emoney_33
Experienced Starter w/First Big Contract
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2005
- Messages
- 5,218
- Reaction score
- 42
Re: Are we not as far as we originallly thought?
This is where I draw the line with your idiocy.
Now adjust for defense, or is that too hard of a concept?
Well Faulk mainly runs the draw, and he averaged 5.4 YPC. I don't think that the draws have gotten minimal yards at all. Plus the fact that the Patriots were able to gain so many yards with a difficult pass defense schedule seems to indicate that there wasn't as much predictability or shotgun struggles as some believe.
The Patriots put up 34 points on the Colts.
The offensive balance is not what won them superbowls. I know it's fun to pretend there's a simple reason or solution or we can look back and mimic the past teams but that's a losing battle. The 2003-2004 defenses were really good. The 2003 offense was kind of bad, the 2004 offense had the monster year of Corey Dillon. It will cost a lot of money to find a RB that would produce that type of year, and the risk of putting so much money on a higher-probability of injury position when you have Tom Brady isn't the best strategy. 2007 was the best team the Patriots ever put together.
I don't think they abandoned the run. They abandoned it in the playoffs because of circumstance (i.e. 24-0 in the 1st quarter).
I think putting the ball in Brady's hands is the best decision you can make so long as you have the weapons. You don't strive to take the ball out of a guy like Brady's hands. He threw 35 times a game this season.
The pass/run splits on the season were 56%-44%. Incidentally that is the same exact splits for the Superbowl champion Saints. The other SB team the Colts had a worse ratio of 62% pass 38% run. It's a passing league, the balance argument doesn't work in today's league.
Interestingly the Saints and Patriots were eerily similar in pass attempts and run attempts. Saints 593/468, Patriots 592/466.
The Ravens game looked terrible and it was, but I trully believe if we had a healthy Welker the entire dynamic of the game changes. If the defense could have stuck together enough in the playoffs we had a decent chance of getting deep.
This team is NOT nearly as bad as some make it out to be. The offense is definitely not something to worry about unless the Patriots shock the universe and do absolutely nothing the entire offseason. The biggest question mark for the offseason is defense IMO. There are quite a few areas where things could turn one way or the other, for example Bodden and the secondary.
The Pats failed to close out games on offensive, that is a fact. Perfect example is in the Indy game, with your reasoning just because they scored 34 points you think their job is done. The fact is that those 34 points meant nothing because they failed to close out the game.
This is where I draw the line with your idiocy.
They arent top 5. You made a statement and I proved it wrong, with facts. Deal with it
Reg. Season
Giants (45+44) new ave. 22.3
Colts (42+35) new ave. 28.1
Eagles (45+40) new ave. 24.6
SD (43+42) new ave. 26.3
GB (48+36) new ave. new ave. 27
MIN (44+38) new ave. 27.7
Saints (48+48) new ave. 26.3
Pats (59+35) new ave. 23.7
Now adjust for defense, or is that too hard of a concept?
I mean, I thought after the Giants Superbowl loss that when Brady sits in shotgun the entire game the DE's can pin their ears back and attack the quarterback, without putting any focus on the run. Personally when I watch any game in the NFL, not just the Patriots, you do not notice the team even with a great passing attack just sit in shotgun, its just too obvious its going to be a pass or MAYBE a draw which will get minimal yards.
Well Faulk mainly runs the draw, and he averaged 5.4 YPC. I don't think that the draws have gotten minimal yards at all. Plus the fact that the Patriots were able to gain so many yards with a difficult pass defense schedule seems to indicate that there wasn't as much predictability or shotgun struggles as some believe.
Even the Saints with their high octane passing attack made Indianapolis respect the run.
The Patriots put up 34 points on the Colts.
The Patriots need to get back to what won them their Superbowls and balance the pass and run.
The offensive balance is not what won them superbowls. I know it's fun to pretend there's a simple reason or solution or we can look back and mimic the past teams but that's a losing battle. The 2003-2004 defenses were really good. The 2003 offense was kind of bad, the 2004 offense had the monster year of Corey Dillon. It will cost a lot of money to find a RB that would produce that type of year, and the risk of putting so much money on a higher-probability of injury position when you have Tom Brady isn't the best strategy. 2007 was the best team the Patriots ever put together.
Why did they abandon the run this year? That could have been the difference between being 11-5 and a first round exit and 13-3 and a possible first round bye.
I don't think they abandoned the run. They abandoned it in the playoffs because of circumstance (i.e. 24-0 in the 1st quarter).
There is no need to have Brady pass the ball 40+ times a game when you have a first round pick at RB who has shown flashes of being a quality NFL running back when given the right amount of carries and other running backs who are capable of getting yards.
I think putting the ball in Brady's hands is the best decision you can make so long as you have the weapons. You don't strive to take the ball out of a guy like Brady's hands. He threw 35 times a game this season.
The pass/run splits on the season were 56%-44%. Incidentally that is the same exact splits for the Superbowl champion Saints. The other SB team the Colts had a worse ratio of 62% pass 38% run. It's a passing league, the balance argument doesn't work in today's league.
Interestingly the Saints and Patriots were eerily similar in pass attempts and run attempts. Saints 593/468, Patriots 592/466.
The Ravens game looked terrible and it was, but I trully believe if we had a healthy Welker the entire dynamic of the game changes. If the defense could have stuck together enough in the playoffs we had a decent chance of getting deep.
This team is NOT nearly as bad as some make it out to be. The offense is definitely not something to worry about unless the Patriots shock the universe and do absolutely nothing the entire offseason. The biggest question mark for the offseason is defense IMO. There are quite a few areas where things could turn one way or the other, for example Bodden and the secondary.











