Forum Replies Created

Viewing 30 posts - 5,401 through 5,430 (of 7,618 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Is this the worst ram pass offense ever? #33853
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Hell, maybe Mannion will be able to play.

    I really like Mannion. I wanted the Rams to draft him. I like Cook better. 😉

    As for the draft, I can see Hackenberg dropping. How far? He has all the physical tools. Is he the QB you want? I could see throwing Philly’s draft choice at him.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Tweets + Bailey replaced by Welker #33850
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    According to Fisher’s press conference, just now. The Rams have signed Welker. We are not sure if he will be active this week.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Tweets + Bailey replaced by Welker #33848
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Rams work out Wes Welker, Hakeem Nicks, Vincent Brown
    Posted by Michael David Smith on November 9, 2015, 12:34 PM EST
    Washington Redskins v Denver Broncos Getty Images

    The Rams are considering a veteran wide receiver to bolster their anemic passing game.

    Toward that end, they’re working out veteran receivers Wes Welker, Hakeem Nicks and Vincent Brown today, Adam Caplan of ESPN reports.

    Welker said last week that he still should be playing. Once among the NFL’s best receivers, Welker has been out of the league all year amid concerns around the league that he has nothing left and may even be putting himself at risk if he plays again.

    Nick has worked out with several teams this year but hasn’t been able to catch on anywhere. The Titans cut him at the end of the preseason.

    Brown was once a very promising young receiver for the Chargers but was cut by the Chargers in 2014, lasted only seven games with the Raiders after that and was cut by the Colts after spending some time in Indianapolis this offseason.

    St. Louis has gotten very little production from the wide receiver position this year. A veteran addition, even of a player past his prime, could make a difference.
    http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/11/09/rams-work-out-wes-welker-hakeem-nicks-vincent-brown/

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Tweets + Bailey replaced by Welker #33847
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Ravens choose Joe Morgan over Hakeem Nicks for depleted receiving corps

    The Ravens added receiver Joe Morgan to their depleted receiving corps.
    AP Photo/Jonathan Bachman
    Nov 4, 2015 at 1:25p ET
    http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/story/baltimore-ravens-joe-morgan-hakeem-nicks-sign-wide-receiver-110415
    The Baltimore Ravens added a healthy body to their depleted group of receivers in former Saint Joe Morgan.

    Morgan was signed after a Tuesday tryout that reportedly also included Hakeem Nicks and Chuck Jacobs. Jacobs was added to the team’s practice squad. While Nicks has the most impressive credentials of the trio, injuries have taken a toll on his career. The 27-year-old has now gone unsigned after five tryouts this offseason. He recorded a career-low 38 catches for 405 yards with the Colts last season after five years with the New York Giants.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Tweets + Bailey replaced by Welker #33845
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/rams-report/article_dc9600a8-35e3-5368-a392-352dceddc175.html#
    Rams’ Bailey draws 4-game NFL drug suspension
    40 minutes ago • By Jim Thomas

    For the second time in a week, a Rams player has been suspended for violating league drug policy.

    Wide receiver Stedman Bailey, the Rams’ No. 3 wide receiver for much of this season, has been suspended for four games without pay for violating NFL policy on substance abuse.

    Bailey, who turns 25 Wednesday, won’t be eligible to play again until the Rams’ Dec. 13 home game vs. Detroit. He can return to the active roster on Dec. 7.

    Last season, Bailey was suspended for four games for violating NFL policy on performance-enhancing substances. Under a new league policy that came out last September, that suspension was rescinded after two games.

    Bailey, a third-round draft pick out of West Virginia in 2013, has 12 catches for 183 yards and a touchdown this season. He drew national attention, and a fine from the league, when he fell to the ground in the end zone to celebrate an 18-yard touchdown reception against Arizona.

    Bailey used the football as a pillow as if taking a nap, then got up after a few seconds. Using the ball as a prop in TD celebrations is against NFL rules, thus the fine. Bailey said after that game that the “nap” was a signal that opposing defenses shouldn’t go to sleep on him.

    Now, opposing defenses from Chicago, Baltimore, Cincinnati, and Arizona _ the Rams’ next four opponents _ don’t have to worry about him. Bailey had two catches for 13 yards in Sunday’s 21-18 overtime loss to Minnesota.

    After trading Chris Givens to Baltimore last week, the Rams were left with only five wideouts on the roster _ one of them being undrafted rookie Bradley Marquez. Minus Bailey for the next month, the Rams need help.

    The team reportedly had wide receivers Wes Welker, Hakeem Nicks and Vincent Brown in for tryouts Monday.

    Last week, running back Trey Watts was suspended indefinitely by the NFL for violating its substance abuse policy and will not play for at least the rest of the 2015 season.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Is this the worst ram pass offense ever? #33844
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    The offensive line is playing better than I expected. What I didn’t expect was the passing game going backward. So, more and more I am starting to put more of the blame on Foles. imo

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Tweets + Bailey replaced by Welker #33843
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    What an idiot.

    He can join Pead on the already been cut squad. We should have traded him instead of Givens. imo

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: No 4th round pick for Eagles #33816
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    When Bradford becomes a FA, we can sign him, thereby completely winning the trade. 😉

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: reporters lament the Vikes game #33812
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    So it’s just different people looking at the thing differently.

    I am not arguing someone else has to see it my way by any means—just adding my own 2 cents.

    That is the way I look at things too. I just throw my stuff out there and let everyone else have a turn. I will debate a few points, but for the majority of stuff, we should all feel good about posting and debating doesn’t have to be a bad thing either.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: reporters lament the Vikes game #33810
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Just to show that it was not a bad decision to go for 2 early in the game. You can criticize Fisher for other decisions but not this.

    I agree with that.

    Some can say that one thing lost the game, and okay if someone thinks that they think it, but to me what lost the game was when the defense had the Vikes backed up to their own endzone and then committed a series of penalties that let them off the hook.

    In a close game like that, it is hard for me to pick any one thing that lost the game. With everything that happened, we got to OT and we got the ball first. I think we didn’t do enough to win. I would have liked to have seen Foles do more, but he certainly didn’t lose the game. I wanted him to do more to win it. imo

    If we isolate penalties, I thought ?5 off sides penalties were ridiculous.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: reporters lament the Vikes game #33805
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/12915634/nfl-change-extra-point-kicks-longer-distance

    The conversion rate for 33-yard field goals over the past five seasons is 92.8 percent (154-of-166).

    From the 2 yard line it is at least 98 percent.

    Two-point plays were converted at a rate of 47.5 percent.

    So, 100 kicks nets you 93 points.

    100 two-point plays nets you 95 points.

    Early in the game you are slighty better off going for 2. Later, end game dynamics might trump that small percentage. Stuff like exact point differential and remaing time become magnified.

    Just to show that it was not a bad decision to go for 2 early in the game. You can criticize Fisher for other decisions but not this.

    Tx, for the information on hits and hurries.

    • This reply was modified 10 years, 5 months ago by Avatar photoAgamemnon.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: reporters lament the Vikes game #33801
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I could not find how many times Foles was hurried or hit this game or for the season. I do know he was sacked once and the Rams are allowing a ~5% sack rate per pass play this year. That is right in the middle for all teams. I would like to know how much of the pressure on Foles is actual vs perceived.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: La Confora: Rams probably won't owe Eagles a 4th #33797
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    We will draft Cook and call it even. 😉

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: No playoffs this year (reactions to the Vikes game) #33773
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Going for 2 or kicking for 1 is an absolute coin flip, especially early in the game. The kick is ~94%. The try for 2 is ~44%. If you did it 12 and a third times, kicking nets you 1 point. Pitt does it all time or close to all the time.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: the Joyner, Harrison controversies #33767
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Btw, i watched that Joyner play, and it did not
    look to me, like Joyner bashed the QB with bad intentions.
    Looked a lot worse than it was.
    Looked to me like Joyner COULD have clobbered him
    but instead just glanced off of him. Joyner
    changed the angle of attack so as to ‘almost’
    miss him completely. He shouldnt have touched
    the QB at all, but I dont think he meant
    to do any damage — i think he meant to just
    strafe real close to him — but he grazed him
    a little too much.

    watch it closely. What do yall think?

    w
    v

    Yeah, I think he tried to pull off. But he hit him just enough tor his head to bounce on the turf and that is where he got dinged.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: No playoffs this year (reactions to the Vikes game) #33765
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    CoachO, 4 minutes ago

    New
    Hey Man said: ↑

    Foles isn’t the whole problem, play calling has a lot to do with it,

    ………………………………………………………….

    While I agree with than sentiment in general. Foles is the problem in that he is one zeroing in on 2 receivers. It was that way in training camp and has gotten progressively worse as the season has gone on.

    There are so many opportunities in every game that are being wasted because he just won’t look at other receivers. He refuses to look in the middle of the field. And the bubble screens have run their course.

    Line up Quck and Britt outside on 3rd down and run an effing slant once in a while. Move the ball downfield. Right now our passing game consists of throws 30+ yards downfield that are nothing more than having Britt or Quick release and run deep fades. Or bubble screens.

    There is no intermediate passing game at all because he can’t make the throws. Sean routes to Cook and Kendricks. Move Austin back inside and run him up the seam. With Britt and Quick running crossing routes. Until I see that I will continue to believe it’s because Foles won’t make that throw.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: No playoffs this year (reactions to the Vikes game) #33764
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I agree, PA. That is the difference between a playoff team and a .500 team. I think we played decent, just not good enough to win. A playoff team would find a way to win. The Rams just aren’t there yet. imo If we beat the teams we should beat, maybe we can still get lucky and make the playoffs, but we will have to beat some better teams to win 6 of the last 8.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams inactives 11/8 and other tweets #33758
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Everyone is talking about the wind today. Will the wind be a big factor?

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams inactives 11/8 and other tweets #33753
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/quinn-mcdonald-havenstein-all-inactive/article_63877e9d-fc9e-52c6-8faf-853beb52ad72.html
    Quinn, McDonald, Havenstein all inactive
    21 minutes ago • By Jim Thomas

    MINNEAPOLIS _ The Rams’ depth will be sorely tested against Minnesota. Pro Bowl defensive end Robert Quinn (knee), starting strong safety T.J. McDonald (foot), and starting right tackle Rob Havenstein (ankle) all were placed on the Rams’ pre-game inactive list Sunday.

    None of the three practiced Friday, the Rams’ final full-scale practice of the week. Havenstein’s absence has resulted in further offensive line shuffling for the Rams. Veteran Garrett Reynolds, who has been starting at left guard since Rodger Saffold’s season-ending shoulder injury at Green Bay, will start at right tackle according to the team.

    He’s no stranger to the position having started there four times last season as a Detroit Lion. Meanwhile, rookie Andrew Donnal comes off the bench to start at left guard. The Rams like Donnal’s toughness, selecting him in the fourth round of the 2015 draft out of Iowa. He has appeared in only three games this season, all on special teams and a total of just 15 plays.

    On the defensive line, Eugene Sims is expected to start in place of Quinn, who has been bothered by a knee issues for the past three weeks. Sims has been with the Rams since 2010 and is one of the team’s longest-tenured players, but this is only his fourth NFL start.

    At strong safety, Eureka High product Maurice Alexander is expected to start in place of McDonald.

    The other Rams inactives are RB/special teamer Chase Reynolds (thigh), DE Chris Long (knee), QB Sean Mannion, and DT Doug Worthington.

    With the personnel shortages at defensive end, undrafted rookie Matt Longacre of Northwest Missouri State _ promoted from the practice squad Friday _ is on the game-day roster.

    Minnesota inactives are QB Taylor Heinicke, LB Eric Kendricks, C Nick Easton, DT Sharrif Floyd, OT Jeremiah Sirles, TE Chase Ford, and DE Justin Trattou.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams inactives 11/8 and other tweets #33751
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Foles will pick the Vikings apart. 😉

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams inactives 11/8 and other tweets #33748
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I would have been fine with Donnal starting at RT.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: JT & Cosell – Podcast 11/6 – Listen to Football Friday #33662
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Segment 2 – Greg Cosell 11/06/15
    Friday, November 06, 2015 12:01 PM

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Benoit on Barron and Gurley…+ more on Barron #33660
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Long has a 2 million roster bonus due next year. It is the last year of his contract. The Rams can cut him or ask to take less money or do some kind of extension. It is hard to call, but I don’t think he will play without some kind of change in his salary cap number for 2016.

    What the Rams do with their players and salary cap for next year will be based on player performance this year. imo

    I would see if he would take something like, 3 more years at 6 million per.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Bruce Arians criticizes spread, but NFL goes more No Huddle #33659
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Product of the System: NFL already becoming a spread offense league
    By Jared Dubin | Staff Writer
    May 12, 2015 1:57 pm ET

    “He’s a product of the system.”

    You hear this phrase every year, typically in the lead-up to the NFL Draft, but also when discussing the exploits of some current NFL quarterbacks. It’s a label that was applied most recognizably to Marcus Mariota and Bryce Petty this year, but also to quarterbacks as disparately talented as Johnny Manziel, Cam Newton, Robert Griffin III and even Aaron Rodgers in the past.

    “I think he has a good chance of being a bust. Just like every other (Jeff) Tedford-coached quarterback,” one NFC scout told the Journal Sentinel’s Bob McGinn before Rodgers was drafted back in 2005. “He’s a system quarterback,” an AFC scout told McGinn at the time. “3-, 5-, 7-step guy. Can’t create on his own. Panics under pressure. Gets flustered easy.”

    Using the “system quarterback” terminology is mostly just a way to a knock a player who threw his collegiate passes out of the so-called spread offense, a way of “not saying, just saying” that the quarterback will not be able to succeed at the NFL level because he won’t be able to pick up the pro-style offense.

    Here’s a news flash: while some college versions of the spread may make it difficult to evaluate quarterback prospects, a modified version of it is also becoming the preferred pro-style offense, more and more with each passing season.

    Marcus Mariota was hit with the dreaded ‘system quarterback’ label before the draft. (Getty Images)

    Let’s walk through some of the characteristics of the spread, as well as the concerns leveled on the shoulders of spread QBs coming out of college, to show just how this is happening.

    Heavy usage of single-back, multi-receiver sets

    The NFL has been heading this way for years. And over the last few, it’s become more and more prevalent. Fullbacks rarely see the field anymore; only seven teams used one for more than 250 snaps last season (less than half the number of teams that did so in 2011, just three seasons earlier), and not a single one featured a fullback on more than half its plays.
    Snaps in single or empty backfield formation
    Year % of Snaps
    2011 69%
    2012 72%
    2013 76%
    2014 80%

    Single and empty back sets have become the dominant formation in the NFL. And it’s not as though every team is removing the fullback and going with 12 personnel (two tight ends). They’re taking that guy off the field mostly to add an additional wide receiver.
    Snaps with 3+ WRs on field
    Year % of Snaps
    2011 49%
    2012 51%
    2013 56%
    2014 59%

    These figures, via Football Outsiders, are actually underestimating the amount of time that NFL teams actually spend in three-plus wide receiver sets because they don’t include snaps where a tight end, running back or H-Back splits out wide. Those plays also generate more yards on a per-play basis than those featuring multiple backs or tight ends, though obviously some of that is affected by the usage of multi-back or multi-tight sets close to the goal line, where yards are inherently depressed.

    Heavy, near-exclusive use of the shotgun

    One major concern often leveled against spread quarterbacks coming out of college is that they never take snaps from under center. The pro-style offense is a big change for them because they’ll have to be under center all the time, the thinking goes. Well, NFL quarterbacks are increasingly moving back a few yards to take the snap out of the shotgun, just like their college counterparts.
    Snaps in shotgun
    Year % of Snaps
    2011 41%
    2012 49%
    2013 57%
    2014 61%

    And those figures just represent the percentage of total snaps taken out of the shotgun. Per a study conducted by ESPN, while 69.4% of all NFL dropbacks started from under center as recently as 2006, that number plummeted all the way to 21.9% during the 2014 season. Basically, at the same time the NFL is becoming more and more concerned with the fact that quarterback prospects don’t take snaps from under center, coaches are having their own quarterbacks take fewer and fewer snaps, and make a lower and lower percentage of their throws, from under center. That seems somewhat illogical.

    And not only are plays from the shotgun becoming more and more common, but they are also more efficient than those from under center.
    Yards Per Play
    Year Shotgun Under Center
    2011 6.1 5.2
    2012 6.0 5.1
    2013 5.9 5.0
    2014 6.0 5.0
    Four-Year Average 6.0 5.1

    Shotgun plays have averaged nearly a yard per play more than plays from under center in each of the last four years, and over the last four years combined. Much of this is because more passes are thrown from shotgun than under center, as stated above, but shotgun runs have generally averaged more yards per play than those from under center as well. Operating out of the gun is a more efficient proposition in basically every situation.

    Quick, single-read throws that don’t require reading progressions

    This is a tough one to break down. Reading NFL defenses is arguably the toughest part of the transition for any college quarterback making the jump to the NFL level. But a lot of that reading is done pre-snap, with the best of the bunch diagnosing the coverage in order to get the ball out quickly, avoid a sack and put it into the hands of a receiver or running back that can make something happen. Over the last few years, quarterbacks have been getting the ball out more quickly than ever before, indicating that the NFL, too, is trending toward becoming a quick-read league.

    Football Outsiders has tracked “time to throw” stats since 2011, breaking every throw down into two separate categories: throws in under 2.5 seconds after the snap, and throws 2.5 seconds or more after the snap.
    Time to Throw
    Year % of throws in Under 2.5 seconds
    2011 55.90%
    2012 55.19%
    2013 56.56%
    2014 58.55%

    Why are more and more throws coming out quickly? Well, because they’re more efficient, of course.
    Completion % by release time
    Year Under 2.5 seconds
    2.5 seconds or more
    2011 64.6% 55.0%
    2012 66.3% 54.8%
    2013 66.8% 54.4%
    2014 68.7% 54.7%

    There will obviously be occasions where the quarterback has to hold onto the ball simply because nobody immediately flashes open. And in those cases, there is nothing more important than being able to manage the rush, read your progressions, and find the open receiver. But that’s something that affects nearly every quarterback in the NFL in extreme ways, to the point that leaguewide completion percentage dropped off 14.0% last season based on the under/over 2.5 seconds after the snap designation. That’s the widest discrepancy in the last four years, as the gap keeps getting wider.

    It’s a distinction that affected everyone from Aaron Rodgers (72.0% to 56.3%) to Colin Kaepernick (68.8% to 47.3%) and Tom Brady (71.5% to 52.1%) to Alex Smith (72.3% to 54.2%). Even the quarterbacks that were among the least affected — Peyton Manning (68.2% to 63.5%), Tony Romo (73.5% to 68.0%), Eli Manning (67.4% to 58.4%), Cam Newton (63.3% to 54.2%) — came from a mixture of spread and more traditional offenses.

    None of this is to say reading progressions doesn’t matter. Of course it does. After accuracy, it may be the single most important quarterback skill. It’s just that the league is rightly trending toward getting the ball out quickly, and quarterbacks of all stripes struggle when forced to hold the ball past when they’d normally throw to their first read. Good quarterbacks make the necessary adjustments before the snap so they already know where the ball is going once they begin their drop; great ones do that, and then are also able to change course if that adjustment doesn’t result in an immediately open target.

    Peyton Manning is among the best in the NFL at making pre-snap adjustments. (USATSI) Peyton Manning is among the best in the NFL at making pre-snap adjustments. (USATSI)

    They aren’t used to calling plays in the huddle

    This is a fairly new criticism that came up this year as Mariota emerged as one of the top draft prospects. Oregon’s offense — along with numerous other spread offenses in college — uses a play-card system that signals in plays from the sideline while the team rushes up to the line of scrimmage, rather than the more traditional NFL style of play-calling where the head coach or offensive coordinator uses a radio connected to the quarterback’s helmet to relay the call, and the quarterback then disseminates that call to the other 10 players in the huddle.

    Cardinals coach Bruce Arians was vocal about this point. “Seeing the guys coming out of the systems now where the coach holds a card up, the players line up, he kicks his foot and they play football — the hardest thing for them is to get into a huddle and call a play,” Arians said. “They’re stuttering, they’re stammering, the guys around them don’t believe in them. That’s that leadership thing. That’s the hardest thing for these young quarterbacks who play in these systems … they have to learn how to play quarterback at this level and sometimes that’s overwhelming.”

    It should be noted here that college quarterbacks don’t have the benefit of radio communication from their coaches like NFL quarterbacks do, which makes it difficult to radio in a play call to them. Additionally, the NFL is increasingly becoming a no-huddle oriented league. No-huddle usage more than doubled from 2011 and 2013 alone, rising from 5.7% of snaps in 2011 to 6.7% in 2012, to 12.2% in 2013. Even more teams used it in 2014, and though I wasn’t able to find a confirmed percentage breakdown, the percentage of no-huddle snaps taken is doubtlessly higher than it was the year before, and next year it will be higher still.

    Look at all the teams that have professed an interest in using more of the no-huddle next season. First, there’s the Raiders. Head coach Jack Del Rio believes it will allow them to be more diverse on offense and vary their tempo. Then there’s the Carolina Panthers. Riverboat Ron Rivera recognized how much more effective Cam Newton was down the stretch of last season when the team went no-huddle, and wants to do it more this year. The Buccaneers are expected to run more no-huddle under offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter.

    These stories come on the heels of teams like the Chargers, Colts and Steelers announcing (and mostly following through on) plans to run more no-huddle before last season. Browns coach Mike Pettine called the no-huddle the future of the league. Add all those teams to Peyton Manning’s Broncos, Bill Belichick and Tom Brady’s New England Patriots and of course, Chip Kelly’s Philadelphia Eagles, and you’ve got the makings of a leaguewide trend toward less huddling that’s already reflected in recent data. What’s more is that no-huddle plays have historically been — you guessed it — more efficient than those run after teams huddle up.

    There are advantages (more time for the quarterback to read the defense and get into the optimal play call, tired defenses that aren’t allowed to change personnel groupings, the need for the opposing team to devote valuable practice time to learning how best to defend no-huddle offenses) and disadvantages (difficulty communicating plays across the entire field, short drives if you don’t get a first down, more time spent on the field for your defense) to the no-huddle, but by and large it’s becoming more prevalent with each passing season, and it’s an effective strategy if you play it correctly. You don’t have to run up to the line of scrimmage and snap it with 20 seconds on the play clock like the Eagles, either. Peyton Manning’s teams rarely huddle, but also rarely snap the ball before there are five or fewer seconds on the play clock. It can be used simply to keep your team in favorable personnel groupings while also controlling the pace of play.

    NFL coaches have also known this would happen for a good, long while. Bill Walsh, the Godfather of the West Coast Offense, wrote the following in his book, Finding the Winning Edge, about the future of NFL offenses:

    Teams will huddle only when the clock is stopped.
    Teams will use single-world offensive audibles.
    The quarterback will receive direction from the coach at the line of scrimmage. Because the ball can be put into play at any moment, the defense must commit itself with its front and coverage.
    The quarterback will look to the sideline the instant the whistle blows on the previous play to see which personnel combination is entering the game. The designated coach indicates the formation to the quarterback and whether he should audible his own play or will receive a play call from the coach. All of these steps will occur without a huddle.
    The quarterback will have even more latitude in audibling at the line of scrimmage. His decisions will override those by the coach signaling in a play call.

    That sounds a whole lot like the spread, no-huddle offense run by, say, the Patriots, who famously use a one-word system for calling plays when they do go no-huddle that Belichick adopted from college offenses. That certainly makes it easier to communicate the calls, and it again gives Brady more time to read the defense at the line of scrimmage without having to blurt out a mouthful of a play call.

    The Patriots use a one-word system for running plays in the no-huddle. (USATSI) The Patriots use a one-word system for running plays in the no-huddle. (USATSI)

    Conclusion

    With NFL teams increasingly incorporating elements of spread offenses into their own, and with those specific tactics generally being more efficient than “the way things have always been done,” maybe it just shouldn’t be as much of a concern as it seems to be in NFL circles.

    College-style spreads, with their wider throwing lanes and larger emphasis on quarterback runs, make it somewhat difficult to evaluate quarterback prospects, sure, but the NFL has historically not been all that great at evaluating quarterback prospects in pro-style offenses, either. The hit rate on quarterback draft selections is the lowest of any position.

    Those trends also beg a more interesting question: shouldn’t NFL offenses be built around the skill set of the quarterback, and not the other way around? If you’re betting the future of the franchise in a player, the goal should be to give him the best chance possible to succeed. If that means crafting an offense that features lots of shotgun, multi-wide, no-huddle plays that rely on quick decisions, why not do it?

    http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/eye-on-football/25182090/product-of-the-system-nfl-already-becoming-a-spread-offense-league

    Agamemnon

    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/columns/ben-frederickson/benfred-rams-offense-having-hard-time-hanging-on/article_4fe73635-2f53-5c06-b4e4-cf80ea9de8c4.html

    BenFred: Rams offense having hard time hanging on
    3 hours ago • By Ben Frederickson

    It’s not an epidemic, Rams coach Jeff Fisher said.

    But it sure seems pervasive.

    Fisher’s team is having a heck of a time holding on to the football.

    “They don’t drop the ball on purpose,” Fisher said this week. “If it keeps happening, you have to start making changes. But, I’m not concerned. The guys are practicing well. They’re catching the ball consistently in games. They’ve become more glaring in close games.”

    Not just drops. Fumbles, too. Both have been hurting an offense that can’t afford to shoot itself in the hands.

    Wide receivers Kenny Britt and Tavon Austin became the latest victims last Sunday.

    Britt muffed a grab on a 3rd-and-4 during the Rams’ first drive. What would have been a deep completion down the left sideline instead turned into a punt.

    Austin, who was brilliant and scored two touchdowns in the win, overcame a first-half fumble at the end of a 24-yard catch and run.

    “Obviously, Kenny’s was a huge play,” Fisher said. “It was a huge opportunity for a big field position change, and then Tavon’s, which in essence they considered a fumble, was kind of between. It was a fumble-drop. Obviously, we have to do a better job of that.”

    The Rams often play music during practice. I suggest a catchy playlist. “Hold Me” by Whitney Houston. “Hold On” by the Alabama Shakes. “Don’t Let Go” by Weezer. I’m sure there are enough other sure-handed hits to make a mix CD for the Rams’ trip to Minnesota this weekend.

    The Rams enter their game against the Vikings having dropped 13 of 124 catchable passes, according to STATS LLC. That’s 10.5 percent, which is second-worst in the league. Carolina (11.4 percent) is the only team that has dropped more catchable passes.

    Britt, running back Benny Cunningham and tight end Jared Cook lead the pack with three drops apiece, according to SportingCharts.com. Tight end Lance Kendricks has two. Receivers Stedman Bailey and Brian Quick each have one.

    The Rams rank only slightly better when it comes to fumbles. They’ve fumbled 10 times in 597 touches, which means they’ve fumbled on 1.68 percent of their touches. That ranks fourth-worst in the league, according to STATS LLC. Cleveland, Arizona and Buffalo are the only teams that put the ball on the ground more often.

    Rams quarterback Nick Foles has fumbled four times, losing two. Austin has fumbled twice, losing one. Cook and running back Tre Mason lost their only fumbles. Former running back Isaiah Pead’s only fumble might have cost him his roster spot. Gurley has fumbled once, but the Rams recovered.

    Drops happen. Fumbles happen. But they’re happening to St. Louis too often.

    If the Rams want to keep rolling, an offense that ranks near the bottom in yards per game (30th), points per game (28th) and time of possession per game (28th) can’t afford to let opportunities slip through its fingertips.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: What Vikings Fans Are Saying #33521
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Rams News Recap: Nov. 3 #33497
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Vikes podcast
    http://www.startribune.com/access-vikings-podcast-zimmer-and-the-vikings-keep-proving-doubters-wrong/339969852/
    Episode 16: The Vikings are winning games they haven’t won in recent years. But can they do it against good teams?
    ————-

    I listened to some of this and it dont sound
    like the vike-podcasters are very impressed with their QB

    w
    v

    You are a better man than I. I tried to listen, but gave up. I think Foles is a better competitor. We will see.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Prediction thread – Minnesota Vikings – out of doors #33428
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: where does the Rams OL stand right now #33402
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I think Tucker is qualified to comment on the OL. I think Havenstein and Barnes and Reynolds are playing better than I expected. I had faith in Havenstein, but Barnes and Reynolds are a bit of surprise to me.

    Agamemnon

    in reply to: Prediction thread – Minnesota Vikings – out of doors #33387
    Avatar photoAgamemnon
    Participant

    I agree with you that the Rams are probably better but I also think RFL is correct when he says the Vikings can do more things on offense. I don’t think the Rams are going to be able to hold them to just FG’s so more help from the offense would be appreciated this week.

    Yeah, Turner is a good OC. It could be who plays better QB, Foles or Bridgewater.

    Agamemnon

Viewing 30 posts - 5,401 through 5,430 (of 7,618 total)