Jump to content

Why Was Frank Gore So Ineffective Down The Stretch?


Recommended Posts

I think it was more from the way they used him after Singletary came back.  He was given a lot of short yardage/goal line carries and the Bills were NOT good at Power Run Blocking, ranking near the bottom of the NFL at success rate for those...

 

Prior to that, he was used in a more full feature role.

 

 

2 minutes ago, dave mcbride said:

I don't think it was age - I think it was playcalling and personnel formations plus the fact that the Bills run blocking talent ain't that great.

 

The Bills run blocking was not good in Power formations. However by all other metrics, it was good to excellent in other situations...Singletary did lead the NFL in yards per carry as an RB, he didn't do that by himself.

Edited by matter2003
Link to comment
Share on other sites

47 minutes ago, freddyjj said:

Gore was seldom used in the 11 formation they used in back half of season.   When he went on field we lined up in heavy formations more often.  As a result lots of 8 or 9 man boxes.  He was in when they knew we were running (short yardage, goal line or 4 minute drill).  Not a lot of lanes to run through and he was too slow to run outside by design.

 

That's why there will be a new compliment to Motor in 2020.

This, for part time fans like Phil who have to ask.. Washington game is where his wonderful career hit the concrete wall because that’s when Motor became the focal point of the running game. After that, when Gore came in, it meant he was getting the ball on short yardage plays. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This post is tongue in cheek, correct?  Not a real question or concern, correct?

 

Shocking, almost disturbing, if not!

 

Gore is 36 years old, has carried the ball over three thousand five hundred times, and rushed for over fifteen thousand yards. In addition, he has almost five hundred receptions for almost four thousand more yards.

 

You don't need to know all the specifics, of course, to know this is the reason.

 

This is a joke, right?

 

Edited by Mister Defense
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

strange that it was asked, but it was a combo of factors very clearly.

Age - He's certainly lost any burst to the edge he might have had. He's still very strong but there is no acceleration.

Scheme - As mentioned by others, he played in a lot of 2 back/2 TE sets where we were trying to gain one yard, and other similar situations.

 

For anyone to say it was not a combination of both, you are missing the big picture.

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

a. He wasn't used in 11 formation

b. he had pretty nominal receiving skills so teams didn't need to account for him in the passing game meaning they guessed run most times he was in there

c. we used him between the tackles so teams didn't worry about setting the edge 

d. we always seems to run on 1st and 2nd down with him in there  

Edited by Locomark
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, BUNCH OF MULARKEY said:

giphy.gif

 

1 hour ago, TroutDog said:


Sign him! He’s a gamer!

 

 

I'd need to see him take a few big hits before I'm completely convinced.

 

 

  • Haha (+1) 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Phil The Thrill said:


Makes sense.  To me, it’s still frustrating how bad he was towards the end of the season.  It’s like every time he touched the ball he gained a yard.  Every time.  I think I have NFL PTSD from watching Gore run the ball over the last few weeks.  It’s was disgusting.  

 

I thought it was more like every time he touched the ball they went backwards, at least towards the end. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, GG said:

Pretty simple.  Singletary's injury forced them to use Gore much more than they expected.

Fail.  His touches went down after game 6.  Instead of an average of 14+ touches per game, he was betting just over 9 touches down the stretch.  Chandler's explanation is the simplest.  As Singletary became the feature back, Gore had to transition to a short yardage specialist.  Unfortunately, he often failed in that role.  On a number of occasions, he failed to convert on third and short or fourth and short.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...