patriot.de
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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 mentioned it earlier. mario williams is just a shadow of his former himself
Gronk handled him a couple of times. I'd like to see how successful Jimmy Graham would be blocking Mario Williiams (staright up, no chop blocks).I saw a triple team on Wilfork today and it was highlighted on a replay. I can't say I saw one on Mario.
Not a chance. Williams has disappointed, but he's been drawing double & triple teams a disproportionate amount of the time.
Haynesworth was just a bust. Williams might turn out to be more like Peppers, who was quiet for half a season in Chicago.
The Bills real problem is the DC, whose philosophy is outdated.
Nice game, btw.
Did he come in for a work out and physical with the Patriots or did we completely skip him because of the $$$?
Not a chance. Williams has disappointed, but he's been drawing double & triple teams a disproportionate amount of the time.
Haynesworth was just a bust. Williams might turn out to be more like Peppers, who was quiet for half a season in Chicago.
The Bills real problem is the DC, whose philosophy is outdated.
Nice game, btw.
Using the All-22 coach’s film package that is available through NFL.com, Buscaglia broke down every snap and his breakdown of Williams’ performance was glaringly revealing.
The film showed that Williams was all-out double-teamed on just one of the 69 snaps he played. There were three other plays where he was “chipped,” meaning a running back or tight end got a piece of him while he was engaged with a lineman.
As the Patriots were rushing for 247 yards, they ran toward Williams’ side on 11 plays, and averaged seven yards per attempt. He was never double-teamed on any of the runs, regardless of which side they were aimed toward, and on eight of the 34 running plays he was on the field for, he was single-blocked by one of New England’s tight ends.
Hi, everyone. Texans fan on here for the big game Monday night and figured my first post might as well be about our Mario Williams.
Mario isn't an effort guy with a high motor. He plays when he wants to, it seems like. He was always nicked up or injured for the Texans and just never was a consistently dominant player, despite the outrageous potential.
It's true he must be accounted for, but not necessarily doubled up. Bull rushing is abot his only move, and a good OT can simply push him out past the QB, where the QB has plenty of pocket to step up into.
It's rather shameful for a DL toblame a sore wrist for poor play. Anything above the waist just doesn't really count, IMO.
Anywho, Have fun facing him twice a year. NE should be just fine.