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Greg Cosell Preview of Bills vs Bengals on One Bills Live


Beck Water

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15 hours ago, Beck Water said:

 

 

https://www.buffalobills.com/video/greg-cosell-bengals-at-bills-in-depth-preview

 

for those who might still be debating the INT on the pass to John Brown - Cosell leads off the show talking about it.

Says that it's a "flood concept", the play is designed to go to Dawson Knox as the first read but he's covered.  Says John Brown is running a clear route and you never want to go to John Brown on that play, but that's the way Josh thinks.  Puts the blame on Josh for that one.

 

As always, a good listen.

 

Overall, my impression is that the Bills offense kind of puzzles Cosell.  He sees it as "erratic".  But then he looks at the end result, where the Bills score a lot of points, and sort of throws up his hands.  He acknowledges that it's the best 3rd down offense in football, so "something must be working"

I was listening to the radio yesterday, and they mentioned a talking head (can't remember the name) who analyzed the team and said our offense always looks stuck in mud or words to that effect, but then somehow ends up with 30 points at the end of the game.

 

I.E., it ended up as a compliment of sorts, but the point was that we are NOT getting all out of it that we should be.

 

He pointed the finger at the OC, saying we shouldn't expect him to be as good as Daboll.

 

He felt like Dorsey has done a lot of clearly obviously WRONG things this year.

 

 

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5 minutes ago, TheBrownBear said:

Yeah, not sure what happened there between Brown and Josh - maybe a miscommunication, maybe just a bad ball from Josh.  I've watched the play a bunch and Josh throws it to Brown because the safety jumps the flood concept to Knox.  He had better options in the flat, but Josh did have one on one with Brown and he was probably emboldened by the success he had earlier in the game and going back to week 18 with the long ball.  An interception at the goal line wouldn't have been the worst thing in the world if we had just tackled the guy instead of letting him jog free for 60 yards.  But yeah, I'm comfortable pinning that one on Josh.

 

I think if Josh would at times just take what is right there in front of him it would be much better, sure it wouldn't be a ton of yards but would keep them on the field longer & give the D more of a rest then when they come up to cover the short pass nail it for a long one .

 

I remember a play that was talked about on a game review & it could be this play when Josh released it Beasely was right there in front of him with no one with in 5 yards of him & i think it could have been a first down instead of going for it all but that's all history .

 

Josh needs to see the field & play a mistake free game or at least keep them to a minimum . GO BILLS !!! 

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14 hours ago, gomper said:

Uncle Greg is terrific. I always learn something. 

It's amazing how little "sports talk" out there actually discusses sports in the way Cosell discusses football.

 

Nitty gritty Xs and Os tactical discussion of the game itself.  I think there is a huge market for this stuff out there, but the media outlets don't know it.

 

Instead it's all human interest type story lines.  Listen to the questions the media asks McDermott after games!  It's all emotional/feeling based garbage.  

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1 hour ago, Nextmanup said:

I was listening to the radio yesterday, and they mentioned a talking head (can't remember the name) who analyzed the team and said our offense always looks stuck in mud or words to that effect, but then somehow ends up with 30 points at the end of the game.

 

I.E., it ended up as a compliment of sorts, but the point was that we are NOT getting all out of it that we should be.

 

He pointed the finger at the OC, saying we shouldn't expect him to be as good as Daboll.

 

He felt like Dorsey has done a lot of clearly obviously WRONG things this year.

 

It would be interesting to know what those "clearly obviously WRONG things this year" might be.

 

From what I can see, Dorsey has done a fairly solid job for his first year ever as OC.  He makes use of less trickery-dickery than Daboll did, but that's not always a bad thing - people forget about that trick play lateral to Devin Singletary off to the L from the Pittsburgh 5 yd line, resulting in a fumble OOB (thankfully) and a FG vs a TD.  Trick plays don't always work and they may pose a distraction from executing fundamentals.  Don't forget  about Josh Allen up the middle for no gain on 4th and 1 at the end of the Tennessee loss. 

 

Last regular season, we had 5 one-score games and we lost every one.  Let's not forget that. In 3 of those losses, the Defense gave up 23, 9, and 14 points, which more fingers the offense for being unable to score enough.  This season, we've had 8 one score games, and we've won 5, which is a substantial improvement.

 

I wouldn't want to deny that there are things I believe Dorsey could do differently, and better, but I also think there are ways in which his offense overall executes better than Daboll's did.

 

I think there's a lot of recency bias in comparing Dorsey and Daboll, and, of course, Daboll had 4 years to evolve as an OC.

 

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2 hours ago, TheBrownBear said:

Yeah, not sure what happened there between Brown and Josh - maybe a miscommunication, maybe just a bad ball from Josh.  I've watched the play a bunch and Josh throws it to Brown because the safety jumps the flood concept to Knox.  He had better options in the flat, but Josh did have one on one with Brown and he was probably emboldened by the success he had earlier in the game and going back to week 18 with the long ball.  An interception at the goal line wouldn't have been the worst thing in the world if we had just tackled the guy instead of letting him jog free for 60 yards.  But yeah, I'm comfortable pinning that one on Josh.

 

I think it's on both of them.  Putting everything together, I think Brown knew he was supposed to be a clearing route and Knox was the first read, so he paused on his route at what should have been enough time to complete the throw, glanced towards Knox, said "Oh Crap it's Coming to me" and took off again.  Romo thought it was supposed to be a skinny post, Cover1 thought it was supposed to bend out towards the sideline (not sure what that's called).  I think Allen tried to adjust to what he thought Brown was doing, which seemed ambiguous, and screwed it up; if he'd have just thrown it ahead of Brown and towards the sideline, either Brown accelerates and makes a brilliant catch or it falls incomplete, no harm no foul, 2nd down.

 

So screwups on both sides, except the QB is the Man and has the final decision authority - hence Josh claiming it as a bad decision.

Edited by Beck Water
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16 hours ago, KDIGGZ said:

But I was told by posters on TBD that it was John Brown's fault. How can they be wrong? 🤔

I think both things can be true…the play isn’t ‘designed’ to go to brown but the wide receivers/josh have plans in place for what they should do when a play goes off script. 
 

looked like brown ran a bit of a double move late that josh wasn’t expecting 

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39 minutes ago, Chaos said:

Romo has no where near the NFL experience Cosell has.  Who could trust his judgement over Cosells. 

 

6 minutes ago, 78thealltimegreat said:

I love Greg he’s one of the best but Romo actually threw for over 34,000 yards with the Dallas Cowboys 

 

I believe Chaos is being sarcastic.  And he would ordinarily have a point, except that Greg Cosell has been watching NFL film full time since it was actual film on reels, and Romo was literally in diapers.

 

I don't think what they say contradicts, actually.  Looking at the whole play, it does appear that the first read was to Knox and that on 1st down, the play design would be to take the checkdown if Knox wasn't open and only an aggressive QB with a big arm would try to hit the clearing route (Romo passed for 34,000 yds, putting him in that aggressive bin himself).  And Romo is correct - Brown did pause on his route, which is consistent with knowing he's not the receiver the play is designed for and not wanting to wear himself out.   Any former QB is going to be inclined to place blame more towards the receiver than to the QB, but the ball wasn't placed where only a receiver running full-out would get it.

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2 hours ago, Nextmanup said:

I was listening to the radio yesterday, and they mentioned a talking head (can't remember the name) who analyzed the team and said our offense always looks stuck in mud or words to that effect, but then somehow ends up with 30 points at the end of the game.

 

I.E., it ended up as a compliment of sorts, but the point was that we are NOT getting all out of it that we should be.

 

He pointed the finger at the OC, saying we shouldn't expect him to be as good as Daboll.

 

He felt like Dorsey has done a lot of clearly obviously WRONG things this year.

 

 

Still a false narrative imo…they are the best third down team in the league.  That is the opposite of stuck in the mud.  
 

team looked actually stuck in the mud much more often with Daboll as OC

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17 hours ago, KDIGGZ said:

But I was told by posters on TBD that it was John Brown's fault. How can they be wrong? 🤔

They said that on the broadcast too. Everyone took that comment and ran with it. At best, though, Brown would have been able to break up the pass for an incompletion. The defender was always in good position, and Brown is a smaller receiver, so I always thought it was more on Allen than Brown. John Brown is not a guy to throw 50/50 balls too. You throw it to him after he smokes the defender and he is open.

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40 minutes ago, MJS said:

They said that on the broadcast too. Everyone took that comment and ran with it. At best, though, Brown would have been able to break up the pass for an incompletion. The defender was always in good position, and Brown is a smaller receiver, so I always thought it was more on Allen than Brown. John Brown is not a guy to throw 50/50 balls too. You throw it to him after he smokes the defender and he is open.

 

In 2019 before we got Diggs, Allen used to throw 50/50 balls to Brown and he defended them as needed.  Overall, of course, I agree with you.

 

I could be wrong, but even with Allen's cannon of an arm, I think those deep balls have to be thrown before the defender is necessarily "smoked", meaning if there's confusion about exactly how the route is being run, disaster can ensure.

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51 minutes ago, MJS said:

John Brown is not a guy to throw 50/50 balls too. You throw it to him after he smokes the defender and he is open.

 

What Allen and all QBs are actually doing is reading the leverage of the defender and since they know where the WR's route is going they decide if the WR is going to be open by the time the ball gets there. Waiting for the WR to be open before throwing is college ball. Diggs wasn't open when Allen threw him a TD against the Patriots two weeks ago, but the leverage of the CB told him Diggs was going to have a step. So in this case I believe that Allen saw the safety come towards Knox which left Brown in one on one coverage against Howard with good leverage if he continued his route the way that Allen expected. He was not throwing a 50/50 ball.

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3 hours ago, Chaos said:

Romo has no where near the NFL experience Cosell has.  Who could trust his judgement over Cosells. 

I don’t see how that is on Brown aside from not making an attempt to break up the interception? Josh threw it short it seems to me. It’s ok if Josh makes a mistake or two now and again

Edited by AlfaBill
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FWIW cross-posting the Dan Orlovsky clip posted in the game week thread

 

 

He goes into the John Brown INT, pointing out that the Dolphins successfully took away the flood concept on 1st down and left Josh with the deep shot to Brown or the checkdown.  I'm a little puzzled because I actually think Josh had a better shot to Morris on the short, flat route than to Singletary (who Orlovsky identifies as the alternative); there were bodies in the way to Singletary, making it likely IMO that throw gets tipped at the line or, if Josh threw it with an arc but it wasn't just right, defenders could make a play.  I thought Josh had a good passing lane to Morris and could have thrown at an angle where it's Morris or no one.  But obviously Orlovsky's overall point is clear - the Dolphins said "you get the deep shot, or the checkdown, and we know you're constitutionally disinterested in the checkdown."

 

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