I didn't get a chance to see the first TD that he allowed, due to the coverage of the CLE/DAL game in OT which pissed me off more than I care to admit. From all accounts though, he was supposedly right there with his man from what I understand--which is obviously a very good thing...
Well it didn't go exactly like that. He was very close to his receiver but made a cardinal mistake by letting the receiver undercut him while he was very close to the back of the end zone and an overthrow was basically out of the equasion.
But he himself was the first to admit that his technique was poor on that play.
Other than that, I know that he has propably gotten some heat in here, but his outside technique impressed me. Even though many people in here said that his interception "wasn't him making a big play", it was actually caused by his good technique. He had outside and over the top responsibility on (Wayne?), with 2 guys covering the zones underneath, and when Luck tried to throw over the underneath coverage and to his receiver, Talib was in perfect position to get the INT on the overthrown ball. His job wasn't to play lockdown there, just to make sure that sideline/over the top throws were unavailable.
Also his awereness of the QB and his actions was awesome compared to what our other CBs can do.
His ability to regulate the cushion fluidly was also a positive. In fact when I went to see the game again, I noticed that most of the times when Luck had his coverage as his first read, Talib closed down the receiver and Luck had to look elsewhere or wait for the coverage to fail (which didn't happen on those occasions) until he was forced to throw away.
Also his tackling looked better than I'm used to with our secondary.
But he did make a few mistakes on the second/third read throws, when he was on a slow developing route and couldn't follow his receiver throughout his route due to a misstep (he had 3 slips in the game), a poor judgement call (bad read on the QB) and just falling behind. But obviously he wasn't in 100% game condition.