LOLPats Pal Kenny Paradiso With A Bradytastic Riff On A GIF Of The Week
[49ers safety Dashon] Goldson is one of the best safeties in the league at filling in the run game, which makes him susceptible to play action. Tom Brady has thrown the third-most play action passes in the NFL this season, which might be strange to some people, because this team lines up with Brady under center far more than people might think. He’s completing 66 percent of his play action passes with nine touchdowns and one interception, and he rarely get sacked in play action, So, this will be very intriguing in this game. That touchdown pass to Brandon Lloyd last week against the Texans – everyone thought it was a busted coverage, but it wasn’t. It was three tight ends, with hard run action, and the two safeties hit the run action so hard, and Lloyd just ran over the top. That’s something you must defend when you play the New England Patriots.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/49ers-safety-dashon-goldson-is-one-of-the-best/
What the New England Patriots Defense Must Do to Stop the 49ers Offense | Erik Frenz
What the New England Patriots Defense Must Do to Stop the 49ers Offense | Erik Frenz
Great stuff from Frenz going even further in depth on many of the things I briefly touched upon in my Ten Keys article.
Two simple things to focus on: Patriots front seven playing disciplined and keeping track of the dump off passes to running backs and tight ends.
For this reason I think we’ll see less attacking Sunday Night and more two gapping and containment.
Going off script | Matt Chatham/Boston Herald
Going off script | Matt Chatham/Boston Herald
Great stuff from this week’s podcast guest Matt Chatham. Nothing makes me happier than when my amateur football analysis is backed up by someone who’s actually been there/done that.
San Francisco is rolling now with Colin Kaepernick, a track-fast quarterback brandishing a throwing motion somewhere between Byron Leftwich and crafty hurler Eddie Harris from the movie “Major League.” The Niners’ “pistol” offense looks undoubtedly bizarre from a professional football point of view, making you often do a double-take in film review just to remember which team is on offense— but it’s worked for them so far.
It will take a great week of preparation for the Patriots, because this is something you rarely see in the NFL. That said, the net effect is a grindingly modest offensive output based largely on move-the-pocket boot passing, and effective use of play-action crossers and checkdowns.
There are the occasional explosive elements, but most seem predicated off a mental or physical mistake on the edge of the defense, either in rush lane integrity or run force. With the similar Seattle game lessons of not falling prey to those kinds of plays presumably learned, and the near-miss lessons from the Houston game of not putting the ball on the ground themselves, shuttering those two small windows by the Patriots would seem to close off any reasonable paths for a ‘keep pace’ kind of game.
I think a lot of times rookies come in and they’re talented, they’re big and fast. They can run and chase the ball. But a lot of times, they’re just kind of running around out there. As they gain more experience and more understanding of the total defense, and where their teammates are and how things fit on different runs, they play with maybe a little more patience, maybe a little bit more recognition in terms of play-action passes and missed direction plays and things like that. Although Jerod is very good and has been very good at those. But I think certainly you get better at them through time.
Belichick talks Welker, Mayo & 49ers – Extra Points – Boston.com
Mayo has elevated his game to a new level this year…
Brady is the MVP. And arguably, the best ever. My question and my wonder is how is there so much fascination on Peyton Manning as MVP this year? I respect and understand what Manning has done but even this year alone, TB12 is the clear cut MVP. Why the media (specially ESPN) fascination and almost “beatification” of Manning and why the tempered reaction for TB12? Thank you. GO PATS!
I don’t watch ESPN so I don’t know what they’re saying but I have a couple points to make on this topic.
First and foremost let’s see what happens Sunday night. If Brady puts in another performance like he did on Monday I don’t see how the argument can be made for Manning over Brady. The quality of the competition is just so lopsided, when all the other stats are equally comparable.
Second, I think the MVP argument is the most overblown thing in the NFL. It’s trying to determine the most important cog in a 53 cog machine. Who really cares? There are so many ways to determine value. Just tell me who the best is and don’t give me a “yeah but he’s just a system player” argument.
Adapting a system to a player is what smart teams do. It makes you think the only thing you need to make a convincing MVP argument is to have one awesome player surrounded by bums and bad coaches.
“They’d be 0-16 if it weren’t for this guy”. Well what does that matter? Isn’t this a team sport? Why are we getting so worked up over that one argument?
It’s just because MVP has such a connotation to it that this one player is just the absolute best, but really when you boil it down it’s not about that, and in a team sport like football that really doesn’t matter.
Tell me who the best quarterback is in the NFL and I’m happy with that.
Is Vince Wilfork a Hall of Famer? – WEEI | Christopher Price
Is Vince Wilfork a Hall of Famer? – WEEI | Christopher Price
Great piece from Chris Price, and he really nails it on the head with the quote below.
This is where Wilfork will likely suffer with Hall of Fame voters. The bottom line? The Hall likes big men, but doesn’t necessarily tend to reward big men in the middle who don’t pile up big sack numbers. Those who didn’t watch Wilfork over the course of his career will instead look at his statistical line and see a handful of sacks – he had just the 15th of his career Monday night against Houston – particularly when compared to some of the other defensive tackles of his era. Of course, Wilfork has played the majority of his career in a defense that didn’t call for a penetrating defensive tackle, but that won’t matter to voters who didn’t see him play on a regular basis and only look at his final numbers.
It’s really too bad because anyone who has watched the games know that Wilfork was the single most valuable piece for a team that won more games than anyone else over his career.