What happened in the game last night? (1 Viewer)

There were several instances where someone came after Jameis untouched. Man, that's gotta be cleaned up fast.

I'm very proud of Jameis for finding his WR's fast and throwing accurately in the 4th quarter, and proud of mike and Olave for stepping up when the game was on the line.
 
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Again, a lot people trying to point out that Peat was bad or Ruiz was bad or Jameis was bad... Guys, the entire offense was struggling. The defense was very effectively using the crowd noise, their own alignment, and just sound disciplined play to expose the offense and prevent them from doing what they wanted to do. Jameis did take some of those sacks and probably prevented turnovers in the process. As much as it was frustrating at times, it probably kept the game from getting away from the saints and gave them a chance to come back and win.

A lot for pontificating about Winston's past turnover issues without acknowledging that he is playing very, very smart and protecting the ball in situations where he would've previously tried to do too much.

In terms of communication errors, it is nearly impossible to determine from the outside who was doing what. All i can tell you is that communication was definitely an issue. Both units struggled and were being outplayed by the units across from them.
 
There were several instances where someone came after Jameis untouched. Man, that's gotta be cleaned up fast.

I'm very proud of Jameis for finding his WR's fast and throwing accurately in the 4th quarter, and proud of mike and Olive for stepping up when the game was on the line.
Those type of mistakes are easier to correct than trying to correct guys who just gets beat playing the right assignments consistently. The O-Line will get it together. We shouldn’t expect them to be the first 3 quarters bad again this season as long as they’re healthy.
 
they are referencing the sack on the first drive of the second half. I remember watching the replay and seeing McCoy and Ruiz engage the same guy, while Peat slid over to block the same player. I made a thread about it wondering whose responsibility it was to slide the protection over. I'm still not sure what Peat's responsibility was on that play?
That was the play where I pointed out that it was lock slide away. The blitzer used his alignment to stay out of the protection count. He was unaccounted for.

This could have been an error in identification or an error in communication. But people acting like that one play made Peat garbage are getting a little ahead of themselves.

Not to mention, on the 56 yard run by Hill he is who sprung him free. The absence of a perfect game--particularly one where the entire unit/team was struggling--does not make a player awful.
 
they are referencing the sack on the first drive of the second half. I remember watching the replay and seeing McCoy and Ruiz engage the same guy, while Peat slid over to block the same player. I made a thread about it wondering whose responsibility it was to slide the protection over. I'm still not sure what Peat's responsibility was on that play?
Yeah, that sack is almost definitely on Kamara. Just watched it again. Protection slid right, Peat took the 1 tech, McCoy gave a post on the 1 tech and blocked right. Nothing to do with Peat whatsoever.
 
Yeah, that sack is almost definitely on Kamara. Just watched it again. Protection slid right, Peat took the 1 tech, McCoy gave a post on the 1 tech and blocked right. Nothing to do with Peat whatsoever.
I haven't watched that play again yet. Was Kamara out on a route? If that were the case, it would be in Winston/the hot WR.
 
I haven't watched that play again yet. Was Kamara out on a route? If that were the case, it would be in Winston/the hot WR.
No, pretty sure he's at fault. He tries to slip out into the flat on the left, sees the blitzer, stops his route, tries to get back in to block and then looks extremely guilty afterwards. :D

10:43 left in 3rd quarter
 
James Hurst is the worst starting left tackle we have had at the top of our depth chart* in the last 17 years...

We have to go back to the Wayne Gandy - Haslet days to be so barren on the offensive line, I would say maybe even 2004 since we were this mediocre as a whole unit.

* not including backups pressed into injury duty
 
In terms of communication errors, it is nearly impossible to determine from the outside who was doing what. All i can tell you is that communication was definitely an issue. Both units struggled and were being outplayed by the units across from them.
Oline communication seemed really bad but situational awareness seemed really awful as well.

It is as though the Oline was only aware of their own responsibilities and had no idea what backfield protection they were getting. On one play Hurst gives up a sack because he leaves his man to pickup a late outside pressure that Kamara can easily chip and as Hurst kicks out he runs over Kamara. The guy he tried to hand off to Peat (who was already busy) got the easy sack.
 
James Hurst is the worst starting left tackle we have had at the top of our depth chart* in the last 17 years...

We have to go back to the Wayne Gandy - Haslet days to be so barren on the offensive line, I would say maybe even 2004 since we were this mediocre as a whole unit.

* not including backups pressed into injury duty
That crown is Charles Brown's to lose.
But Hurst is a problem.
 
Again, a lot people trying to point out that Peat was bad or Ruiz was bad or Jameis was bad... Guys, the entire offense was struggling. The defense was very effectively using the crowd noise, their own alignment, and just sound disciplined play to expose the offense and prevent them from doing what they wanted to do. Jameis did take some of those sacks and probably prevented turnovers in the process. As much as it was frustrating at times, it probably kept the game from getting away from the saints and gave them a chance to come back and win.

A lot for pontificating about Winston's past turnover issues without acknowledging that he is playing very, very smart and protecting the ball in situations where he would've previously tried to do too much.

In terms of communication errors, it is nearly impossible to determine from the outside who was doing what. All i can tell you is that communication was definitely an issue. Both units struggled and were being outplayed by the units across from them.
Great thread.

What are your thoughts on both lines seemingly getting manhandled up front? Is that a physical/technique issue that may be hard to fix? Or do you think it’s more of an outlier?
 
Great thread.

What are your thoughts on both lines seemingly getting manhandled up front? Is that a physical/technique issue that may be hard to fix? Or do you think it’s more of an outlier?
Could be a little of both, though I'm gonna go back to crowd noise. So on the offensive side, the silent count means that the OL is not getting the jump on the DL that they usually get. Like the DL, the OL is now keying ball movement, whereas in a less noisy environment, the OL knows the snap count and the defense doesn't.

Which is exatly what the Saints defense was dealing with on the other side. If they're at home, they're able to tee off the way the Falcons defense was.

That said, the Falcons were definitely more gap sound on both sides of the ball. They looked like they had really repped the zone run game heavily and targeted the Saints fronts, focusing for instance on "this is how we're gonna combo the 3-tech up to the backer" vs. the 2i vs. the 1-tech, etc. I think having that snap count jump, coming hard off the ball, and the Saints being on the smaller side inside really worked in their favor. Also, as I said before, they were just running zone all game with some fomrational and backfield window dressing. Narrowly focusing a gameplan like that also works in an offense's favor... so long as the point of focus is executed effectively, which it was (if it's not, then you haven't repped the other stuff so you may not be as sound if the opponent throw some different looks at you).

If your zone reps during the week aren't being shaved away by reps of power or counter or whatever else during the run periods, then you have more time to perfect it and cover more situations. It worked really well for the Falcons. But I do think it will be a much different game in New Orleans, where the Falcons won't have those same structural advantages.
 
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