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The Patriots have faced the Bills, Bucs and Jets.
Which of those teams has an offense right now?
You can't spell offensive without offense.
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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.The Patriots have faced the Bills, Bucs and Jets.
Which of those teams has an offense right now?
Geno Smith passed for over 300 yards yesterday and the Jets' offense scored 27 points.
EJ Manuel passed for 296 yards and the Bills' offense scored 24 points in week 2 against a team that shut out the Giants yesterday.
It's not like the offenses the Pats have faced have done as bad as they did vs. the Pats in their other two games. In fact, each team the Pats have faced this year have had their worst offensive performance so far this year against the Patriots. All three offenses scored their fewest points in a game vs. the Pats.
Huh?!? Look at Twitter and other boards and even some on this board, there is a very real and decent size segment of the Patriots population down on this defense because they are beating no one.
We don't know how this offense will perform against an elite offense, but the offense has been great thus far. I guarantee you if the Pats defense does well vs. Atlanta it will be that White and Jones are both hurt and Stephen Jackson is out. And then if they do against the Bengals, it will be Dalton sucks.
It's not. I'm cautiously optimistic right now, but I recognize that Matt Ryan and Drew Brees are a step up from Geno Smith and E.J. Manuel. The defense doesn't have to "shut down" it's next three opponents. I would be ecastic if they did, but they don't HAVE to do that. All they have to do is slow those opponents down better than the past defenses were able to do against upper echelon quarterbacks.
Huh?!? Look at Twitter and other boards and even some on this board, there is a very real and decent size segment of the Patriots population down on this defense because they are beating no one.
We don't know how this offense will perform against an elite offense, but the offense has been great thus far. I guarantee you if the Pats defense does well vs. Atlanta it will be that White and Jones are both hurt and Stephen Jackson is out. And then if they do against the Bengals, it will be Dalton sucks.
It's not. I'm cautiously optimistic right now, but I recognize that Matt Ryan and Drew Brees are a step up from Geno Smith and E.J. Manuel. The defense doesn't have to "shut down" it's next three opponents. I would be ecastic if they did, but they don't HAVE to do that. All they have to do is slow those opponents down better than the past defenses were able to do against upper echelon quarterbacks.
Geno Smith faced the Bills yesterday. That's the same Bills team the was missing its CB1 and S1, and then lost its CB2 during the game.
Yes, if you ignore what you've seen from the Bills offense, you can pretend it's a good offense because its best game was a one point win, at home, against another 1-2 team who's coach is already on the hot seat. Come on.
Again, come on. Your making complete non-points and acting as if they mean something. The defense looks better, but we won't know how much of that is valid, and how much is a product of playing 2 rookie QBs in their first couple of games, followed by a QB who's struggling big-time and lost his top 2 receivers during the game, until it plays against offenses that are actually playing well. That's just the simple truth.
Never said either were good offenses or even average offenses. I am just stating both offenses have produced respectable numbers this year against other defenses.
Non-point? How is it a non-point? Every single offense we faced has also faced the Jets' defense (other than the Jets obviously) and everyone thinks the Jets' defense is great right now. The fact that every offense the Pats has faced this season has had it's worst game against the Pats means something. What it means may be different five weeks from now than it does right now, but it is the only measuring stick we have at this point.
I know that, people will always be critical, didn't deny that.
The bolded sentence makes no sense, I also agree there will be excuses ('you beat up a 1-3 team!') next week. None of this says the D is at 04 or even 07 level, they played three horrible offenses and that is fact. You are in damage control mode, reaching for a reason to overrate the defense.
Indeed. I don't see how a "wait and see" approach is bashing, under the circumstances.
Yeah, that's the thing. People are praising the Dolphins defense, but they still gave up 23 points to Atlanta and 20 to Indy. The Falcons had 377 yards of offense and the Colts had 448 yards of offense. The Dolphins defense didn't shut down either of those offenses. They made some key stops at key times, but both offenses moved the ball on the Dolphins' defense.
If the Pats' defense does something similar, I would consider it a very good day for the defense. Not because I have low expectations from the defense, but that is what good defenses in the NFL do against good offenses these days in the NFL.
The Patriots have faced the Bills, Bucs and Jets.
Which of those teams has an offense right now?
But that's completely meaningless without context. Hell, the whole point of "but we won't know until we see a better offense" is to point out that the context matters.
The answer to your question is obvious, and you know that already. Look, you made a really bad post. It happens. Just let it die.
I don't know about that. Geno Smith is Jeckyl and Hyde, but at times he is a very good QB.
But then again, Jake Locker, Kevin Kolb, and Joe Flacco aren't a murder's row of QBs (as I already said) and the Pats weren't able to shut them down.
A successful day for the defense, to me, would be to hold Atlanta near the total yardage that the Dolphins did or less. Somewhere between 330-370 yards with around 17 points on the board and a turnover or two. That's not out of the question, especially with a running game that's missing their primary threat and a TE that's getting up there for the passing game to lean on, should Julio be taken out of the game by getting doubled. It's if Atlanta goes over 400 yards of total offense and puts up 24 or more points that I'll begin to worry. I'll start there and take those projections on to Cincy and New Orleans.
I like getting Matty Ice in week 4 - the pass defense has enough real game action together to figure things out and he's like the mid-term exam after three quizzes.
The fundamental differences between heading into week 4 this year over last year are 1) the pass rush is noticeably better and we're already seeing more stunts and disguised looks at the line even when they don't blitz and rush four, and 2) the CBs are where they are supposed to be and looking for the ball on completions and incompletions alike.
Last year, this board was blowing up with complaints about how vanilla the pass rush looked eight and nine weeks into the season. With Kelly in the middle with Vince along with Ninkovich and a second-year Chandler Jones, the looks at the line of scrimmage are different from play to play. We do not know how effective that is against a smart and experienced signal caller - we'll find out next week and two weeks later when Drew Brees comes to town. My guess is that looks are disguising the rush packages and the coverages just fine, but we don't really know yet.
Last year the CBs were getting burned and the safeties were out of position on almost anything thrown between 15 and 40 yards. That is not happening this year. Arrington is lights out against whoever is in the slot, and Dennard and Talib are muscling their guys up the field, and get their heads around when they sense the ball is in the air.
Everyone has to remember the repeated plays last year when McCourty and Cole, or Moore or Dowling were getting burned and picking up penalties for not looking for the ball. Dowling and Moore are gone, McCourty is a safety, and I don't remember seeing Cole on the field except on special teams. Dennard and Talib are a completely different story.
...Last year...
Just to piggyback off of two words in your post, and not the whole thing:
Last year is actually an excellent example. The first two weeks were against the Titans and the Cardinals, and the Patriots held them to a combined 33 points.
Then they faced the Ravens in week 3 and gave up 31, followed by giving up 28 to the Bills, and people saw that it was mostly the same old defense.
People have seen this before. They want to know that the story's going to be different moving forward. I don't see any reason to blame them for that.
You are talking about irrelevant points.
The Pats have held three opposing offenses to 20 points and you are comparing them to two opposing offenses (which everyone knew were just as bad as the three the Pats have faced this year) to 33 points.
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