Jump to content

Jordan Palmer on Allen - It’s more about the loss Brian Daboll, who Bellicheck says is elite


Reed83HOF

Recommended Posts

The premise in this thread seems to be

 

  1. Josh Allen needs the greatest mind in football to succeed
  2. Brian Daboll is that greatest mind
  3. Bringing back the greatest football mind is not feasible. 

So how do we rid ourselves of this albatross of a QB Beane stuck us with? 

 

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

12 minutes ago, Beck Water said:

 

There is a chance, indeed.

 

 But again...at this point, we're not talking about honing an elite top-level understanding.  We're talking about making bonehead decisions that the man who "changed my career when he walked into the building" (Josh's words about Dorsey) should be able to talk to Josh and be heard about.

 

 

Agree...

 

Wrong thread (kind of) but since I have your attention and I do (most of us do) trust your insight...

 

And comments or thoughts on this? I literally just had this pop up on Twitter. I want to go back and watch the entire thing...

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

34 minutes ago, Chaos said:

The premise in this thread seems to be

 

  1. Josh Allen needs the greatest mind in football to succeed
  2. Brian Daboll is that greatest mind
  3. Bringing back the greatest football mind is not feasible. 

So how do we rid ourselves of this albatross of a QB Beane stuck us with? 

 

 

Trade to Giants.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, Beck Water said:

 

I think Jordan Palmer doesn't help himself by being America's Guest.

 

Josh's performance on Monday night should not be about losing Daboll.  Josh is a big boy now, a 6 year veteran.  He doesn't need an "elite football mind" to tell him don't make (at least 2 of) the three throws he made that were intercepted, protect the football vs. trying to get back to the LOS but taking the ball and yourself into traffic.

 

He doesn't.  Any ordinary competent fooball mind will tell him that.  Josh just has to be willing to be coachable and listen.

 

Daboll has done some good things as a coach.  Daboll has done some strange things as a coach.   If Daboll is such a great coach, why did his team get drubbed 40-0 on Sunday?  It wasn't just that they didn't win, it's that they looked awful.

 

And if Josh learned so much from 4 years with this brilliant football mind, and Josh is as smart and dedicated as Palmer tells us he is, shouldn't he be able to retain some of those learnings from Daboll - at least long enough to not do totally stupid *****?

That last paragraph really sinks Palmer’s theory to me. We should expect a great student to remain one after their teacher leaves because they retained…something. Either Josh isn’t so smart and disciplined or Daboll isn’t such a great coach. One of these is true based on recent evidence. Not sure which yet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Reed83HOF said:

 

Agree...

 

Wrong thread (kind of) but since I have your attention and I do (most of us do) trust your insight...

 

And comments or thoughts on this? I literally just had this pop up on Twitter. I want to go back and watch the entire thing...


god he’s got a weird presence about him 

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Reed83HOF said:

 

Agree...

 

Wrong thread (kind of) but since I have your attention and I do (most of us do) trust your insight...

 

And comments or thoughts on this? I literally just had this pop up on Twitter. I want to go back and watch the entire thing...

 

So I pretty much watched the whole thing on Youtube.

 

I don’t think the limiting Josh’s designed runs is news.  I believe McDermott and Beane both talked about it after the season.  The word Dorsey used was limiting, not taking out all together.

 

Obviously to most of us, as a means to limit Josh’s scrambles or the hits he takes when he runs, less designed runs was a “fail” last game.  It might be better to put in a couple designed runs early and get Josh some “contact” that he seems to need to settle him.

 

I’ve never known quite what to make of Dorsey’s pressers.  I didn’t like Daboll’s his first year and a half, either - I thought he improved greatly during his time here.  Part of that went with improvement in Josh’s play so he wasn’t being called on the carpet by the press, which is what this presser by Dorsey was all about.  I don’t want to conflate how a guy comes across in front of the press, with his overall professional competence or his interpersonal abilities 1:1 or with coworkers.

 

A few thoughts:

-I think Dorsey and Joe Brady have no real clue how to effectively help Josh out of a “Sugar High Josh” superhero mindset.  Dorsey said something about “Joe does a great job” (of helping Josh on the sideline).  But I can’t recall (maybe I’m missing something) a game where Josh was making unforced error after unforced error and yet pulled it together and turned it around.  Anyone else?

-Likewise I think they have no idea how to limit Josh’s running or persuade him to get down or go OOB and take fewer hits.  It reminds me of a story where a French nobleman asked the King to intervene on behalf of another nobleman and the King response “I will do what I can for you; I will pray that he leave you alone”.  I think all they can do is continue to point it out, and hope Josh absorbs it and makes changes.

-Dorsey sounded most sincere when he said he had all the confidence in the world in Josh and when he said ‘all these guys want to be coached’.  That makes me feel that at least outside the actual game, Dorsey has confidence in his relationship with Josh and feels that Josh respects him and listens to him.

-I think their plan at this point is to hope this was a 1 game aberration and that Josh will take accountability and correct himself

 

Time will tell.

 

Edit: 

I heard a lot of concern from Dorsey for his own play calling and for scheme to put the right guys in the right places.  So I think at the least, he feels the need to re-examine his play calling and even aspects of his play design.  As he should, but how deep or broad this is can’t say.

Edited by Beck Water
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Beck Water said:

 

Well, I guess it depends upon how you see things.  I spent my professional life looking for patterns, and especially when it came to process development, trying to figure out where when and why things went sideways, a need not necessarily best served by setting out arbitrary intervals and counting the number of failed batches within them.  That could lead you to decide "we had more failed batches since Rodomontade took over as supervisor - 8 vs. 4" - but failing to see that the number of failed batches actually spiked up at an earlier time interval and maybe we need to look at what changed right then.

 

This is frankly where my point about it being somewhat ironic for someone to talk about manipulating data to make a point comes from.  Here's what I see when I look at this "artwork":

Capture1.thumb.JPG.d79bcf948531de0705f917b61dd9131b.JPG

I see that there were some early "teething pains" with Josh, where he was turnover-prone during his rookie season and into his second season.  After his 16th game, which happened to be September 29 2019 vs. NWE (4th game of his 2nd year), he really settled down and cleaned up the interceptions - UNTIL November 7, 2021, most of the way through his 4th season - that was the Jacksonville game.  Beasley was playing on what we later learned to be cracked ribs from the previous week, our OL was atrocious against the Jags pass rush, and Josh was reckless with putting himself and the ball at risk.

 

So looking at this as a process developer, I would say something changed for the better on September 29, 2019.  We know from Josh that he had some hard discussions with Beane and with McDermott about changing how he played after that game.  Then I would say something changed again on November 7, 2021 - WHILE DABOLL WAS STILL HERE.  And I would start to look at what that might be.

 

We overlook Nov and Dec of 2021 because Josh got his act together and played so splendidly in the playoffs.  But I think in hindsight, that's where the pattern started.  And I personally think Josh may have to do an exercise where he climbs a ladder and lets himself fall backwards a few dozen times, trusting some combinations of Kincaid, Sherfield, Knox and Hardy to catch him.  A "thought exercise" might be prudent here.

 

 

 

It's a fair point - that the last 19 games (i.e. the Dorsey era) is an arbitrary mark. But even if we count Jacksonville as the starting point, he had 4 multiple INT games in his last 12 under Daboll's coaching and since then it is 7 in 19. That is an uptick. It might feel like it is a relatively small change ratio wise but given the small numbers here that matters. But as you are aware, I am not particularly arguing that it is Dorsey's fault. And even if the pattern starts with Jax 2021 I would say the pattern escalates (not the right word but you take my point) with Green Bay last year. It is 6 multiple INT games in 13 since that day. That is where it basically goes from 1 in 3 or close thereto (5 in 18 post between Jax 2021 and GB 2022) to 1 in 2. 

 

I think they have to look at everything and Dorsey and his game planning is part of it, but I have to say I think it is mostly (not exclusively) Josh. I don't think he is the same guy. I didn't think he was down the stretch last year, but because the game after Green Bay was the Jets and the elbow injury I just put it down to that. I am worried now. Genuinely worried. Because I think there is something else going on. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing an elite Josh Allen performance on Sunday. Then we can take a breath and say okay it's still there let's build his confidence back up and make sure he has the right support. My concern is we will see another scratchy day where things just don't look right with our Quarterback and the people saying the fix is to give him more easy throws.... well you are right to say they were all there for him on MNF. Dorsey didn't call a perfect game, but there were plenty of chain movers there for Allen on every drive. He just was either not seeing them or deciding not to take them as he bailed clean pockets and forced balls into double / triple coverage. 

Edited by GunnerBill
  • Like (+1) 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

It's a fair point - that the last 19 games (i.e. the Dorsey era) is an arbitrary mark. But even if we count Jacksonville as the starting point, he had 4 multiple INT games in his last 12 under Daboll's coaching and since then it is 7 in 19. That is an uptick. It might feel like it is a relatively small change ratio wise but given the small numbers here that matters. But as you are aware, I am not particularly arguing that it is Dorsey's fault. And even if the pattern starts with Jax 2021 I would say the pattern escalates (not the right word but you take my point) with Green Bay last year. It is 6 multiple INT games in 13 since that day. That is where it basically goes from 1 in 3 or close thereto (5 in 18 post between Jax 2021 and GB 2022) to 1 in 2. 

 

I think they have to look at everything and Dorsey and his game planning is part of it, but I have to say I think it is mostly (not exclusively) Josh. I don't think he is the same guy. I didn't think he was down the stretch last year, but because the game after Green Bay was the Jets and the elbow injury I just put it down to that. I am worried now. Genuinely worried. Because I think there is something else going on. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing an elite Josh Allen performance on Sunday. Then we can take a breath and say okay it's still there let's build his confidence back up and make sure he has the right support. My concern is we will see another scratchy day where things just don't look right with our Quarterback and the people saying the fix is to give him more easy throws.... well you are right to say they were all there for him on MNF. Dorsey didn't call a perfect game, but there were plenty of chain movers there for Allen on every drive. He just was either not seeing them or deciding not to take them as he bailed clean pockets and forced balls into double / triple coverage. 

 

See, this is where I find this kind of thing worth discussing, because I started out thinking we fundamentally disagreed, and I'm almost entirely on the same page with you here.

 

I agree it's relevant to look at how many bad games there are relative to total games played over an interval, and while I don't like chosing arbitrary intervals, that number appears to be increasing.  I'm also with you that I looked at the elbow injury as problematic/explanatory of problems down the stretch last season.  But we're hearing from Josh that's all healed, no problems.  Yet here we are, so....

 

And we're on the same page that the problem isn't Josh needs more chain-mover easy throws, because they're there, Josh just isn't taking them.

 

I 'm perfectly willing to believe that Daboll is a greater talent than Dorsey as a play designer.  (I also felt that at times, Daboll got way too cute with what he was trying to do, but that's a story for another day).  But as I learnt during my career, sometimes you don't need the most brilliant mind in the room working on your project; there are occasions where that helps, but there are more times when you're better served by a fundamentally sound, organized, competent worker.  I think exactly as you say - while Dorsey did make some puzzling play calls at times, Josh had competently designed and executed

"chain movers" enough to keep drives going, many of which he passed up in favor of bailing from the pocket and forcing balls into dangerous territory trying to hit the big shot and light up the scoreboard.

 

And while sure, the whole team played badly in the Bengals game, I thought that was a large part of what went on in Josh's approach to the Dolphins game (where he got away with it) and the Bengals game (where he didn't).  So it's now 3 games in a row.  Once is an occurrence, twice could be a coincidence, three times is a pattern.

 

I'm curious if you watched Dorsey's interview?  I gave my take on it above and I don't want to influence if you didn't watch it and wish to, but there were several points I found interesting there.

 



 

Edited by Beck Water
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, Mrbojanglezs said:

It's better to have an offensive head coach with a franchise QB generally. The consistency on offense is more important than consistency on defense 

The evidence increasingly supports this take.  I hope the Bills will be the exception as I like McD and appreciate what he has done for the Bills.  His culture is the difference from the 20 years spent in football purgatory.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, Beck Water said:

 

See, this is where I find this kind of thing worth discussing, because I started out thinking we fundamentally disagreed, and0 am almost entirely on the same page with you here.

 

I agree it's relevant to look at how many bad games there are relative to total games played over an interval, and that number appears to be increasing.  I'm also with you that I looked at the elbow injury as problematic/explanatory of problems down the stretch last season.  But we're hearing from Josh that's all healed, no problems.  Yet here we are, so....

 

And we're on the same page that the problem isn't Josh needs more chain-mover easy throws, because they're there, Josh just isn't taking them.

 

I 'm perfectly willing to believe that Daboll is a greater talent than Dorsey as a play designer.  (I also felt that at times, Daboll got way too cute with what he was trying to do, but that's a story for another day).  But as I learnt during my career, sometimes you don't need the most brilliant mind in the room working on your project; there are occasions where that helps, but there are more times when you're better served by a fundamentally sound, organized, competent worker.  I think exactly as you say - while Dorsey did make some puzzling play calls at times, Josh had "chain movers" enough to keep drives going, many of which he passed up in favor of bailing from the pocket and forcing balls into dangerous territory trying to hit the big shot and light up the scoreboard.

 

And while sure, the whole team played badly in the Bengals game, I thought that was a large part of what went on in Josh's approach to the Dolphins game (where he got away with it) and the Bengals game (where he didn't).  So it's now 3 games in a row.  Once is an occurrence, twice could be a coincidence, three times is a pattern.

 

I'm curious if you watched Dorsey's interview?  I gave my take on it above and I don't want to influence if you didn't watch it and wish to, but there were several points I found interesting there.

 



 

 

Haven't watched Dorsey's presser yet. Will try and find time to before Sunday. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, Beck Water said:

 

See, this is where I find this kind of thing worth discussing, because I started out thinking we fundamentally disagreed, and0 am almost entirely on the same page with you here.

 

I agree it's relevant to look at how many bad games there are relative to total games played over an interval, and that number appears to be increasing.  I'm also with you that I looked at the elbow injury as problematic/explanatory of problems down the stretch last season.  But we're hearing from Josh that's all healed, no problems.  Yet here we are, so....

 

And we're on the same page that the problem isn't Josh needs more chain-mover easy throws, because they're there, Josh just isn't taking them.

 

I 'm perfectly willing to believe that Daboll is a greater talent than Dorsey as a play designer.  (I also felt that at times, Daboll got way too cute with what he was trying to do, but that's a story for another day).  But as I learnt during my career, sometimes you don't need the most brilliant mind in the room working on your project; there are occasions where that helps, but there are more times when you're better served by a fundamentally sound, organized, competent worker.  I think exactly as you say - while Dorsey did make some puzzling play calls at times, Josh had "chain movers" enough to keep drives going, many of which he passed up in favor of bailing from the pocket and forcing balls into dangerous territory trying to hit the big shot and light up the scoreboard.

 

And while sure, the whole team played badly in the Bengals game, I thought that was a large part of what went on in Josh's approach to the Dolphins game (where he got away with it) and the Bengals game (where he didn't).  So it's now 3 games in a row.  Once is an occurrence, twice could be a coincidence, three times is a pattern.

 

I'm curious if you watched Dorsey's interview?  I gave my take on it above and I don't want to influence if you didn't watch it and wish to, but there were several points I found interesting there.

 



 

I agree with a lot of this but I don't think the Dolphins game completely fits the pattern.  Allen was on fire early hitting both the gimmies and some great deep shots in staking out a 17 - 0 lead.  The drop by Knox though kept it from being 21 - 0 and the drop by Shakir late in the 2nd quarter kept it from being 24 - 6 at half.  Throw in the big punt return to et up a Dolphin TD and suddenly the game is a dog fight.

 

The pattern I'm seeing or maybe cluster is a better description given we're only talking a few games is that when things go wrong Allen gets antsy, starts pressing trying to put a dagger in the heart of an opponent the Bills should be rolling. 

 

 

10 hours ago, Beck Water said:

 

A few thoughts:

-I think Dorsey and Joe Brady have no real clue how to effectively help Josh out of a “Sugar High Josh” superhero mindset.  Dorsey said something about “Joe does a great job” (of helping Josh on the sideline).  But I can’t recall (maybe I’m missing something) a game where Josh was making unforced error after unforced error and yet pulled it together and turned it around.  Anyone else?

 

I think last years Miami playoff game might fit the bill.  After 2 INT's and a fumble Allen snapped back into form.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

It's a fair point - that the last 19 games (i.e. the Dorsey era) is an arbitrary mark. But even if we count Jacksonville as the starting point, he had 4 multiple INT games in his last 12 under Daboll's coaching and since then it is 7 in 19. That is an uptick. It might feel like it is a relatively small change ratio wise but given the small numbers here that matters. But as you are aware, I am not particularly arguing that it is Dorsey's fault. And even if the pattern starts with Jax 2021 I would say the pattern escalates (not the right word but you take my point) with Green Bay last year. It is 6 multiple INT games in 13 since that day. That is where it basically goes from 1 in 3 or close thereto (5 in 18 post between Jax 2021 and GB 2022) to 1 in 2. 

 

I think they have to look at everything and Dorsey and his game planning is part of it, but I have to say I think it is mostly (not exclusively) Josh. I don't think he is the same guy. I didn't think he was down the stretch last year, but because the game after Green Bay was the Jets and the elbow injury I just put it down to that. I am worried now. Genuinely worried. Because I think there is something else going on. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing an elite Josh Allen performance on Sunday. Then we can take a breath and say okay it's still there let's build his confidence back up and make sure he has the right support. My concern is we will see another scratchy day where things just don't look right with our Quarterback and the people saying the fix is to give him more easy throws.... well you are right to say they were all there for him on MNF. Dorsey didn't call a perfect game, but there were plenty of chain movers there for Allen on every drive. He just was either not seeing them or deciding not to take them as he bailed clean pockets and forced balls into double / triple coverage. 

I would add that we can't ignore the play of the O line over this period of time.  It has been bad, real bad.  By any measure it has been a bottom ranked O line.  I can't help but remember what happened to Mahomes in that Super Bowl when his banged up line was lit up.  In fact every great QB struggles when their line is awful.  It gets in the QB's head big time. Throw in an anemic conventional running game that isn't there for Allen/Dorsey to lean on and you have the perfect recipe for the kind of football we've been seeing from Allen.

 

I wonder if people started playing us differently half way through last season when they could substantiate in the film room just how bad our O line was and how limited our collection of skill players was. And Allen, having a gunslinger personality compounds the problem in a way that more cautious QBs would not.

 

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, CincyBillsFan said:

I would add that we can't ignore the play of the O line over this period of time.  It has been bad, real bad.  By any measure it has been a bottom ranked O line.  I can't help but remember what happened to Mahomes in that Super Bowl when his banged up line was lit up.  In fact every great QB struggles when their line is awful.  It gets in the QB's head big time. Throw in an anemic conventional running game that isn't there for Allen/Dorsey to lean on and you have the perfect recipe for the kind of football we've been seeing from Allen.

 

I wonder if people started playing us differently half way through last season when they could substantiate in the film room just how bad our O line was and how limited our collection of skill players was. And Allen, having a gunslinger personality compounds the problem in a way that more cautious QBs would not.

 

 

Yes I said that in one of the other threads. I think the line played pretty well on Monday (especially in pass pro) but Allen bailing clean pockets at the rate he is suggests it is mental for him now and we know, because we have seen it with other QBs before, you put them behind bad offensive lines for a long period they start to drop their eyes to the rush and bail pockets early. And the Bills have fielded bottom 10 offensive lines in 2021 and 2022. I don't think it was so much that teams started playing us differently middle of last year when the realised the line was bad so much as Josh started playing differently to try and compensate for his poor protection. I actually am pretty confident the line is improved for 2023.... not that it will be great but that it can at least be middle of the pack. We need to find a way of re-adjusting Josh to trusting his protection. That final play of overtime when he bailed a clean pocket and ran into pressure by doing so.... that is the sign of a scrambled brain. That pocket confidence and pocket poise needs rebuilding piece by piece.

 

But 100% I agree it has to be in the pot of what has gone wrong since the middle of last year and how do we fix it. 

  • Agree 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, CincyBillsFan said:

I agree with a lot of this but I don't think the Dolphins game completely fits the pattern.  Allen was on fire early hitting both the gimmies and some great deep shots in staking out a 17 - 0 lead.  The drop by Knox though kept it from being 21 - 0 and the drop by Shakir late in the 2nd quarter kept it from being 24 - 6 at half.  Throw in the big punt return to et up a Dolphin TD and suddenly the game is a dog fight.

 

Assuming we're both talking about the Dolphins playoff game, it was 17-17 with 33 seconds left in the half, after Allen threw 2 interceptions.  Allen played pretty well in the first half of Monday's Jets game too (and suffered a couple drops I think?) to build up a 13-3 lead at the half.

 

So I guess it depends upon what one views as 'the pattern'?  There may be more than one.

-Start with good play

-Build lead

-Make @#$@#% unforced errors, such as picks (or fumbles while extending the play or running into truble)

-Allow opponent to tie game

-Eventually pull head out of ass and play well again, but by then it may be too late.

 

14 minutes ago, CincyBillsFan said:

The pattern I'm seeing or maybe cluster is a better description given we're only talking a few games is that when things go wrong Allen gets antsy, starts pressing trying to put a dagger in the heart of an opponent the Bills should be rolling.

 

So maybe it's the "should be rolling" perception (in Allen's mind) that's the problem?  The Bills have a top of the league defense.  There's no "should" about rolling them.  And while the Dolphins defense wasn't as good last season, it was solid and focused on shutting down the Bills.

 

Again, it may depend upon one's point of view, but as Gunner pointed out, if we start with the Jax game in 2021 and count multi-turnover games, we have 12 out of 32 games or better than 1 in 3 of Josh's games have been multi-interception games.  If we start with the middle of last season - the 3 game stretch starting with the Packers where Allen threw 2 INT per game - we have 7 out of 14 games or 1 in 2 games are multi-turnover games.

 

So from one perspective, 7 games is "a few" from another - HALF the games being multi-turnover games is freakin' scary and seems to indicate an intensifying problem.   Hopefully someone is sharing these data with Josh Allen, because looking at it as 'it's just one game" might be hiding the forest.

 

14 minutes ago, CincyBillsFan said:

I think last years Miami playoff game might fit the bill.  After 2 INT's and a fumble Allen snapped back into form.

 

It's a valid point as well that McDermott deservedly praised Allen's performance on the final drive to bring the team into FG range and tie the game, forcing OT.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

It's a fair point - that the last 19 games (i.e. the Dorsey era) is an arbitrary mark. But even if we count Jacksonville as the starting point, he had 4 multiple INT games in his last 12 under Daboll's coaching and since then it is 7 in 19. That is an uptick. It might feel like it is a relatively small change ratio wise but given the small numbers here that matters. But as you are aware, I am not particularly arguing that it is Dorsey's fault. And even if the pattern starts with Jax 2021 I would say the pattern escalates (not the right word but you take my point) with Green Bay last year. It is 6 multiple INT games in 13 since that day. That is where it basically goes from 1 in 3 or close thereto (5 in 18 post between Jax 2021 and GB 2022) to 1 in 2. 

 

I think they have to look at everything and Dorsey and his game planning is part of it, but I have to say I think it is mostly (not exclusively) Josh. I don't think he is the same guy. I didn't think he was down the stretch last year, but because the game after Green Bay was the Jets and the elbow injury I just put it down to that. I am worried now. Genuinely worried. Because I think there is something else going on. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing an elite Josh Allen performance on Sunday. Then we can take a breath and say okay it's still there let's build his confidence back up and make sure he has the right support. My concern is we will see another scratchy day where things just don't look right with our Quarterback and the people saying the fix is to give him more easy throws.... well you are right to say they were all there for him on MNF. Dorsey didn't call a perfect game, but there were plenty of chain movers there for Allen on every drive. He just was either not seeing them or deciding not to take them as he bailed clean pockets and forced balls into double / triple coverage. 

My point all along-  current Josh and ‘20 ‘21 Josh are not the same.  Yet that was disputed.  That could change….and hopefully will, but that’s not the point in all of this. Something isn’t right and his elbow is fine.  
 

The underlying point in this is that we need an OC that can best help him get back to 2020 Josh or better.  That may be Dorsey.  I liked the game plan on Monday but there were a handful of situational play calls that had me feeling a certain type of way.  He has the season to turn Josh back around.  It’s a tough situation to have your career in the hands of someone else, but that’s really the case here Imo. He needs to find a way to right the Josh allen ship
 

@Beck WaterI apologize if I offended you.  I tend to be blunt and to the point when things are blatantly obvious to me and my eyes.  I now realize that you were just sparking discussion, while I was just shutting it down because I didn’t think there was a discussion to be had.  

  • Eyeroll 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, GunnerBill said:

 

It's a fair point - that the last 19 games (i.e. the Dorsey era) is an arbitrary mark. But even if we count Jacksonville as the starting point, he had 4 multiple INT games in his last 12 under Daboll's coaching and since then it is 7 in 19. That is an uptick. It might feel like it is a relatively small change ratio wise but given the small numbers here that matters. But as you are aware, I am not particularly arguing that it is Dorsey's fault. And even if the pattern starts with Jax 2021 I would say the pattern escalates (not the right word but you take my point) with Green Bay last year. It is 6 multiple INT games in 13 since that day. That is where it basically goes from 1 in 3 or close thereto (5 in 18 post between Jax 2021 and GB 2022) to 1 in 2. 

 

I think they have to look at everything and Dorsey and his game planning is part of it, but I have to say I think it is mostly (not exclusively) Josh. I don't think he is the same guy. I didn't think he was down the stretch last year, but because the game after Green Bay was the Jets and the elbow injury I just put it down to that. I am worried now. Genuinely worried. Because I think there is something else going on. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing an elite Josh Allen performance on Sunday. Then we can take a breath and say okay it's still there let's build his confidence back up and make sure he has the right support. My concern is we will see another scratchy day where things just don't look right with our Quarterback and the people saying the fix is to give him more easy throws.... well you are right to say they were all there for him on MNF. Dorsey didn't call a perfect game, but there were plenty of chain movers there for Allen on every drive. He just was either not seeing them or deciding not to take them as he bailed clean pockets and forced balls into double / triple coverage. 


he also threw 80 fewer passes in 2022 than 2021…. So an uptick in trouble passes while a drop in overall passes thrown 

  • Like (+1) 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This topic is OLD. A NEW topic should be started unless there is a very specific reason to revive this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...