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Josh Allen deep ball misconception


DJB

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I went back and reviewed all of Allen's deep ball passes since his rookie year. 

 

I'll preface by saying I dont have a ton of clips but I tried my best to illustrate a few things.  

 

So firstly Allen was was much more aggressive year one with the deep ball. One positive was that he would put it in a spot where the WR could usually make a play on it. The bad part is that for some reason he was throwing into double coverage way too much and got picked a bunch.

 

 

(Now that clip is from week 4 of 2019 but used just to illustrate type of pick he was throwing deep)

 

I vividly remember Daboll going off on him on the sidelines a couple times after throwing deep picks. It may have been week week 14 in 2018 against the Jets at home. 

 

After that episode with Daboll, Allen then became a little gun shy about throwing the deep ball. He spoke often about protecting the ball. 

 

Now this past year when Allen did throw the deep ball it was usually in a one on one coverage.

 

However he wasn't throwing the ball to the WR he usually threw it to a spot just beyond the WR but far away from the defender. Each one of his deep throws the defender was far enough away that he didnt even get a hand on it or come close. I think Allen was really worried about getting picked and was throwing it conservatively. 

 

That tells me that Allen at least knows not to throw into double coverage, and if he can regain his aggressiveness and worry less about getting picked off by putting it closer to his WR hes going to connect on his deep ball far more often.

 

Allen did show more confidence and threw the deep much better down the stretch last year. 

 

Take a look at this clip from NE week 16 2019

 

 

 

First clip is a 25 yard rope to Beasley right at the sideline over a defender. That's a special throw. 

 

The 2nd is to Dawson Knox and it's a really pretty one. Perfect placement over Knox shoulder away from the defender and it's on the money. 

 

The 3rd one is a single high safety look. John Brown should have been double covered there but the DB for some reason trails away leading the safety one on one. Hard to know if Allen sees the defender trail away but regardless it's a perfect throw with defenders in his face. 

 

(I really wish I had some clips of some deep ball misses that Allen threw to really illustrate my point about him being gun shy or afraid to throw an INT. It would have really helped.)

 

I think there is a misconception on Allen being a poor deep ball guy. I think hes a terrific intermediate thrower (as illustrated by the Beasley catch). I think Allen in the first half of this year based on the games I watched was really worried about turning the ball over. In the back half his confidence grew and he wasn't throwing deep balls into double coverage as much and was also giving his WR a chance to make a play on the ball. 

 

We can assume that Allen's ability to read coverages, combined with growth on knowing when and when to not throw it deep, along with the confidence to put the ball where the WR can make a play will equal greater deep ball completions. The Patriots game perfectly illustrated that. 

 

Cheers guys

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We'll see. He was long so many times and hesitant often and left a lot of plays on the field. The good news is is he usually works through and solves his problems. That's what I'm hoping he does this offseason. If he can consistently hit the long ball this offense is going do a lot of damage!

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Good job appreciate all the work. I dont think there is any doubt that Allen CAN make pretty much any throw (often shaky ok the short "easy" ones) in the NFL with the arm he has and that is what you demonstrate here.  My concern is how consistent is Allen?  He has beautiful throws mixed in with inaccurate throws and some real hero ball head scratching decisions.  You can make any NFL qb look like an All Pro with selected highlights.  We could also make Allen look real bad with "lowlight" reel.

 

Now of course we dont always know if Allen has a a terrible throw or the receiver ran the wrong route.  We also have questionable WRs talent, his first year was a joke of a receiving corps but it was materially upgraded this year.  Still our playoff loss could have been a win had  Duke Williams been able to hold onto a TD or John Brown better footwork on the sideline, neither was easy but every game in the NFL good WRs make those catches.

 

So for me, in his third season, same system same coaches, J Allen has to continue to improve.  He now has a good O Line and now a true legit #1 WR in Diggs.  For me Allen HAS to make big strides this year and that starts with consistency and would be nice to get over 60% of his passes completed.

Edited by RoyBatty is alive
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It’s not a misconception, it’s a fact. He was horrible throwing the ball deep last year. 
 

If you also look at his rookie year he was in the bottom 3rd of the league in completing passes deep.

 

https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stat-analysis/2019/2018-19-deep-ball-project

 

 

Edited by Bangarang
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Allens biggest issue coming out of college and year 1 was the intermidiate passing game.  Last year he was top 5 in the NFL in that category.  Ironcilly, PFF pointed to his intermediate game his rookie as a reason he wouldnt become a legitament starter.  Deep accuracy is a category where year over year different Qbs lead the league and doesnt corelate year over year.  

 

This is my main gripe last year with PFF.  Allen corrected and spent time improving on the single largest area of NFL success at Qb.  Instead all year they harped  on his deep accuracy.  Which his rookie year when he was tops in the league in air yards they dismissed as a category that does not corelate to future success.  

 

Allen showed his rookie year he has the arm and accuracy to hit the deep throws.  Adding Diggs will open things up for Brown and the rest of the offense.  I suspect Allen improves on deep ball and the offense becomes more explosive.

Edited by Mat68
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20 minutes ago, Bangarang said:

It’s not a misconception, it’s a fact. He was horrible throwing the ball deep last year. 
 

If you also look at his rookie year he was in the bottom 3rd of the league in completing passes deep.

 

https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stat-analysis/2019/2018-19-deep-ball-project

 

 

 

His stats say he was poor I agree. But what I'm trying to say is he's improving and I showed some reasons as to why he's been poor .  

 

Year 1 - Too many  INT into double coverage  

Year 2 - Less into double coverage but hesitant sometimes to put the ball where the WR can make a play .  

 

Year 3? 

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3 minutes ago, DJB said:

 

His stats say he was poor I agree. But what I'm trying to say is he's improving and I showed some reasons as to why he's been poor .  

 

Year 1 - Too many  INT into double coverage  

Year 2 - Less into double coverage but hesitant sometimes to put the ball where the WR can make a play .  

 

Year 3? 


How can he be improving if statistically he’s gotten worse?

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8 minutes ago, DJB said:

 

His stats say he was poor I agree. But what I'm trying to say is he's improving and I showed some reasons as to why he's been poor .  

 

Year 1 - Too many  INT into double coverage  

Year 2 - Less into double coverage but hesitant sometimes to put the ball where the WR can make a play .  

 

Year 3? 

 

Yep, that is where I am this is a big year for him.  No more excuses. We now have a legit #1 WR good line and good RB.

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19 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

How do we know it was hesitation to put the ball where the WR can make a play and not just a terrible over/under throw?... sorry, I have to assume the latter.

 

That's fair. And I was connecting the dots of Daboll ripping  him and Allen throwing to a 'safe spot'

 

 

Again  I wish I had the clips but from watching his deep balls that missed they  were always on the WR side and not on the DB side which to me says he's putting it where he wants it.

 

Now if the ball was all over the place I'd be more concerned but his misses were  90% to the side of the WR away from the DB

18 minutes ago, Bangarang said:


How can he be improving if statistically he’s gotten worse?

 

I'm going to assume you read the entire first post where I tried to explain his missed deep throws this year.

 

Some of it is again  explained above to Scott. 

 

Again  he's not perfect  and I'm not trying to emphasize  that. What I am is that he's improving and he's not as bad as the numbers indicate  

Edited by DJB
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5 minutes ago, Bangarang said:


How can he be improving if statistically he’s gotten worse?

Because, the single largest area NFL qbs need to win at is the short to intermediate.  0 to 20 yards is where the NFL passing games win or lose.  Allen went from bottom of the NFL to to top 5 in year 2.  That progression paired with his improved Td to int ratio all shows Allen developing into an above average qb.  

 

Deep throws are low percentage.  Connecting 5 to 6 more a season is the difference from bottom to tops in the league.  Adding Diggs will greatly improve the offense in this area.  Having 2 guys outside who can run past defenders and run full route trees will create more oppurtunites down the feild.

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1 minute ago, Mat68 said:

Because, the single largest area NFL qbs need to win at is the short to intermediate.  0 to 20 yards is where the NFL passing games win or lose.  Allen went from bottom of the NFL to to top 5 in year 2.  That progression paired with his improved Td to int ratio all shows Allen developing into an above average qb.  

 

Deep throws are low percentage.  Connecting 5 to 6 more a season is the difference from bottom to tops in the league.  Adding Diggs will greatly improve the offense in this area.  Having 2 guys outside who can run past defenders and run full route trees will create more oppurtunites down the feild.

 

All true but then again deep threat opens up the entire rest of the field.  Allen has pretty much as strong an arm as there is and it would be nice to have a top WR with speed that can get open and let Allen heave it his direction or at least have the constant threat.

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20 minutes ago, DJB said:

 

That's fair. And I was connecting the dots of Daboll ripping  him and Allen throwing to a 'safe spot'

 

 

Again  I wish I had the clips but from watching his deep balls that missed they  were always on the WR side and not on the DB side which to me says he's putting it where he wants it.

 

Now if the ball was all over the place I'd be more concerned but his misses were  90% to the side of the WR away from the DB

 

I'm going to assume you read the entire first post where I tried to explain his missed deep throws this year.

 

Some of it is again  explained above to Scott. 

 

Again  he's not perfect  and I'm not trying to emphasize  that. What I am is that he's improving and he's not as bad as the numbers indicate  


You said his deep ball is improving. It’s not and it’s actually gotten worse. Facts don’t care about your feelings.

19 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

Because, the single largest area NFL qbs need to win at is the short to intermediate.  0 to 20 yards is where the NFL passing games win or lose.  Allen went from bottom of the NFL to to top 5 in year 2.  That progression paired with his improved Td to int ratio all shows Allen developing into an above average qb. 
 

 

Do you understand that this thread is about Allen’s deep ball? 
 

Quote

Deep throws are low percentage.  Connecting 5 to 6 more a season is the difference from bottom to tops in the league.  Adding Diggs will greatly improve the offense in this area.  Having 2 guys outside who can run past defenders and run full route trees will create more oppurtunites down the feild.


The question isn’t whether the opportunities to throw deep will be there, it’s whether Allen can take advantage of them and actually complete those passes. So far he’s proven to be a poor deep ball thrower and it’s clearly a problem.

Edited by Bangarang
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3 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

Allen's lack of accuracy on the deep ball cost us the Baltimore game.... there's were several deep balls he missed that would've changed the game and resulted in the Ravens toning down the blitzes that were coming at him all game. 

Browns lack of route running cost them the Baltimore game.  This is a game where not having a #1 wr costed them the game.  Not a single Wr was able to consistently get open.

14 minutes ago, RoyBatty is alive said:

 

All true but then again deep threat opens up the entire rest of the field.  Allen has pretty much as strong an arm as there is and it would be nice to have a top WR with speed that can get open and let Allen heave it his direction or at least have the constant threat.

Down the strech he hit his fair share of deep throws.  Diggs and Brown with Allens arm stength is going to stress defense.  

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Didn’t go back and look at all the throws but IIRC He can hit the deep ball if the receiver isn’t running a 9 or go. There’s touch involved in the 9 so the receiver can track it and run under it. 

 

He was just throwing it on a frozen rope to the WR running 9s. It’s difficult to adjust to and needs to be very accurate because he’s throwing at the WRs back. If he’s not very accurate it is uncatchable or lands 10 yards ahead. A little more arc on the ball and he gives the receiver a better chance to make a play.  The horizontal routes he can fire it in there because the WR has his body in better position to make a play. They just need to catch it...

Edited by Not at the table Karlos
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What we can all agree, is that IF Josh becomes even remotely good at deep balls, not even great, he has the arm strength to do so as few ever had. With Diggs and Brown, and the occasional TE deep, wow can could the Bills O stretch the field! With Beasly on shorter routes and Josh's run ability, this offense could be AMAZING just by improving this aspect. And I'm sure he can.

 

BTW, I'm awed at how 3rd & 17 with Allen is like 3rd &  8 for most QBs. And that has been the case already. I wish the damn haters would focus on the good stuff too.

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57 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

Allens biggest issue coming out of college and year 1 was the intermidiate passing game.  Last year he was top 5 in the NFL in that category.  Ironcilly, PFF pointed to his intermediate game his rookie as a reason he wouldnt become a legitament starter.  Deep accuracy is a category where year over year different Qbs lead the league and doesnt corelate year over year.  

 

This is my main gripe last year with PFF.  Allen corrected and spent time improving on the single largest area of NFL success at Qb.  Instead all year they harped  on his deep accuracy.  Which his rookie year when he was tops in the league in air yards they dismissed as a category that does not corelate to future success.  

 

Allen showed his rookie year he has the arm and accuracy to hit the deep throws.  Adding Diggs will open things up for Brown and the rest of the offense.  I suspect Allen improves on deep ball and the offense becomes more explosive.

and if Knox stops dropping balls, we are going to have one heck of an offense

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22 minutes ago, Bangarang said:


You said his deep ball is improving. It’s not and it’s actually gotten worse. Facts don’t care about your feelings.

 

Do you understand that this thread is about Allen’s deep ball? 
 


The question isn’t whether the opportunities to throw deep will be there, it’s whether Allen can take advantage of them and actually complete those passes. So far he’s proven to be a poor deep ball thrower and it’s clearly a problem.

 

The deep ball stats aren't always black and white .  Watching the film to see why he misses is the grey. 

 

If stats were everything  then you could argue Odell is a poor WR. There's more to a player then just stat watching . 

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1 hour ago, RoyBatty is alive said:

Good job appreciate all the work. I dont think there is any doubt that Allen CAN make pretty much any throw (often shaky ok the short "easy" ones) in the NFL with the arm he has and that is what you demonstrate here.  My concern is how consistent is Allen?  He has beautiful throws mixed in with inaccurate throws and some real hero ball head scratching decisions.  You can make any NFL qb look like an All Pro with selected highlights.  We could also make Allen look real bad with "lowlight" reel.

 

Now of course we dont always know if Allen has a a terrible throw or the receiver ran the wrong route.  We also have questionable WRs talent, his first year was a joke of a receiving corps but it was materially upgraded this year.  Still our playoff loss could have been a win had  Duke Williams been able to hold onto a TD or John Brown better footwork on the sideline, neither was easy but every game in the NFL good WRs make those catches.

 

So for me, in his third season, same system same coaches, J Allen has to continue to improve.  He now has a good O Line and now a true legit #1 WR in Diggs.  For me Allen HAS to make big strides this year and that starts with consistency and would be nice to get over 60% of his passes completed.

This post makes good points. 

 

I agree with those who say his stats throwing deep are bad, but it's obvious he can make all the throws.    

 

His stats are bad for multiple reasons.   One is that he threw deep out of desperation more often than we'd like, like that horrible duck he threw to DiMarco last season.   He'd get rushed, scramble, fail to find a better option (which may or may not have been there) and then he'd unload the ball deep.   Not necessarily a bad decision, but certainly bad for the stats.   Another is that doesn't always get enough air under the ball.  He has to learn that.   Another is that he needs guys open more often.  Diggs should help that.   This will be the first season that Allen will be on the field with two legitimate deep threats.  

 

So as you say, he has to continue to improve.   He needs some better line play, but I think primarily he needs to to be better at pre-snap and post-snap recognition.   When Allen understands what he's looking at, when the play is working the way it's supposed to, he throws the ball well, both short and deep.   When he doesn't understand completely, he tends to hesitate, to fail to identify the opportunities, and that makes him throw late.   When he's late, he's in a hurry, and when he's in a hurry his accuracy declines.    

 

He needs to see and understand.  If he does that, he'll be fine.   If he doesn't, he'll never be much better than we saw last season.  

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19 minutes ago, Bangarang said:


You said his deep ball is improving. It’s not and it’s actually gotten worse. Facts don’t care about your feelings.

 

Do you understand that this thread is about Allen’s deep ball? 
 


The question isn’t whether the opportunities to throw deep will be there, it’s whether Allen can take advantage of them and actually complete those passes. So far he’s proven to be a poor deep ball thrower and it’s clearly a problem.

What im saying is deep accuracy is a violtile stat year over year.  Players that are worst routinley lead the league the following year and visa verse.

 

Who did Allen have to throw to the last 2 years?  Having Diggs outside greatly improves the success of his deep ball.  For everything Jon Brown is, what he is not is a consistent deep ball guy.  For his career he is below the NFL in catch rate of deep throws.  Diggs on the other hand has been near the tops in the league in this category his entire career.

 

With 5 to 6 plays being the difference from tops to worst, having Diggs on the recieving end of those plays will greatly improve.  Mind you the guys Allen the past 2 years was throwing these balls to.  He didnt have Tareek Hill or Micheal Thomas.  It was Benjimen, Holmes, Mckenzie, Jones, and Foster I like the odds of him improving.

8 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

It def contributed.... but there were guys open deep early in that game that Allen missed. It would've changed the whole complexion of the game and the Ravens defensive strategy, IMO.

 

They tee'd off on him and the line all game... we didn't make them pay for the Blitz once.

Because they manned up across the board and no one got open.

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One thing I noticed from year one to two was how the ball was thrown deep- in year one he threw ropes deep while last year he threw many more lofted throws. The lifted throws require work and coordination with your recievers, hopefully bit improved this year 

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1 hour ago, ScottLaw said:

How do we know it was hesitation to put the ball where the WR can make a play and not just a terrible over/under throw?... sorry, I have to assume the latter.

And why don't you assume the first? To maintain your penchant for negativity?

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4 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

What im saying is deep accuracy is a violtile stat year over year.  Players that are worst routinley lead the league the following year and visa verse.

 

Do you have a source for this? It’s certainly not true for Allen.

 

4 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

Who did Allen have to throw to the last 2 years?  Having Diggs outside greatly improves the success of his deep ball.  For everything Jon Brown is, what he is not is a consistent deep ball guy.  For his career he is below the NFL in catch rate of deep throws.  Diggs on the other hand has been near the tops in the league in this category his entire career.


Can you at least agree that Allen is a poor deep ball thrower? Can you identify that there is in fact a problem? Allen’s weapons have been questionable at best I will agree but anyone who’s watching objectively can see his deep ball was horrific last year. Guys were open and he consistently overthrew them. 

 

4 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

 

With 5 to 6 plays being the difference from tops to worst, having Diggs on the recieving end of those plays will greatly improve.  Mind you the guys Allen the past 2 years was throwing these balls to.  He didnt have Tareek Hill or Micheal Thomas.  It was Benjimen, Holmes, Mckenzie, Jones, and Foster I like the odds of him improving.

Because they manned up across the board and no one got open.


Again, where is your source that shows 5 or 6 plays is the difference from being the best and being the worst?

 

No one got open? Really? Are you really going to say that after watching Allen his first 2 years he didn’t miss any deep balls to open receivers. 

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15 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

What im saying is deep accuracy is a violtile stat year over year.  Players that are worst routinley lead the league the following year and visa verse.

 

Who did Allen have to throw to the last 2 years?  Having Diggs outside greatly improves the success of his deep ball.  For everything Jon Brown is, what he is not is a consistent deep ball guy.  For his career he is below the NFL in catch rate of deep throws.  Diggs on the other hand has been near the tops in the league in this category his entire career.

 

With 5 to 6 plays being the difference from tops to worst, having Diggs on the recieving end of those plays will greatly improve.  Mind you the guys Allen the past 2 years was throwing these balls to.  He didnt have Tareek Hill or Micheal Thomas.  It was Benjimen, Holmes, Mckenzie, Jones, and Foster I like the odds of him improving.

Because they manned up across the board and no one got open.

Russel Wilson and Drew Brees throw beautiful deep balls.  This doesn’t vary by season, and Allen’s deep ball misses weren’t due to lack of weapons.  That isn’t to say he had great weapons, but he misses open receivers routinely.  If his receivers weren’t getting open deep, you might have a point, but when he misses open receivers by 3-5 yards, that’s on him and him alone.

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1 minute ago, ScottLaw said:

Should I just chalk up his terrible overthrows or under throws to him being too cautious? How does that make any sense? 

1) Deep balls are low percentage as it is. 2) Allen has shown he can make all the throws. 3) We saw a change in Allen's aggressiveness in making those throws after the NE game and a more cautious approach to protect the ball. 4) Allen showed improvement over the season as he became more confident and less cautious.

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My belief all along is that Josh Allen is perfectly capable of launching a beautiful deep pass.  I never did any analysis, but I thought early on last season that he was over throwing routinely out of a fear that he would be picked off if he threw it anywhere near the DB.  There were also times when his footwork was awkward.  He needs to come to the point where he is appropriately careful, but not afraid, and uses sound footwork wherever possible.  There is nothing he did wrong that is not easily correctable.

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2 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

So we just chalk up terrible throws from the QB as him being too cautious now? That's the standard? ?

QB's make terrible throws from time to time. All of them do, pretty much. In this specific discussion of deep ball throws with Josh Allen, many of them appear to be due to a focus on ball security for the many reasons already given.

 

Allen has made ugly throws before. Not saying he hasn't. He's a young, developing QB. What we saw a real change in his approach to deep ball throws last season.

2 minutes ago, TigerJ said:

My belief all along is that Josh Allen is perfectly capable of launching a beautiful deep pass.  I never did any analysis, but I thought early on last season that he was over throwing routinely out of a fear that he would be picked off if he threw it anywhere near the DB.  There were also times when his footwork was awkward.  He needs to come to the point where he is appropriately careful, but not afraid, and uses sound footwork wherever possible.  There is nothing he did wrong that is not easily correctable.

And we saw that change after the NE game where he was picked off multiple times.

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6 minutes ago, TigerJ said:

My belief all along is that Josh Allen is perfectly capable of launching a beautiful deep pass.  I never did any analysis, but I thought early on last season that he was over throwing routinely out of a fear that he would be picked off if he threw it anywhere near the DB.  There were also times when his footwork was awkward.  He needs to come to the point where he is appropriately careful, but not afraid, and uses sound footwork wherever possible.  There is nothing he did wrong that is not easily correctable.

He also has a tendency to tuck his throwing elbow close to his body and short arm deep throws.  That’s a much bigger issue than his footwork.

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16 minutes ago, Bangarang said:

 

Do you have a source for this? It’s certainly not true for Allen.

 


Can you at least agree that Allen is a poor deep ball thrower? Can you identify that there is in fact a problem? Allen’s weapons have been questionable at best I will agree but anyone who’s watching objectively can see his deep ball was horrific last year. Guys were open and he consistently overthrew them. 

 


Again, where is your source that shows 5 or 6 plays is the difference from being the best and being the worst?

 

No one got open? Really? Are you really going to say that after watching Allen his first 2 years he didn’t miss any deep balls to open receivers. 

Did he miss throws?  Yes.  Am I concered that he a has a fatal flaw? No.  The point about his recievers.  Unless the ball landed inbewteen the numbers in their arms they didnt catch it.  For 1 that was uncatchable their been 1 where they should have.  During last offseason PFF did a podcast on deep balls.  Just look at the numbers.  The league leaders are under 20 completion.  So 5 to 6 completions equates to 25% thats a big swing.

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21 minutes ago, ScottLaw said:

Should I just chalk up his terrible overthrows or under throws to him being too cautious? How does that make any sense? 

There were recievers open early in the game on deeper throws. He missed them. 

Every Qb misses them..... Even Mahomes.

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1 hour ago, Bangarang said:

It’s not a misconception, it’s a fact. He was horrible throwing the ball deep last year. 
 

If you also look at his rookie year he was in the bottom 3rd of the league in completing passes deep.

 

https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stat-analysis/2019/2018-19-deep-ball-project

 

 

I can't wait for threads like this to disappear after this upcoming season.

 

No more excuses!   No more "Growth".  

 

Either he can do it this year or we find another QB.

 

PLEASE.

 

 

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35 minutes ago, Mat68 said:

Did he miss throws?  Yes. 


Cool, we agree.

 

Quote

Am I concered that he a has a fatal flaw? No. 


Fatal flaw meaning if he doesn’t fix it he will be out of the league? 
 

Quote

The point about his recievers.  Unless the ball landed inbewteen the numbers in their arms they didnt catch it. 


100% false. Now you’re just being ridiculous and nonsense like this makes it impossible to have a rational discussion.

 

Quote

For 1 that was uncatchable their been 1 where they should have. 

 

This must mean that Allen was near the top of the league in throwing the most uncatchable passes. This doesn’t help any argument you’re trying to make.
 

Quote

During last offseason PFF did a podcast on deep balls.  Just look at the numbers.  The league leaders are under 20 completion.  So 5 to 6 completions equates to 25% thats a big swing.


PFF lol

 

Itd be easier to say you’re talking out of your rear end because essentially that’s what you’re doing

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6 minutes ago, Nextmanup said:

I can't wait for threads like this to disappear after this upcoming season.

 

No more excuses!   No more "Growth".  

 

Either he can do it this year or we find another QB.

 

PLEASE.

 

If Allen never improves on deep balls but continues to be good in the intermediate and improves in the short passing game, he'll be the QB for a long time. Deep balls are nice to have, but it's the short to intermediate passing game that keeps offenses moving and wins football games.

 

But I think he will improve. Especially with Diggs who can actually make contested catches (something we've lacked for years except for the few passes Duke Williams caught) and adjusts well to the ball in the air.

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We saw it all from Allen in the playoff game, the good and the bad.

 

But, he also led them down the field for the tying FG when all the momentum was against the Bills late in the game.

 

And if 55 of teammates didn't miss a block in OT, we are talking about how Allen led the Bills to victory from behind in a playoff.

 

Josh Allen is all of 24 years old with two years of starting experience behind him and McBeane has just supplied him with no excuses for missing deep ball shots now as they just acquired one of the best all around route runners in the game,, who is also one of the very best deep ball threats.

 

We shall see.

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1 minute ago, MJS said:

 

If Allen never improves on deep balls but continues to be good in the intermediate and improves in the short passing game, he'll be the QB for a long time. Deep balls are nice to have, but it's the short to intermediate passing game that keeps offenses moving and wins football games.

 

But I think he will improve. Especially with Diggs who can actually make contested catches (something we've lacked for years except for the few passes Duke Williams caught) and adjusts well to the ball in the air.

If you can’t hit the deep ball with consistency, you’d better be really, really accurate on the short and intermediate stuff to thrive in the NFL.  And there’s no rule against being good at both.

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