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Posted (edited)

While Josh Allen changes some plays at the line, it is time for him to call all of the plays, much like Jim Kelly did.  It seems obvious that some of his frustration is directed at results of a called play when it fails and letting him take the wheel would get rid of that distraction.  

Regardless of the fact that this is non- existent in the current NFL, there has to be a lot of range as to the frequency of audibles among the QBs.  Some do quite a bit, some not that much.  

Advantages if JA Calls all the plays:

Josh has a feel for the flow of the game and what works and doesn't work with the 11 on the field at the time.  

The frustration from calls he disagrees with would be eliminated. 

Joe Brady can focus on developing a game plan for the opponent and sideline management.  

His standing as a team leader would be reinforced. 

He knows this team better than anyone.  

He would be super motivated and a motivated JA is a wonerful thing to see. 

He has earned it.  

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by jethro_tull
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Posted

It's not 1993 anymore and offenses are infinitely more complicated than they used to be. QB's have more on their plates than they've ever had in their lives.

I think asking them to be ready to have the right play ready 5 seconds after they've just processed the last play is just too much to ask in this era.

Giving them an extra option coming to the line is about the most you should ask of them at this point, imo.

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Posted
4 minutes ago, Simon said:

It's not 1993 anymore and offenses are infinitely more complicated than they used to be. QB's have more on their plates than they've ever had in their lives.

I think asking them to be ready to have the right play ready 5 seconds after they've just processed the last play is just too much to ask in this era.

Giving them an extra option coming to the line is about the most you should ask of them at this point, imo.

Totally agreed, there has to be reasons why it doesn't happen today.  

But it just feels right for this team right now.  Mainly because playcalling could sure use a shot in the arm and this might be the thing.  

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Posted
1 minute ago, jethro_tull said:

Totally agreed, there has to be reasons why it doesn't happen today.  

But it just feels right for this team right now.  Mainly because playcalling could sure use a shot in the arm and this might be the thing.  

 

I think a Josh Allen called offense would make McDermott's head explode before halftime. :lol:

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Posted

Did they have mics in their helmets back then?  

The K-Gun was so successful because it was up-tempo, but they can do that now without having the QB call the plays.  

The QB instead gets to audible out of plays based on his read of the D

 

But I agree, it would be fun to see, even if it will never happen

Posted
9 minutes ago, Simon said:

 

I think a Josh Allen called offense would make McDermott's head explode before halftime. :lol:

I'm not worried about McDermott's head exploding, but I think it would make most Bills fans' head explode. There is NOTHING about the way Allen plays the game that makes me think he'd be a good OC. I'm envisioning the sugar high, backyard football offense down in, down out.

Posted
Just now, Artful Dodger said:

 

You say that as if it's a bad thing...

 

I made an honest effort to remain neutral. :D

 

1 minute ago, transient said:

I'm envisioning the sugar high, backyard football offense down in, down out.

 

At this point I'd be all for it!

Posted

Disagree.  If the game plan is off, you need a OC who is able to make the offense dynamic and can make the changes on the fly.  No QB can do that.  The NFL is well past that era.  Past game is why you need and require a OC who can counter what the defense is doing.  Brady did not do that.   Allen continues to misread the pressure some of these opposing DCs are doing to him.

Posted
31 minutes ago, Simon said:

It's not 1993 anymore and offenses are infinitely more complicated than they used to be. QB's have more on their plates than they've ever had in their lives.

I think asking them to be ready to have the right play ready 5 seconds after they've just processed the last play is just too much to ask in this era.

Giving them an extra option coming to the line is about the most you should ask of them at this point, imo.

Forget not Occam's razor and its corollary -The Complexity Paradox

“We are great at handling complexity until things get really, really complex.”

Signature_themes_562387-950x633.jpg.webp

Posted
8 minutes ago, Marcus Aurelius said:

Forget not Occam's razor and its corollary -The Complexity Paradox

“We are great at handling complexity until things get really, really complex.”

Signature_themes_562387-950x633.jpg.webp

I don't see the sailboat 

 

kevin smith mallrats GIF

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Posted

AND ANOTHER REASON !  

Plays are getting sent in late on the road in load stadiums (e.g. Houston). 

As reported on OBL, they mention and explain why it gives the defense an advantage.   Typically the offense has only 12 sec or so to execute the play.  

The no-huddle / up tempo offense literally cannot be run in that situation- with JA calling the plays and Bills not substituting they will have a heck of a rapid fire approach and tire out the defense.  

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Posted
4 minutes ago, jethro_tull said:

AND ANOTHER REASON !  

Plays are getting sent in late on the road in load stadiums (e.g. Houston). 

As reported on OBL, they mention and explain why it gives the defense an advantage.   Typically the offense has only 12 sec or so to execute the play.  

The no-huddle / up tempo offense literally cannot be run in that situation- with JA calling the plays and Bills not substituting they will have a heck of a rapid fire approach and tire out the defense.  


I hate to say it but you know some of the checks we don’t like are josh

 

 

some agreement here though: when will Anderson was sitting out early downs and coming in on third down we should’ve skipped subs and gotten to the line to keep their own mvp off the field. We don’t maximize our advantages and manage game flow in a way that I love. 

 

 

Posted
16 minutes ago, jethro_tull said:

AND ANOTHER REASON !  

Plays are getting sent in late on the road in load stadiums (e.g. Houston). 

As reported on OBL, they mention and explain why it gives the defense an advantage.   Typically the offense has only 12 sec or so to execute the play.  

The no-huddle / up tempo offense literally cannot be run in that situation- with JA calling the plays and Bills not substituting they will have a heck of a rapid fire approach and tire out the defense.  

 

Yes.  Has no one noticed that Bills' offense is most effective when it's running the two-minute drill, and presumably Brady doesn't have time to send in plays?

 

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