- Joined
- Sep 13, 2004
- Messages
- 15,618
- Reaction score
- 14,861
There's no question that this defense has evolved to the point where it passes the eye test. There's also no question that it wasn't always there. If it had been, BB & co. wouldn't have made the flurry of in-season moves that they did. Over the past few games we've seen the new (e.g. Rowe, Van Noy) and adjusted (Ryan) pieces start to fit together.
For the full-season scoring stat, IMO it's a terrific illustration of the notion of full-team defense with special teams and offense setting up the defense for success. Limiting turnovers, moving the ball even if you don't score, downing punts inside the 20, stopping return men cold...that's all an integral part of scoring prevention, and nobody does it better. All of that + a rapidly gelling defensive unit gives you two straight games without a touchdown allowed. Good stuff.
For the full-season scoring stat, IMO it's a terrific illustration of the notion of full-team defense with special teams and offense setting up the defense for success. Limiting turnovers, moving the ball even if you don't score, downing punts inside the 20, stopping return men cold...that's all an integral part of scoring prevention, and nobody does it better. All of that + a rapidly gelling defensive unit gives you two straight games without a touchdown allowed. Good stuff.












