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Sean McDermott excited about calling the Defense


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7 hours ago, Malazan said:

 

That doesn't answer the question about why you think calling plays is going to make a difference in something you believe him to already be bad at when he's not calling plays.. 

 

It's going to make him worse simply because he will have more to do in the moment.  Do I call TO, do I challenge, what D personnel for this play,what play, what's the other teams personnel, etc.  My Air Disasters reference was a jest, but task saturation is a thing.

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7 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

What Einstein has "sometimes when camera is on McDermott he is holding the call sheet and talking into the headset" doesn't even make the standard of evidence, let alone proof. 

 

I have explained why and what is going on in those scenarios. It isn't what he thinks. It is evidence of something. Just not of McDermott having taken over playcalling. 

 

Thats literally called circumstantial evidence. Entire cases have been won on circumstantial evidence such as “the camera saw the defendants car driving on the same road the victim was later found”. 

 

Just like your “the coach only admitted it once and therefore it is once” claim. Actually, that argument is a logical fallacy - a mixture of appeal to ignorance and hasty generalization.

 

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Edited by Einstein
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1 hour ago, Freddie's Dead said:

It's going to make him worse simply because he will have more to do in the moment.  Do I call TO, do I challenge, what D personnel for this play, what play, what's the other teams personnel, etc.  My Air Disasters reference was a jest, but task saturation is a thing.

 

There's a million possibilities.. maybe he overthinks things and 'task saturation' will force him to make different decisions, maybe he'll rely more on others to make those decisions, it may not impact that part of the job at all.  

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16 minutes ago, Malazan said:

 

There's a million possibilities.. maybe he overthinks things and 'task saturation' will force him to make different decisions, maybe he'll rely more on others to make those decisions, it may not impact that part of the job at all.  

 

We're in violent agreement here.

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1 hour ago, Einstein said:

 

Thats literally called circumstantial evidence. Entire cases have been won on circumstantial evidence such as “the camera saw the defendants car driving on the same road the victim was later found”. 

 

Just like your “the coach only admitted it once and therefore it is once” claim. Actually, that argument is a logical fallacy - a mixture of appeal to ignorance and hasty generalization.

 

It is only circumstantial evidence until someone can demonstrate why it isn't evidence of what you are claiming. Which I've already done. When you have some evidence come back to me and we will discuss. 

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14 hours ago, BringBackFergy said:

Then why the F#*! does Andy Reid have a monstrous laminated poster in his hand for the past four years. Eric Bienemie was OC in name only. Every Chiefs player has confirmed Andy was calling plays. You’re wayyyy off.

I watch a lot of Chiefs games and I can say without a doubt that laminated poster is a burgers menu! He has one (or 5) delivered after every game.

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On 4/19/2023 at 9:46 PM, MJS said:

The ice is still pretty thick.

 

Yep, how many coaches are on the hot seat after 13-3 seasons? With the 3 losses coming by a total of 8 points? I get that we all want a trophy, but some here have ridiculous expectations. 

 

 

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Edited by Augie
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3 hours ago, Freddie's Dead said:

 

It's going to make him worse simply because he will have more to do in the moment.  Do I call TO, do I challenge, what D personnel for this play,what play, what's the other teams personnel, etc.  My Air Disasters reference was a jest, but task saturation is a thing.

 

Calling the plays on D means (whoever is doing it) that they know what personnel to counter the offensive personnel in the game.  That's the whole

reason for calling plays.

 

As to challenges, those should be looked at from assigned personnel up in the booth.  As a matter of fact, I don't like coaches on the sidelines making

the challenge calls at all.  They have the worse vision to see what happened (unless it happens right in front of them).  Us fans have better

evidence then they do.  As to TOs called on D, McDermott will just do what he is always doing if the D isn't ready.

 

It's already been shown over and over that numerous NFL Head Coaches call plays for either the O or D.  McDermott will have the headset on

and others can chime in if they see something he needs to know.  I got no problem with this change.

Edited by ColoradoBills
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10 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

But he didn't accept blame when it failed. Indeed he loaded more and more of it onto the players. He blamed and fired Donnie Henderson. He blamed Doug Whaley. He even ended up turning on Dennis Thurman after the "10 men on the field debacle" vs Miami. Rex never blamed himself. Not ever. 

your half way through the conversation bud. I am not talking about him putting blame on himself. I am talking about others putting the blame on him. HE did admit after his HC career that he made mistakes in Buffalo that cost him. 

 

The whole point being.. Rex took accountability on to himself BY letting go people... In my opinion.... McD should of taken over the Defense Post 13 seconds... Taking accountability is different than taking blame after the fact. I think we are on same page here, you just looped into it late. 

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2 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

When you have some evidence come back to me and we will discuss. 

 

I could say the same to you, no?

 

The only evidence you have is McDermott not admitting it more than once.

 

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Edited by Einstein
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10 hours ago, Richard Noggin said:

 

He didn't take accountability if he repeatedly stuck with that overly complex scheme that his players couldn't execute in a changing NFL.

 

So then let's not use him as some more accountable alternative to McDermott (as per your claim I was replying to)?

 

I'm excited to finally see in Buffalo a definitively McDermott-designed, -installed, and -called defensive attack. So maybe we agree about that the clarifying lack of ambiguity re: who to blame for 2023's defensive performances. 

HE owned the Defense.. It was His Baby.. My point is... McD should of Owned this defense and made it his Baby a long time ago and to the original conversation that started all this was the remark of how the former DC was let go and how late it was. I wish you guys would really catch up to my original quotes instead of turning it. 

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On 4/19/2023 at 9:22 PM, blacklabel said:

All I know is when McD has taken over the play calls periodically during his tenure here, it feels like the defense plays with a bit more of an edge. It also seems like he's more willing to take risks and call some more unique things. 

 

I know it was out of necessity in 2020 when they had to switch things up defensively, but it looked like they were more in an attack mode rather than a "sit back and keep it in front of us" mode.

 

I think it's a needed change. Les Frazier is a great coach and the players love him. I just feel like he kind of hit his ceiling here. Didn't see a lot of different wrinkles or unique things from his defense over the years. And unfortunately, in the big moments, it really seems like he goes all deer in the headlights and things fall apart.

 

I'm looking forward to seeing what Sean can do. Should be interesting at the very least. 

Frazier definitely coached scared and not to lose which leads to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

losing

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8 minutes ago, Augie said:

 

Yep, how many coaches are on the hot seat after 13-3 seasons? I get that we all want a trophy, but some here have ridiculous expectations. 

I agree, the 14-4 results are hard to argue.  That's a good season.  But the FO did seem to make a change with Frazier even though he had good results and good D rankings.  I don't know if it is reasonable to make such a change just based off of the small sample size of disappointment from playoff losses, so I am hoping it is more than that.

 

I like the change and am hoping it is a sign that they are moving away from what looked to me to be a passive, predictable defense. 

 

Also strategically, I never agreed with the bend but don't break strategy we seemed to start with.  Going against lesser QBs and giving them the 5-7 yarders didn't make sense to me.  The Mac Jones/Tua/Wilson's of the world, live for those - it's the 25 yarders they would be hesitant to take and hard for them to make.  But I really couldn't argue with the results, the lesser QBs rarely beat us.  Would still like us to change it up.

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6 hours ago, Augie said:

 

Yep, how many coaches are on the hot seat after 13-3 seasons? With the 3 losses coming by a total of 8 points?

 

There was Marty, who was fired after a 14-2 season.

 

And Pederson, who was fired 2 years after winning the Super Bowl.

 

Also Dungy, who was fired after making the playoffs but losing in the wild card round.

 

Or Nagy, who was fired 2 years after going 12-4 and winning Head Coach of the Year.

 

In fact, 9 of the last 15 Head Coach of the Year have been fired.

 

I think McDermotts ice is thinner than most realize. 

 

6 hours ago, Augie said:

 

I get that we all want a trophy, but some here have ridiculous expectations. 

 

Are they ridiculous expectations though? 

 

History and statistics are on our (the pessimists) side.

 

Of the 33 head coaches to win at least one Super Bowl, 29 of them won their first Super Bowl within the first five seasons with that team. 

 

Meaning, McDermott would have to buck history. Defy statistics. He would have to fit within the 12% of coaches who have done it after five years of being with the team.

 

 

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4 minutes ago, Einstein said:

 

There was Marty, who was fired after a 14-2 season.

 

And Pederson, who was fired 2 years after winning the Super Bowl.

 

Also Dungy, who was fired after making the playoffs but losing in the wild card round.

 

Or Nagy, who was fired 2 years after going 12-4 and winning Head Coach of the Year.

 

In fact, 9 of the last 15 Head Coach of the Year have been fired.

 

I think McDermotts ice is thinner than most realize. 

 

 

Are they ridiculous expectations though? 

 

History and statistics are on our (the pessimists) side.

 

Of the 33 head coaches to win at least one Super Bowl, 29 of them won their first Super Bowl within the first five seasons with that team. 

 

Meaning, McDermott would have to buck history. Defy statistics. He would have to fit within the 12% of coaches who have done it after five years of being with the team.

 

 

 

I think the Pegulas are rational people, and I disagree. 

 

Almost everybody gets fired eventually, so those stats don’t impress me. You can cherry pick stats to tell any story you’d like. I don’t think our HC or GM are in any trouble whatsoever. Keep doing what you’re doing. Remain Super Bowl favorites yearly. 

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14 minutes ago, Einstein said:

 

This strategy, statistically, is proven to result in many many years of "always the bridesmaid and never the bride".

 

Oh, and wasted franchise QB careers.

 

You need to be in it to win it. But sure, if people want to start over again, the Browns are just down the shoreline and easy to follow. 

 

To say never the bride is just plain wrong. If you are NOT in it, you will not win it. The bride comes out of a field of contenders. That’s how it works. 

 

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12 hours ago, PrimeTime101 said:

HE owned the Defense.. It was His Baby.. My point is... McD should of Owned this defense and made it his Baby a long time ago and to the original conversation that started all this was the remark of how the former DC was let go and how late it was. I wish you guys would really catch up to my original quotes instead of turning it. 

 

From this perspective it's less about being accountable and more about organizational/coaching hierarchy. You disagree with McDermott's efforts to focus on the executive duties of his office, while empowering his coordinators to run their respective units. As a first time head coach, you probably think he was too humble in deferring to the expertise of those he hired. Which might not be entirely wrong, in retrospect. He was probably too deferential to Frazier's expertise and the respect he engendered amongst his players. 

 

So now is our chance to see a different approach. The one you wanted from the start, presumably?  

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