There were games where teams were effective in slowing each guy down. In none of those games did the defense play Bo's 2010/2011 style of containment. That's my point.I guess you'll have to point me to which teams slowed them down:knapplc said:Go look at what opposing defenses did to Denard Robinson last year, and how they slowed him down. Same for Braxton Miller. Both of whom torched us.
Blitzes are not overrated. Used correctly they are very effective. They cannot be used in all situations, but Bo uses them in nearly no situation, and that's wrong.
Denard Robinson:
vs. NU - 11/18, 180 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 23 rush, 83 yds (3.6 ypc), 2 TD - 263 total yds, 4 TDs
vs. Notre Dame: 11/24, 338 yds, 4 TD, 3 INT; 16 rush, 108 yds (6.8 ypc), 1 TD - 446 total yds, 5 TDs
vs. Mich St.: 9/24, 123 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT; 18 rush, 42 yds (2.3 ypc), 1 TD - 165 total yds, 2 TDs
vs. Iowa: 17/37, 194 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 12 car, 55 yds (4.6 ypc) - 249 total yds, 2 TDs
vs. Ohio St. - 14/17, 167 yds, 3 TD, 0 INT; 26 rush, 170 yds (6.5 ypc), 2 TD - 337 total yards, 5 TDs
So Michigan St. (#5 in the country in yards allowed and arch-rival) had him bottled up, Iowa was about the same and ND and Ohio St. were much worse. I suppose you can throw VaTech in as a team that bottled him up but it's a lot easier to have everyone on the same page when you have a month to prepare.
Braxton Miller:
vs. NU (3 quarters) - 5/8, 95 yds, 1 TD; 10 rush, 91 yds (9.1 ypc) - 186 total yds, 1 TD
vs. Mich St. - 5/10, 56 yds, 1 INT; 9 rush, -27 yds (-3.0 ypc) - 29 total yds
vs. Wisconsin - 7/12, 89 yds, 1 TD; 19 rush, 99 yds (5.2 ypc), 2 TD - 188 total yds, 3 TD
vs. Penn St. - 7/17, 83 yds, 1 TD; 18 rush, 105 yds (5.8 ypc), 1 TD - 188 total yds, 2 TD
vs. Michigan - 14/25, 235 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 16 rush, 100 yds (6.3 ypc), 1 TD - 335 total yds, 3 TD
So, again, Mich St. had his number, Wisc & Penn St. were comparable and he torched Michigan. You can argue that he compiled his stats against us in only 3 quarters but he only completed one pass and had 3 rushes for 12 yards playing all but 5 plays of the third quarter so we were doing better in the second half and our offense was actually holding the ball which is a large part of why both these QBs were able to put up the stats they did against us.
I don't argue that I wish we could do some things differently but I think is misleading when people talk like we're the only team that has problems with mobile QBs. They hurt a lot of people and, as shown above, they hurt a lot of teams worse than us.
I'd probably be willing to pay a small admission fee to see that.Couldn't be. I look better in high heels.
Damion Stafford. He did well at JUCO and the coaches said good things about him this time last year. While he didn't have a bad season, he wasn't the impact player we need Seisay to be.I am on the same page as gkf. I think the secondary will be the strength of our defense, if not of the entire team. While Seisey hasn't stepped foot on the field for us, he did well at Memphis, he did very well at JUCO, and the coaches have only said great things about him so far. Bo is going to be more involved this year and I like what I hear about TJ so far. I'm optimistic.
Totally disagree..... See New England Patriots!!! Other than Tom Brady. Name 5 sure fire hall of FAMERs from their 3 super bowl teams! Listen to all the whiny steeler fans b!^@h about not having more HOFers from the steel curtain teams. How many guys get in from TOs 3title teams? Now how many we want but how many realistically get in? My point.... Coaching wins! Or Steve Fischer would have 2 rings! Give the Fab five dean smith or coach k with a more disciplined approach and don't tell me they don't win a least one title.I do find that even great coaches tend to require great players in order to perform at a highly elite level. It seems sort of ... obvious? expected? to have a drop off when the talent level drops off.
By "solid" I mean, Bo has been glowing about the secondary. He said we will be more multiple this year than we have been EVER since he's been here. He said the guys get the mental stuff this year and that is translating to them playing quicker, smarter, more aggressive, more intense. A lot of those guys are very athletic, they just were skiddish to make mistakes and not wanting to get chewed out by Bo. They played at the speed of their mental understanding... and still made mistakes along the way. If the mental understanding is there then that makes the physical part shine. I think that was the major difference between the defense of 2009 and the defense of last year... the mental aspect. Those young players might be just as much as athletic and talented as Amukamara or Haag or Gomes... but what keeps them from wrecking havoc on the field is their lack of confidence in their mental game and their lack of understanding of the mental game. Once that catches on, the athleticism shows and the players do the quick turn around.gkf, what do you mean by "solid?" We have guys who have played, but unfortunately nobody has truly impressed back there.
We have no idea if Mo Seisay is going to translate to a solid contributor this year. PJ Smith spent a lot of time doing nothing last year, and even though Ciante Evans started six more games than Smith, Smith had a better year statistically. Andrew Green performed well enough at the end of the year, but how much improvement he makes from last year to this is anyone's guess. There is nothing in this group that makes me think that our CBs are going to be "solid." Sure, it's possible, but there is nothing guaranteeing that.
I would characterize our defense - especially our secondary - as anything but "solid." I'd say it's a rebuilding area with lots of question marks and very few solid answers.
Bo glowed about the team heading into last season, too. Summer optimism doesn't always translate to Fall success. This is all just fluff, with no substance. We've seen it before and we've been disappointed with the results.By "solid" I mean, Bo has been glowing about the secondary. He said we will be more multiple this year than we have been EVER since he's been here. He said the guys get the mental stuff this year and that is translating to them playing quicker, smarter, more aggressive, more intense.
This is all well and good, and I hope it translates into a better secondary, but every team does versions of this kind of thing. None of it is any kind of guarantee that we'll be better.This year... Terry Joseph is forcing players to learn intricate details of the mental aspect of the game. He's testing them with quizzes at their lockers every day, he's testing them with quizzes in the film room and on the white board every day... he's giving them what they need to get that one step head start that will make all the difference at this level where everybody on the field is running on similar par levels. THIS IS WHY WE'RE BETTER THIS YEAR THAN THE PAST 2 YEARS. We're getting a lead off to steal second... and therefore beating the 2nd baseman who is only 15ft away. We're all moving in unison... connecting the dots and communicating where each dot is. Our athleticism has always been constant... it's the mental repetitions that have lagged at times.
Belichick does a masterful job. He's probably one of the best in the game.Totally disagree..... See New England Patriots!!! Other than Tom Brady.I do find that even great coaches tend to require great players in order to perform at a highly elite level. It seems sort of ... obvious? expected? to have a drop off when the talent level drops off.
Belichick does do a masterful job. He's a master at identifying and signing talented players who've been overlooked by other teams. Brady is the posterboy for this. Look at Dennard. Belichick got Dennard for a fire-sale bargain price. All because of an incredibly poorly timed DUI. Belichick does this same thing time and again, getting an incredible bang for his buck on "special situation" guys.Belichick does a masterful job. He's probably one of the best in the game.Totally disagree..... See New England Patriots!!! Other than Tom Brady.I do find that even great coaches tend to require great players in order to perform at a highly elite level. It seems sort of ... obvious? expected? to have a drop off when the talent level drops off.
That said, where is New England without Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski, and Wes Welker?
When Cassell stepped in that one year, he still had Moss and Welker to throw to. Or how about their D, which has had some very bad years lately, without Wilfork? Belichick is widely regarded as a defensive genius, and yet NE has put up some of the worst defenses for years, trying to get by with their limitations, because they haven't managed to acquire the right pieces.
You're right that talent can get you so far, but my point is, so can coaching.
Absolutely.I guess you'll have to point me to which teams slowed them down:knapplc said:Go look at what opposing defenses did to Denard Robinson last year, and how they slowed him down. Same for Braxton Miller. Both of whom torched us.zoogies said:I think blitzing is overrated. It's best if we can get the rush from the 4-man front. Of course, this isn't always possible and blitzes can be effective. However, I would think in my limited knowledge that blitzes work best against pocket-passing statues. The ones Bo has figured out already. Sending a blitzing 'backer or DB on a real mobile QB is asking to get burned. Blitzes are going to be even easier to evade than an open-field tackler for those guys, because the blitzer is charging.
And once evaded, if there's no run lane open, we're short a man in coverage. Coverage can only really work for a certain amount of time. Taking a man away from coverage, and going against a QB who can evade him 1-on-1 and extend plays from the pocket, seems like a low-percentage, high-risk strategy.
Blitzes are not overrated. Used correctly they are very effective. They cannot be used in all situations, but Bo uses them in nearly no situation, and that's wrong.
Denard Robinson:
vs. NU - 11/18, 180 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 23 rush, 83 yds (3.6 ypc), 2 TD - 263 total yds, 4 TDs
vs. Notre Dame: 11/24, 338 yds, 4 TD, 3 INT; 16 rush, 108 yds (6.8 ypc), 1 TD - 446 total yds, 5 TDs
vs. Mich St.: 9/24, 123 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT; 18 rush, 42 yds (2.3 ypc), 1 TD - 165 total yds, 2 TDs
vs. Iowa: 17/37, 194 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 12 car, 55 yds (4.6 ypc) - 249 total yds, 2 TDs
vs. Ohio St. - 14/17, 167 yds, 3 TD, 0 INT; 26 rush, 170 yds (6.5 ypc), 2 TD - 337 total yards, 5 TDs
So Michigan St. (#5 in the country in yards allowed and arch-rival) had him bottled up, Iowa was about the same and ND and Ohio St. were much worse. I suppose you can throw VaTech in as a team that bottled him up but it's a lot easier to have everyone on the same page when you have a month to prepare.
Braxton Miller:
vs. NU (3 quarters) - 5/8, 95 yds, 1 TD; 10 rush, 91 yds (9.1 ypc) - 186 total yds, 1 TD
vs. Mich St. - 5/10, 56 yds, 1 INT; 9 rush, -27 yds (-3.0 ypc) - 29 total yds
vs. Wisconsin - 7/12, 89 yds, 1 TD; 19 rush, 99 yds (5.2 ypc), 2 TD - 188 total yds, 3 TD
vs. Penn St. - 7/17, 83 yds, 1 TD; 18 rush, 105 yds (5.8 ypc), 1 TD - 188 total yds, 2 TD
vs. Michigan - 14/25, 235 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT; 16 rush, 100 yds (6.3 ypc), 1 TD - 335 total yds, 3 TD
So, again, Mich St. had his number, Wisc & Penn St. were comparable and he torched Michigan. You can argue that he compiled his stats against us in only 3 quarters but he only completed one pass and had 3 rushes for 12 yards playing all but 5 plays of the third quarter so we were doing better in the second half and our offense was actually holding the ball which is a large part of why both these QBs were able to put up the stats they did against us.
I don't argue that I wish we could do some things differently but I think is misleading when people talk like we're the only team that has problems with mobile QBs. They hurt a lot of people and, as shown above, they hurt a lot of teams worse than us.