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Patriots vs. Bengals All 22 Thoughts: Defense Edition

October 8, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Nice to finally get a look at the All 22 after a day’s delay. Pats seem to be finding their stride on defense and when they wrap up and make tackles, things look pretty good. They’re flashing more and more physicality in the secondary as well, which is needed.

Perhaps the biggest note is Darrelle Revis looking like Darrelle Revis, but also how well Arrington and Dennard played as well. Can’t remember having three corners playing this well since… well… ever.

The biggest concern – defensive end depth with Chandler Jones and Dominique Easley ailing while Michael Buchanan was just shut down for the season. Might be a move to come there.

Here are my notes on the defense…

Dennard might be the unsung hero of this defense. He’s feisty, shows good anticipation and seems like the key guy to allow man defense across the board. Very curious to see what happens with Browner now in the mix. Dennard seems too good to ride the pine now.

Chris Jones continuing to progress, taking on double teams better. 

Revis anticipates double moves so well, he never stops moving. His talents were on clear display right off the bat, smoothly sticking with AJ Green like glue.

Man-to-Man defense certainly has it’s plusses when Revis-Dennard-Arrington are all playing. But on third-and-long on the first drive the Pats went to Cover 4 to snuff out the underneath routes. A good example of how mixing coverages is key.

Savvy “ole” move by Ninkovich on the second Bengals possession against the tight end trying to block him. Ninkovich has been under the radar this year somewhat, but continues to show up in the run game. 

Some good stuff out of Easley playing defensive end. His power continues to flash, but he’s still developing the savvy needed to pass rush in the NFL. He’s really shown how versatile he is early in the year and as he gets more comfortable on his knee he should only get better.

Casey Walker showed up on just his second snap with the Patriots, plowing through the line to blow up a run for a loss. Might be a little early to say anything definitive but the Pats have to be happy to see this from their big body replacement of Siliga. He could be a key piece down the stretch.

Next third-and-long the Pats went to Cover 2 Man but when that play was blown dead by a penalty they went back to Cover 4 for third-and-longer.

Clear as day where Easley hurt his shoulder mid-way through the second quarter, he was just trying to extend against a block and immediately reached to it. His arm hung limp as he walked to the sideline. Doesn’t seem major and he was at practice today so that’s a good sign.

Love Jamie Collins in the passing game, but he’s not a downhill linebacker how can hammer an oncoming offensive linemen. In space against pass-heavy teams he’ll be incredibly valuable. Of course that is most of the teams in the NFL that we worry most about. But against some of the NFC teams it might be interesting with him.

Chris Jones with another great stack-and-shed in the second quarter. Solid game for him so far. Michael Buchanan entered for Easley and he looks a little lost so far. Looking for the injury that landed him on IR.

I’m sure one of the talking points you’ve heard this week is that the Pats pass rush pressure wasn’t great but against a quick-throw team like the Bengals it’s almost impossible to get to the QB consistently. The good thing I see is that the pass rush is getting there right after Dalton unloads it, forcing him to quickly throw to his first read consistently. That’s a positive and something we’ll need to do against the good QBs like Peyton.

Holy ticky tacky holding call on Dennard! 

Bengals went run-heavy at the end of the second quarter after taking a couple shots at the end zone. Pats countered with a 3-4 base defense that held up well, forcing the field goal. Good red zone stop.

On the forced fumble by Revis on AJ Green it felt like it all started with a great jam by Revis that put Green off balance. Again, Revis was everything we thought Revis is and was in this game.

Look at that, Dennard gets sent on a blitz on the first play of the second half forcing a rushed throw and incompletion. Nothing better than a three-and-out to start a half, and the Pats got on their way to one with some rare DB pressure.

Jerod Mayo bounced back again in what has been an up-and-down start to his season. It’s amazing how much better the Pats are when he plays well. And how bad they are when he doesn’t.

Pats were in base defense, Cover 4 on the 37-yard touchdown pass to Sanu. Chung jumped the underneath route leaving Dennard with no help. McCourty’s absence was felt here.

Pats got caught in an exchange on a 15-yard gain to Hill. Ninkovich dropped and Mayo blitzed off the edge. Great throw by Dalton and a tough catch. Like seeing this kind of disguise.

On AJ Green’s touchdown Logan Ryan got no jam and then ran into Mayo which opened up enough space for an easy TD throw from Dalton. Not entirely Ryan’s fault, but a better jam would’ve likely helped him avoid Mayo coming over to cover the RB.

Collins is almost better getting right up on the line of scrimmage and using his athleticism in tight space to avoid blocks. In the fourth quarter he did just that, blowing up a zone run.

Great move by Chris Jones to pick up the first sack of the season against the Bengals. Not playing every down has allowed Jones to really elevate his game. He made a handful of impact plays in this game.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: all-22, analysis, cincinnati bengals, new england patriots

Buffalo Bills defense will be challenged by Patriots’ two tight ends | The MMQB with Peter King

October 8, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Buffalo Bills defense will be challenged by Patriots’ two tight ends | The MMQB with Peter King

Nice analysis from Andy Benoit, looking at how the Pats could look to exploit Brandon Spikes in the play action passing game.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

October 8, 2014 by Mike Dussault


On to Buffalo! As soon as I get to watch the Bengals All-22. Seriously NFL Game Rewind is killing me.

https://www.patspropaganda.com/on-to-buffalo-as-soon-as-i-get-to-watch-the/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

October 7, 2014 by Mike Dussault

To put how unusual this is into context, take an average team that beats the spread by 17-plus points exactly 10 percent of the time. What is the chance that team would beat the spread by 17-plus points five (or more) times out of ten? 0.2 percent! So this is a case where a small sample size really does tell us something. Over the last decade, the Patriots have been completely on their own island in their propensity for following big losses with surprisingly strong wins. And it looks like more than randomness. Note that I am counting 2008, too. If we only include the Brady era, following big losses the Patriots have beaten the point spread by more than 17 points four out of seven times.

FOOTBALL OUTSIDERS: Innovative Statistics, Intelligent Analysis | Any Given Sunday: Patriots over Bengals

https://www.patspropaganda.com/to-put-how-unusual-this-is-into-context-take-an/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: stats

On Brady and weaponry

October 7, 2014 by Mike Dussault

As I’m waiting for the All-22 film of Pats-Bengals to come out, I couldn’t help but click on Michael Silver’s latest NFL.com article positing that Brady *could* be at a tipping point with Belichick because, when compared to Denver and Peyton Manning, Belichick just hasn’t given Brady the best weapons to use. (You can go find the article on your own if you really want to read it.)

Now Silver has always had these kind of takes when it comes to Brady. Here’s one from 2010 that pretty much has the same takeaway – Brady isn’t treated as well as Peyton Manning is and should be upset about it.

Silver runs down each and every Denver “weapon” but when you boil it down I think the only real difference is that Denver hit on Demaryius Thomas in the first round before Manning even got there.

Are there any Patriot fans out there who think the Patriots would be better with Welker instead of Edelman right now? Not to mention about six months from now when Welker will either be looking at retirement or dangerously prolonging his career?

The Pats did try to get Emmanuel Sanders last year but this year went with Brandon LaFell, who has shown solid progress and is the top X receiver in New England right now. Given their style of play, and what Brady’s strengths are, I don’t think it’s crazy why the Pats went with physicality and size over speed.

And we’ll see how well Sanders does against Revis and Browner. LaFell’s size is something this Pats team has lacked for as long as anyone can remember.

Of course ditching Logan Mankins is mentioned, but the part about getting the rookie tight end who led the league in receptions last year? Well that part isn’t important. Apparently that doesn’t qualify you as a “weapon”.

Oh and comparing Julius Thomas to Gronk? Come on. We know what Gronk has gone through and that he’s still getting it all back, but with both healthy there’s little debate who the better tight end is. Thomas was invisible for two years in Denver before Peyton arrived.

Another thing Silver ignores is how many receivers have failed in New England. Is that Belichick’s fault too? Chad Jackson, Joey Galloway, Torry Holt, Taylor Price, Chad Ochocinco are just a few high round draft picks and significant free agents that didn’t last long in Foxboro. 

I’m sure Silver will just tell you it’s Belichick’s fault for missing on the draft picks and the other guys were just past their primes. That’s an argument that ignores one of Brady’s few flaws, which is how picky he about who he throws the ball to.

Silver also says that Revis was the only high-profile signing the Patriots made this offseason, conveniently leaving off Brandon Browner, re-signing Julian Edelman, while also making a significant departure from recent years and taking a pure pass rusher with their first-round pick.

This is the storyline that Silver has clearly be enamored with since 2010 – that Tom Brady and the Patriots would be so much better if Bill Belichick would just dish out a big contract to someone like… well, he doesn’t actually have any specific moves that the Pats could’ve made to give Brady what he needs, instead it just remains that nameless, faceless “weapon” that Peyton Manning has in spades.

Here’s the other thing someone as taken with Denver’s offseason approach as Silver clearly is – we’re only five weeks into the season, let’s see how good Denver’s depth looks when injuries strike. Aqib Talib looked great for us in September last year too.

The Patriots have won more games than anyone since 2001. They have had one of the top-ranked offenses every year, and from the way Silver makes it sound, Brady did it almost entirely on his own except for when Randy Moss was here. 

Really what it boils down to for me is when was the last time the team with the best offensive “weapons” won the Super Bowl? Is that what’s really held this team back? If the Pats get final defensive stops in 2007 and 2012 and have 5 Super Bowls, does this perspective still exist?

Or is it just an east crutch for the simple minded football fans who think all you need is a star quarterback, wide receiver and “pass rusher”, who are all paid the appropriate budget-busting contract, to be an “elite” team who wins the Super Bowl every single year?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: tom brady

October 7, 2014 by Mike Dussault

I love the Stork. I love the man. He’s a hard worker. He’s a grimy kind of guy, likes to get down in the trenches. And the good thing is he loves his job. He loves being the center and loves to get in there,” said Vereen. “I was talking to him and I said, ‘I’m looking forward to play with you. I’m glad you’re gonna be in there’ and he says, ‘Shane. You see this ass? Just follow it.’ You’ve got to love it.

Patriots Vereen On Bryan Stork: ‘A Grimy Guy That Loves The Trenches’ « CBS Boston

https://www.patspropaganda.com/i-love-the-stork-i-love-the-man-hes-a-hard/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bryan stork

Bryan Stork Held His Ground vs. Bengals, Patriots Followed Suit | NEPatriotsDraft.com – 2014 NFL Draft

October 7, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Bryan Stork Held His Ground vs. Bengals, Patriots Followed Suit | NEPatriotsDraft.com – 2014 NFL Draft

Stork love!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bryan stork

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Random Post

Will Cardona’s snap speed have any impact on the kicking game? I’ve heard one of the reasons against long FG attempts is that with the distance the kicker has to cover, by the time the snap is down, the defenders are on top of the ball. Will having a snap that gets back so quickly make any noticeable difference in FG attempts?

Wow I never even thought about that but it makes some sense. We’ll see if they’re more willing to try some long ones this year. And how about Cardona getting no credit for just stepping in and doing a great job last night. We always take long snappers for granted until they rocket one over […]

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