Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Little talk of the HUGE screen TD pass to Turner


CRA

Recommended Posts

That was huge.....and obvious pass interference by Tony G to set it up....

Hometown and HOF player no call.

The more I look at this game, the more it is obvious the better team on Sunday didn't get the win. But if they play like this from here on out.....we shouldn't lose many

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The more I look at this game, the more it is obvious the better team on Sunday didn't get the win. But if they play like this from here on out.....we shouldn't lose many

I agree. But the 24 hour rule is past. Time for the winning streak to start. First up, Seattle.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The personal foul on Godfrey was BS as well. That was textbook tackling. Oh and Phillips was in the game on that screen play and he totally missed Turner, which was his man. The effort by Gamble on that play was mind blowing. I'm talking benched at the end of '10 type of disappointment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yup they just talked about that to Rivera on Moving the Chains(he response was No Comment pretty much).

As for moving forward; consistency is the key. We have been too up and down so far and in order to win many games you can't be laying eggs one week and playing awesome the next. I hope them play the way they are capable the rest of the way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Haruki missed the would-be td saving tackle.

Expecting Nakamura to make a td saving tackle is the problem. I work with a former Panthers safety (not going to tell you which one, because the football team I work for monitors my web access closely) and we were talking today about the last few weeks. He straight up said that Nakamura cannot start in this league. Free Safety's need to have a center field type of mentality where they always know where the ball is going to drop, then the football aspect comes into the scenario where the safety has to go up and intercept or knock down the ball at its highest point.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I will as soon as you withdraw your fandom from the Patriots. Informative threads are great but all of these estrogen and emotion driven threads you start are ridiculous.
    • Will be there tonight and expect nothing from the Canes. They are soft and won't go after anyone, nor will they respond when, not if, Florida starts bullying them. Not to mention Freddie is in net. I fear this will be an ass-kicking.  
    • Is this not a bit contradictory?  Also surely if any of us are smart enough to evaluate what we're seeing in real time, a former NFL QB can at least manage the same.  Especially considering he's basing his analysis on hours (maybe generous?) of reviewing All-22 footage which he can play back over and over again, focusing each time on different position groups, match-ups, progressions, etc. which is simply impossible for a fan to fully assess in real time.  Unless you're actually at the game, we basically only get the QB/O-line in frame during the broadcast and even in that limited window of the field, there is simply too much happening.  I'm usually broadly focusing on Bryce, maybe peeping the footwork (or lack thereof) and just the overall pocket and whether there is any pressure coming.  I'm not able to watch every individual one-on-one o-line match-up on top of it to see who got beat, who didn't pick up a blitz, which o-lineman didn't shift to help double-team, or whatever else. I think the truth is somewhere in between (as is almost always the case).  Knowing the play call, audible, etc. is pretty important when judging individual performances, which is why we should always take PFF grades with a grain of salt.  But yeah we can also get a pretty good overall sense of how a player is performing just from watching the game on the couch on Sundays.  I still think there's a lot of value in a review video like this.  As long as you have the bare minimum media literacy to take the interesting insights while also acknowledging inherent biases from a video like this (i.e. obviously focusing on the good over the bad).
×
×
  • Create New...