WR position, and the few guys who are fast... can't catch. 

Daboll's scheme is very bland/generic and doesn't do anything special to get players open.

 

Zay Jones seems to be improving on his route running, but he needs his QB to throw with better anticipation.

Kelvin Benjamin gets very little separation and basically just uses his size.  He needs his QB to have better placement, so he can win jump balls and box out defenders.

 

So while lack of WR talent is certainly an issue, I have no doubts that our receivers would be looking much better with improved QB play. 

 

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36 minutes ago, mjt328 said:

There are basically three different ways to get separation:

 

Speed - This obviously cannot be taught.

Scheme - This has more to do with the coordinator/playcaller than the receiver.

Route Running - This is a combination of physical skill and technique, which can certainly be taught and improved.

 

 

The Bills don't really have much speed at the WR position, and the few guys who are fast... can't catch. 

Daboll's scheme is very bland/generic and doesn't do anything special to get players open.

 

Zay Jones seems to be improving on his route running, but he needs his QB to throw with better anticipation.

Kelvin Benjamin gets very little separation and basically just uses his size.  He needs his QB to have better placement, so he can win jump balls and box out defenders.

 

So while lack of WR talent is certainly an issue, I have no doubts that our receivers would be looking much better with improved QB play. 

 

 

Another substantial advantage that we don't seem to use is height.  Between Benjamin, Holmes, Clay, Croom and Thomas we have 5 receivers between 6'4" and 6'6".  We never seem be able to isolate any of these guys on the short CB and just automatically convert and 3rd and <5 by exploiting that advantage

 

A bit different form of separation, but we need to use what we got...

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11 hours ago, ChicagoRic said:

I'm constantly hearing that our wide receivers can't get separation. I know that speed is a factor but it can't be the only thing. Is it scheme? Is it coaching? Is it really just a lack of talent? Enlighten me.

You can teach other WRs to pick off the defense which always works for New England, the key is it has to be done within the first two yards of scrimmage otherwise you get flagged.

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4 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

SJ under Gailey is probably not a great example because Gailey taught "beat your man, get to the spot" rather than crisp route running.  Stevie struggled when he moved to teams where the latter was expected.

 

But the principle is sound, the WR ideally needs to "sell" the defender that he's running a different route than he actually is.  Our guys are poor salesmen.

 

Not saying SJ was ever a traditional crisp route runner. Stevie used unorthodox ways to get open. Basketball moves off the line, basically. What he DIDN’T use, which was my point, was speed to get open. Lots of ways to be a productive receiver in the NFL.

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Absolutely.

 

Seperation is knowing the play and the discipline, aptitude and consistency to run that crisp route every time.  All those things can be coached.  

 

The NFL's greatest receivers have one thing in common, regardless of when they played:  All top-shelf route runners.  

 

 

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