- Joined
- Oct 10, 2006
- Messages
- 76,878
- Reaction score
- 66,861
I just explained why it's a better trade scenario.
:confused2:
Your explanation fell short.
Registered Members experience this forum ad and noise-free.
CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.I just explained why it's a better trade scenario.
I think you're mixing up players with philosophy. Randy Moss forces the team to use a specific philosophy on offense.
I don't know about that. It is a different time where offenses are allowed to get away with much more. Besides, the 2010 defense would have to be close to what the 2003 or 2004 defenses were for the 2003 or 2004 offense to work.
Personally, I thought the 2003 offense was the worse of the Brady era (even possible than last year) and that offense was covered up with arguably the best defense in Patriots' history. I have no desire to go back to that offense. In fact, many of the problems that people complained about last year's offense were prevalent in that year's offense (problems converting third downs, problems scoring, etc.).
Thats just not correct
The Patriot offense has been better with Moss than it was before. Not really close.What I'm trying to say is that the Patriots' offensive system which has seen the most success (not only for the Patriots, but also teams like the Saints who employ 3-4 solid but not spectacular WRs and mix up formations) is one which does not have a #1 receiver. Moss by his nature is never anything but a #1 receiver. So while the statistics and talent of having a #1 receiver is tempting, I do not believe it is in the best interest of the football team as a whole.
One of the Patriots' best games last season was against the Falcons, a week after the debacle against the Jets and when BB took over playcalling from BOB (or so it appeared). Instead of lining up in Gun 0 Out Slot every play and have "throw to Moss" or "throw to Welker" their idea of "mixing it up," BB called a great, balanced offense against the Falcons. There was a ton of play action, some screens, lot of motions, less gun, a lot of Taylor runs (his best game of the year), and even a deep TE touchdown pass to Baker, catching the defense off guard.
The Patriot offense has been better with Moss than it was before. Not really close.
You seem to think that having Moss means we have to call plays differently. Thats just not true.
We can run the Atlanta game plan with or without Moss, but it works better with him, because he must be accounted for.
The value of a strength in an offense is as much intangible as tangible. The ability to do things that do not involve the strength better because the defense is focussed on the strength is what offensive gameplanning is about.
It isn't? Then why haven't we seen them run the ball 35 times a game? Why haven't we seen them use 2 TEs and throw to them instead?
One reason: Because Moss is too good a player not to use him. THAT is the crux of the PROBLEM, not the solution. Everything revolves around getting the ball to Randy, because he's such a good player. So unless you can clone Randy and put five of him on the field at once, you're not going to be able to play any other offense than "throw to Randy."
Making the offense look like 2007 is not the goal. Making the team as a whole look like 2003-04 in 2010-12 is the goal.
I thought you just said he was more than a decoy? Isn't that saying he's a decoy?
In my ideal world, I'd have 16 games a year with an Atlanta-style gameplan, where, like you just said, Moss is a "decoy."
So what you have is a past-his-prime WR, who is a decoy, has one year left on his contract, and little hope of sticking around past the current season. Why wouldn't you try to trade that asset for a more usable one in the long term?
Thats ridiculous.
You want to get rid of Moss because Moss is so good, it would be crazy not to use him?
There are plenty of WRs in plenty of offense that get as many balls thrown to them as Moss. In fact, Welker does.
Its simply wrong to state that our offense is dictated by having to force the ball to the guy we throw to the 2nd most.
By the way, our offense ranked 3rd in yards, 6th in points, and 8th in 3rd down conversions.(1% below 4th) and you want them to give away their top weapon and expect to improve?
Also the last 3 years rank 1st, 3rd and 4th in scoring years in the BB era, so saying we were a better offense without Moss is nuts.
Dude you can't be that out of touch.
We have more than one play in the playbook.
Having Moss on the field makes the running game better because you have to keep the saetydeep. It gives Welker more room tp operate because the D has to put attention to Moss.
That doesn't make him a 'decoy' it makes him a talented WR who ALSO contributes value even when the play doesn't go to him.
Adrian Peterson makes the Minnesota play action better, that doesnt mean he is a decoy.
You are way off the mark here.
Just think about the fact that you are arguing that Moss has no value to us because he is so good it would be stupid to not focus on getting him the ball. Which is it? Does he suck now, or is BB just a moron who is bamboozled into screwing up his offense because the only good play is a Moss play?
Decoys dont lead the NFL in TD receptions.Yes, let's think about it. Moss, because of his ability, dictates either two options:
1) Throw to Moss. --> Doesn't work, defenses will adjust, and force...:
2) Do not throw to Moss/Use as a decoy --> Why not trade him instead of having one year of being a decoy and having him walk?
Great idea, get better by putting worse players on the field.Because Moss is his decoy. Get rid of the decoy and put two similar players on the field. Welker gets less catches but offense becomes more balanced and unpredictable, which is key for late drives and 3rd down/red zone conversions.
Why because you say so? What has happened when teams double Moss all day? We take advantage of it and throw to other receivers and win. You only have to look at game by game stats to realize that if a team trys to take Moss away we do not force the ball to him, we take what is open. You are basically making this part up out of thin air.Its simply wrong to state that there no mentality exists on the team that Randy is too good not to throw the ball to, especially deep, especially when it matters most.
Our offense gets better and our defense gets worse, and its the offenses falut we didnt win a ring?And zero rings, because of games like SB 42, the 2010 Ravens game, the 2009 Jets road game, the 2009 Saints game (the offense was equally as bad as the defense), the 2009 Dolphins road game, the 2007 Ravens game. All games when the defense put together a solid game plan and the offense was not unpredictable or balanced enough to work around it.
Can't we just celebrate Welker's amazing progress in this thread? I don't have any trouble with a trade Randy debate, but this is getting long winded enough that perhaps it should have it's own thread. The return of WW is certainly worthy of it's own thread.
The former is true in the present, the latter will be true in the future.
Can't we just celebrate Welker's amazing progress in this thread? I don't have any trouble with a trade Randy debate, but this is getting long winded enough that perhaps it should have it's own thread. The return of WW is certainly worthy of it's own thread.
| 3 | 1K |
| 18 | 1K |
| 18 | 2K |
| 14 | 4K |
| 13 | 3K |
From our archive - this week all-time:
April 6 - April 21 (Through 26yrs)











