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analysis

Three GIFs That Defined Patriots Win Over Bengals

October 6, 2014 by Mike Dussault

It was a lot more enjoyable this week finding three plays to GIF that defined the victory over the Bengals. Of course I could’ve just chosen horrible penalty calls but we’ll stick with plays the Patriots actually made.

 photo Cin1_zpsddc527a5.gif

We start with the first play of the game, a 20-yard play action completion to Brandon LaFell. For all the criticism the Pats took last week for trying to pass right out of the gate, this play set the tone for the entire game and gave the Pats their first non-three-and-out first possession this season.

 photo CIN2_zps6653341a.gif

There were quite a few defensive plays to choose from, especially on third down where the Bengals didn’t convert one all day. Here is a key third down stop on the Bengals first possession of the second half. A touchdown drive here might’ve made a game out of it, but the Pats went aggressive with press man and no one could get open. Just watch Arrington attack the receiver at the top of the screen. That disrupts the whole timing of the play. Beautiful work on defense.

 photo Cin3_zpsa799292d.gif

Finally we go with the Gronk’s 17-yard touchdown catch where he looke like the Gronk of old, even as the safety dove at his knees, Gronk didn’t even flinch. Each week Gronk is getting closer to his old self and this play is a reminder what a weapon he is.

Previous Three GIFs:

Kansas City Chiefs

Oakland Raiders

@ Minnesota Vikings

@ Miami Dolphins

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 3gifs, 3gifs2014, analysis, new england patriots

Pats Posits: We’re Not Dead Yet!

October 6, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Well, well, well, so the Patriots don’t suck after all. I’ve been enjoying the afterglow for the last 15 hours and going back to look at the game was every bit as sweet as I thought it would be.

This looked like the Patriots team we’re used to seeing. They played with an edge and though it wasn’t a perfect night by any stretch of the imagination, it’s clear that the 2014 Patriots will be in the thick of the AFC hunt once again.

The penalties were an absolute disgrace but it didn’t even matter. The Pats were ready to steamroll the Bengals despite 12 penalties for 112 yards. Honestly the penalties didn’t even bother me that much –  the Pats were pissed off and I’ll take that edge every Sunday.

The offensive line had an excellent night. The downfield blocking opened up a ton of seams and the result was an explosive ground game that put up over 200 yards after struggling to get more than 3.5 yards-per-carry the last couple weeks.

For a guy we wrote off as “just a center” Ryan Wendell was a godsend at right guard. The quickness and ability to sustain blocks downfield was apparent all night long. Not to mention the pass protection which allowed just one sack. And on that one it was more of a coverage sack as Brady couldn’t find anyone open and Gronk couldn’t hold his block.

And how about Gronk? He’s slowly shaping into that best tight end in the NFL we remember. Kind of funny for all the “Brady has no weapons talk”, I guess everyone forgot Gronk is actually one of the best weapons in the game?

Tim Wright starting to come around as well. As I’ve said before he just looks like the kind of player that is the perfect fit for the Pats, and he’s still not even playing that much – 19 of 84 snaps. 

Brandon LaFell is another one who just seems to fit and Brady seems to be developing more and more confidence each week in him. Is he a downfield homerun hitter? No but he’s a blocking beast and brings size and physicality to the short-to-intermediate zones that are the Pats bread and butter. 

Ridley and Vereen looked like the backs we expect them to be and of course a lot of it had to do with the blocking.

I said it all last week, and here was Darrelle Revis on full display. What a night for him and luckily it doesn’t appear that his injury was anything that will keep him out. That was a “best corner in football” showing last night.

Not to mention how huge getting Alfonzo Dennard back was. It’s great to have one corner who can play press but having that second outside guy who can do it opens up so many doors. I can only imagine what it looks like with Browner in the mix as well.

Kyle Arrington doesn’t get a ton of love, but he’s as good of a slot corner as there is out there. His physicality at the line of scrimmage continues to impress. 

Bounce-back game for Jerod Mayo who looked good stopping the run from the sub defense, one of the big keys for this game. Jamie Collins had a good game as well, as the heavy amount of sub played into his strengths.

He played just 14 snaps but new DL Chris Walker showed up a couple times causing disruption in the middle. He could be a real find with Siliga out.

Chris Jones again showed some positive progress this week, picking up the first sack the Bengals have allowed this year. Now that he can be a rotational player he’s starting to show up both getting upfield and holding his ground.

Pats are starting to get dinged up – Hightower/Ebner were inactive, Easley and McCourty left the game and didn’t return, Chandler Jones was limited with a shoulder injury and Revis left the game with a hamstring issue but returned. How these injuries play out with two big divisional games in the next 10 days will be something to monitor.

Finally I’ll wrap this up with a comment about Tom Brady. So good to see him so comfortable in the pocket. He just had a spring in his step that instantly demonstrated he was on for this one. We can debate who’s elite or declining and all that stuff, but the simple fact is Tom Brady is still really good and still a quarterback you can win a Super Bowl with.

Three GIFs coming later today…

Filed Under: Pats Posits, Uncategorized Tagged With: analysis, new england patriots, pats posits

New England Patriots Gameplan: Week 5 vs. Cincinnati Bengals

October 3, 2014 by Mike Dussault

It’s been a long short-week where just about everything that can be criticized on a football team has been ripped to shreds by every media outlet. The Pats always have some early-season drama but they’ve never looked quite as bad as they did against the Chiefs. 

Now an undefeated Bengals team comes to town, setting the Pats up for another national broadcast dogfight. The Patriots have almost always bounced back after bad losses during the Belichick regime. Can they do it again? The odds have never seemed more against them.

Offensive Gameplan

The Pats did a good job of slowing things down against the Chiefs and focusing on getting everyone on the same page pre-snap. As a result there were less blown plays due to trying to go too fast. That should continue this week, but the gameplan must rely on the ground game and establishing it early. 

It would appear after a week of controversy and back-to-back games in the stands, that Aaron Dobson should be chomping at the bit to get out there. If the Pats can get him involved, especially in a Dobson-LaFell-Edelman-Gronkowski package (take your pick of RB), the Pats offense will have the kind of size they’ve never had.

Defensive Gameplan

Fundamentals. In my All-22 defensive film review I broke down that most of their problems were simply missed tackles, blown contain, or trying to do too much. The young leaders on the defense, specifically Chandler Jones and Dont’a Hightower, have to set the tone. When they do that, good things happen and this defense is capable of being a proverbial “elite” one.

The Patriots are much better on defense than they showed against the Chiefs, and I continue to believe they are just inches away from showing how good they can be. The Bengals have plenty of weapons to challenge the Pats, but if they get Alfonzo Dennard back, and are able to sprinkle some Brandon Browner in, the Pats should be ready to get back to their physical ways.

Five Points of Emphasis

1. OL Continuity: Tough one this week with Cameron Fleming unlikely to play after missing all of practice this week with a “finger”. Does Cannon go to RG now – if so who’s the third tackle/blocking TE? Or how about Wendell who looked okay there in his first non-center action. Regardless I think Stork earned another start and Connolly must keep repping at guard. The only way the protection and blocking will get better is as one unit settles in to playing with each other. That can’t happen with more constant rotation. Keep as many pieces in place as possible and just keep rolling them out there.

2. Commit to the Run: The Patriots have just gotten too cute with their gameplans in recent weeks. It’s like they think this is still the 2011 team that would force teams to pick their poison. Now, they have to pick the poison themselves and jam it down the opposition’s throat. They need the attitude of the run game to establish what kind of game this will be. It can also give the OL some confidence as they get to exert their will instead of sitting back and pass blocking right off the bat. Run early. Run often.

3. Stop Sub Runs: An early-season theme for the Patriots has been getting gashed by the run against their sub defense. They’ve corrected the problem in the past, and need to do so again this year. Facing Gio Bernard is no easy task and he has the kind of speed and elusiveness to give the Patriots defense fits. No question, stopping the run from the base defense is imperative as it always is, but it’s the sub defense, likely with Wilfork anchoring them, that must be ready to stop Bernard. Hightower, Mayo and Collins are key players.

4. Man-handle them: The Pats have sprinkled in some man defense over the first four weeks, but this week is the time to get aggressive with it. The Bengals get the ball away quick, that’s why Andy Dalton has yet to be sacked. Taking away that quick passing game is key. It gives the pressure a chance to get there and disrupts the timing of what has been a very efficient offense to this point.

5. Win: The Pats’ backs are against the wall and now face a good team in a national game. This is what football is all about. Yes, the playoffs are what matter most, but if you can’t enjoy the up-and-down journey of the regular season, you’re missing out. A win over an undefeated Bengals team will completely change the conversation around the Patriots. Let’s just hope it’s not an ugly and/or undeserved victory and that they show consistency and progress on both sides of the ball.

Filed Under: Gameplan Tagged With: analysis, cincinnati bengals, game plan, new england patriots

Patriots vs. Chiefs All 22 Thoughts: Offense Edition

October 2, 2014 by Mike Dussault

The good news about watching the All-22 offense is that they don’t have a lot of plays so it doesn’t take very long! But seriously folks, taking an emotionless look back at what has been haunting us all week really helps. 

Things are never as bad as everyone would have you believe and I actually came away from the re-view with a feeling like this offense will take strong strides soon.

I continue to believe the offenses struggles start with the offensive line and they started in training camp. They are not a coordinated unit yet and the sooner they can stick with a starting five, the sooner things will get better.

I thought the pass protection was better in this game. They still had their problems, but there were plenty of times where Brady had the time he needed. The third quarter sack where Hali went right around Solder was a tough play – Hali got a perfect jump on the snap. Not sure any LT has the quickness to get over on him when that happens.

Connolly looked a little lost, especially when asked to pull. As Greg Bedard pointed out this week, he just hasn’t repped at LG very much and I agree that it shows. He took some bad angles and was a little slow pulling. But I did see him improve a bit over the course of the game.

But what is most troubling to me about the offensive line is their downfield blocking. It’s rarely clean and that doesn’t leave much room for the ball carrier to avoid the free hitter. The backside linebacker made plenty of plays for the Chiefs as the Pats OL just didn’t seem to have the quickness or keep their blocks sustained long enough to open up a big play hole.

Stork was solid outside a couple plays and I think he should get the starting nod again. He earned it. And he is a master of picking up his fellow Patriots off the ground. 

Communication for the entire OL is still not where it needs to be and a lot of the interior pressures were the result of miscommunication by Connolly and the two rookies. That’s understandable. It will get much better with experience.

I thought Wendell actually looked okay at left guard. At least he had some quickness and athleticism to get to the second level. If Fleming is out this weekend could we see a Wendell-Stork-Connolly interior?

Brandon LaFell had one of the few positive days and the more i see of him, the more I understand why the Patriots coaching staff likes him. He’s got size and physicality, and he fits the Pats underneath offensive focus.

Wish Tim Wright could get more involved. He’s another one that looks like a perfect fit for what they do, but we do know it takes time in this offense.

Brady’s first interception seemed just lazy to me, like he was trying to force it. Even if Edelman kept running it still would’ve been picked I think.

Tons of single high safety looks with stacked boxes. Understandable why Brady took a shot to Edelman on the second play of the game. Hopefully when that’s Dobson he can separate a little better. But I also think Brady thought it was press, which Edelman could’ve gotten off of to get free, but the corner bailed just before the snap and already had a running start going down the field.

Garoppolo is clearly a good fit for what the Pats do and it’s a minor silver lining that he got two drives in this one. His release is quick even by NFL standards and that will make him efficient and tough to sack.

Finally, everyone has a theory as to what is wrong with the Pats offense. The simple truth is that the machine isn’t working yet. We can debate which pieces don’t fit or are declining or sub-par, but there are pieces in place to make the machine run far better than what they showed here.

Developing the downfield blocking is a concern, because guys don’t suddenly get more athletic, but as far as the passing game they will be able to protect Tom Brady eventually. Hopefully this weekend. Once that domino falls and becomes consistent, they’ll be back to the kind of offense we expect to see.

Finding that consistency could decide the fate of the season.

Filed Under: Film Review, Uncategorized Tagged With: all-22, analysis, new england patriots

Patriots vs. Chiefs All 22 Thoughts: Defense Edition

October 2, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Missed tackles. Inability to get off blocks. Blown contain. Falling down. Those four things summed up about 90% of the Patriots defensive problems in reviewing the All-22 game film this week.

It was almost a carbon copy of what we saw against Miami, where the players are in position to make plays, to get stops on third downs, but those fundamental mistakes proved the difference.

Once things began to unravel, the problems were hastened by players try to do too much. And their inability to stop the run early put them on their heels and severely hurt the pass rush.

I remain optimistic about this defense. The front seven leaders that are emerging are Chandler Jones and Dont’a Hightower. When they don’t play well, and they certainly didn’t against the Chiefs, the rest of the defense seems to follow suit.

Here are some player specific observations:

Chris Jones made some good plays early in the game and appeared to be returning to form. He had a good pass rush in the first quarter, showing good violence in his hands to knock the offensive lineman off balance. 

Rob Ninkovich hasn’t shown up in many big plays this year, but his ability to set the edge is solid. Chandler Jones on the other hand was up and down setting the edge all night and it eventually got him pulled, though he did appear to injure his shoulder and that could’ve played into the benching as well.

It comes back to DO YOUR JOB for Chandler. He’s trying to beat guys inside instead of setting a hard edge and it came back to hurt him at least four times for big gains. He has to shoulder a good deal of blame in this one.

Dont’a Hightower was up and down as well, and is another guy trying to do too much later in the game resulting in him being out of position due to overaggressiveness. He and Jones must bounce back this week and the rest of the defense will look a whole lot better.

Revis has caught some flack but I think he’s really close to being the player we thought he was. He has perfect position but he’s just millimeters off right now. That will change.

And as for those people worrying about the scheme, it’s the least of their problems. Again, set the edge and tackle and they’re forcing at least 3 more punts in this game easy.

Jamie Collins is not a downhill player inside. He has trouble taking on offensive linemen coming to block him and relies on his athleticism (as he should) to get around them. But he will not defeat them with physicality and thus he gets lost in the wash a lot. In space however, he is very strong and athletic.

A down game for Jerod Mayo who struggled to get off blocks and could possibly seem a step slower than I remember him. He’s never been that savvy in coverage and that problem was once again apparent, though covering Jamaal Charles is no easy task.

Easley saw his first extended action of the year, including time at defensive end, a spot where I don’t think he’s a great fit. Still he was solid and showed ability to set the edge. His pass rush started to show signs of life in this one, including the play below where he was partially responsible for getting Alex Smith out of the pocket. This is so critical for this defense and exactly why Easley was brought in.

image

Bunch formations really gave the Pats a hard time. They showed poor anticipation to defeat them until Jamie Collins got in there on one in the third quarter.

The Pats similarly had no answer for Travis Kelce, which, after practicing against Gronk, seems a little strange.

I think this defense is set to elevate their game in a major way. It really comes down to fundamentals – wrapping and tackling, getting off blocks and playing within the system without trying to do too much.

If they do those things, look out.

Filed Under: Film Review, Uncategorized Tagged With: all-22, analysis, new england patriots

Three GIFs that Defined Patriots Loss to Chiefs

October 1, 2014 by Mike Dussault

Well, there were some hard choices this week as to which stinker plays I chose to represent the atrocity that went down in Kansas City. Here they are in all their non-glory.

 photo KC1_zps298c77de.gif

This first one set the tone for the night to an extent. Close ball game early in the second quarter with a manageable third-and-two on the edge of field goal range. They try to run a sweep that gets BLOWN UP, especially my boy Stork in a “welcome to the NFL” moment. No sustained blocks, no push, and the Pats are punting.

 photo KC2_zps9ef05ec2.gif

This second one comes on third down of the Pats first possession of the second half. A critical situation where they could’ve gotten off on the right foot to actually make it a game. What do they do? Take a sack and a fumble. Luckily Solder somehow recovers it, not that it really mattered.

 photo KC3_zpsdc96786e.gif

Finally comes a running play that was pretty much how it went this night. Dont’a Hightower looks like he should’ve blown his knee out and Chandler Jones gets completely sealed off, which happened a lot this game. Not to mention a missed tackle by Wilfork. This play sums it up – defense is right there to make the plays, they just don’t make them and the result is a big gain.

Previous Three GIFS

Oakland Raiders

@ Minnesota Vikings

@ Miami Dolphins

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 3gifs, 3gifs2014, analysis, new england patriots

Pats Posits: Big picture problems

September 30, 2014 by Mike Dussault

It’s going to be a rough week Patriots fans. Everyone will have their theory about what the root of the Pats problems are. 

Tom Brady doesn’t have enough weapons. There’s no deep threat. Belichick the GM isn’t helping Belichick the coach. They shouldn’t have traded Logan Mankins. The play calling. You’ve heard them all by now and it didn’t take a blow out to make any of them definitively true.

On defense it was pretty simple, they weren’t ready to play. They were out-coached. Blown tackles started them off on the wrong foot, over compensating with over-aggressiveness just made it worse, and things snowballed from there.

Offensively the protection was a bit better but the blocking still looks messy and out-of-sync. The running game is all but ignored. And in a recurring theme, teams are just stacking the line of scrimmage because they don’t think the Pats offense can beat them beyond seven yards. 

Thus the box is stacked for the running game, and any receiver who catches a short pass is immediately killed if he doesn’t get immediately to the ground.

The defense still has potential. They were way to sloppy last night and that is a concern – not that they don’t have the talent, but it seems almost as if they think they don’t have to earn it every game. Once they start playing like they have to earn it every down, they’ll be pretty good. There’s too much talent for them to be as bad as they were last night.

Offensively, the concerns are real and have been for a while. It’s as if they just can’t get our of their own way to get this offense to where it needs to be. Everything seems overthought on offense. They can’t put two good plays together at this point.

The hard part is that after a quarter of the season you should know to an extent what you have and I can’t say for sure what the Patriots have on either side of the ball. 

I tend to think the defense can and will be okay, but I have real concerns about the offense that run deep and have for a while now. Pointing out individual players seems like a waste because everyone is at fault.

My only prescription? Find the best OL combo and stick with it. Establish a level of trust from Brady because he doesn’t have that now. Lean on the running game more. Get Dobson in there and do whatever they can to pull some coverage away from the line of scrimmage.

Ignore the noise this week. There’s plenty to be excited about this weekend with an undefeated team coming to town on national TV. Things look bad right now, but one thing I’ve learned is to never count the Patriots out until their season is over.

The season isn’t even close to over.

Filed Under: Pats Posits, Uncategorized Tagged With: analysis, new england patriots, pats posits

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What are your opinions on Hightower and his role in the upcoming season? Mayo, Collins, & Hightower looks like a very viable linebacking core on paper but how will it translate on the field.

I think Hightower slides to middle linebacker, Collins plays the strongside where he can do some covering and some blitzing and Mayo stays at weakside where he can use his speed to make that majority of the tackles. I really liked how Hightower came on at the end of the season and I think he […]

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