Uptown
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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.He was on the field @ DetThe other guy that needs to play is Derek Rivers. Annoyed he hasn’t played a single snap of football yet.
MUCH MORE better...Brown and shelton need to play better and stop the run to win. Otherwise we have no chance, no matter what the offense does
The bad decisions were relying on Dorsett to be the Cooks replacement even though there has been literally nothing at this point in his career to show that he was capable of that, signing Patterson at all since his route running is substandard let alone relying on him to replace Amendola’s production, and not seeing injury potentials from a mile away with Britt and Mitchell in spite of the fact that they both have very checkered injury histories going back to college. I mean a lot of us saw that prior to the season but the coaching staff didn’t? Come on now. They didn’t do enough at the position. They know this. The devil is in the details and those details were the amount of scrap heap, chuck-it-at-the-wall-and-see-if-it-sticks transactions at the position before the ultimate desperation move of bringing in Gordon. But they should have done more and the fact that they didn’t has cost them two games now. You can’t give BB the lion’s share of the credit when things are going well without giving him the lion’s share of the blame when they don’t. That’s not the way it works.
We'll see. Edelman coming back by itself (to make no mention of Gordon) will make life easier on all of the wideouts. I personally think Dorsett is a bust but he should have more room to operate with Edelman in the line-up. If he still doesn't produce, cut him loose in the offseason.
The other guy that needs to play is Derek Rivers. Annoyed he hasn’t played a single snap of football yet.
Two more to IR. Just what we needed!
Eh, they haven't exactly played a murderer's row.
Who says that the Pats are actually relying on Dorsett to be the "Cooks replacement", or that they ever intended to? Has he been running primarily Cooks-type routes and failing miserably? Or has he been running routes mostly at the underneath and intermediate level (Edelman/Amendola range)? He has an 86% catch rate on 4.7 tgts/game at a ypc of 9.2. That's where Brady has been getting him the ball, and it most definitely was NOT in Cooks' wheelhouse last season.
So then, who says that the Pats were relying on Patterson to replace Amendola's production?
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WRT Patterson, he's catching over 70% of what's thrown his way. Tape has shown that he's been wide open, and in Brady's field of vision, on numerous other plays where he wasn't targeted and Brady tried to force the ball to Hogan instead. Patterson has been getting open and has clearly demonstrated that he can catch. How "substandard" can his route-running possibly be?
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The Pats "should have known" that Britt, Matthews and Mitchell wouldn't have been healthy enough to make the roster? They should have "done more"? Could they have? Okay, then we should list the WR possibilities they "skipped" - by name.
Who was available - among those WRs who had a more acceptable injury history, AND an acceptable production history?
Who was available to the Pats to sign and during what time frame?
How much would they have likely cost against the cap (currently at $3.55M)?
WRT "time frame", here's the injury chronology:
The Pats didn't finally give up on Mitchell until Aug 6th.
Matthews didn't injure his hammy until the start of the 2nd week of Camp. The Pats signed Decker immediately afterward, on Aug. 3rd (the first "desperation signing", I suppose. Matthews wasn't released until Aug. 7th (with an IR settlement). As of 10 days ago, he was still in the Boston area, working out with Edelman at BC. He tried out and signed with Philly on Sept. 19th.
Britt was still rehabbing and trying to get back to practice as late as Aug. 20th (released Aug. 22nd, just 10 days before cutdowns).
The rest of the "desperation signings" happened after cutdowns, when there were more players available to choose from. They included Darboh, Hansen, Fowler and Coleman.
What were their other realistic opportunities (given cap constraints).
BTW ... Gordon ... was that a "desperation acquisition"? Or was it an "opportunistic" one?
WRT "cap hit" constraints, here's what Mitchell, Matthews and Britt would've cost had they been healthy and kept on the roster:
-- Mitchell's cap hit would've been ~$700k. His release left $144k in dead money, plus whatever his grievance settlement was for.
-- Matthews' cap hit would have been around $700k. His release left $300k in dead money.
-- Britt's cap hit would have been something like $1.2M. He left behind $200k in dead money.
-- Decker's dead money is around $75k, IIRC
Brady has only been ABLE to get him the ball on the shorter routes because he can't get separation on the deeper ones. The INT on Sunday night shows that.
Because Patterson has been tasked with more of the routes that Amendola used to run here. Have you seen him attempt a 7-9 route yet?
Very. And that's a knock on him going back to Tennessee. Brady ignores him even though he's "wide open" and it's been widely commented, most recently by Lombardi today, that it's because Brady doesn't trust him. There are reports going back to training camp that Brady froze him out because he doesn't trust Patterson to be where Brady expects him to be on the field. That's because Patterson's routes have never been precise which makes him a horrible fit in the EP.
Britt and Mitchell. Mitchell just missed the entire year last year and struggled with even getting on the field early in camp. Britt has had a checkered injury history. I give them a pass on Matthews because that's the only one that truly came out of leftfield (hence, why I didn't mention him in my previous post).
Off the top of my head and verifying the numbers after that:
Of all of them, everything considered, I would prefer Brown, Hurns (I think he would be good with Brady throwing him the ball), and Wilson. The Patriots instead went the bargain basement route. And that's not even mentioning the draft.
- John Brown (1 Yr/$5M)
- Michael Crabtree (3 Yrs/$21M)
- Allen Hurns (2 Yrs/$12M)
- Sammy Watkins (3 Yrs/$48M)
- Albert Wilson (3 Yrs/$24M)
Ah, so they were complacent then.
I would say both, however I don't think they touch him with a ten foot pole if the WR position is adequately manned.
If they can play, they're a bargain. The problem comes that they couldn't play and there was never really any indication that they were going to be healthy enough to do so. Now it's both a sunk cost and a wasted cost with the dead cap hits. Meanwhile, the WR corps as its currently constructed, is still among the worst in the NFL.
River played 13 snaps Sunday night. Didn't register any stats.
Yes, it's annoying that, in spite of our expectations, he apparently hasn't been good enough yet to play more than that.
Dude, Dorsett is far from being a bust. Only White has been targeted more times than Dorsett (20 to 19). Dorsett is also only behind White and Gronk in receptions (White 14, Gronk 13, and Dorsett at 12. So he's right in the mix.
Hogan, meanwhile isn't doing very well. He's 7 of 14.
Brady's long ball has never been his strong suit. It's hard to pin it on Dorsett when he was doubled on both deep throws in the Detroit game (IIRC).
So far, he's had a total of 24 receptions for 304 yards in 18 games. That averages out to just over 1 reception per game for 17 yards per game and completely disappeared Sunday night. You can call him a bust or you can call him what you want, but he's been a disappointment. Someone with his speed should be getting open on deeper routes with more consistency.Dude, Dorsett is far from being a bust. Only White has been targeted more times than Dorsett (20 to 19). Dorsett is also only behind White and Gronk in receptions (White 14, Gronk 13, and Dorsett at 12. So he's right in the mix.
Hogan, meanwhile isn't doing very well. He's 7 of 14.
Brady's long ball has never been his strong suit. It's hard to pin it on Dorsett when he was doubled on both deep throws in the Detroit game (IIRC).
So far, he's had a total of 24 receptions for 304 yards in 18 games. That averages out to just over 1 reception per game for 17 yards per game and completely disappeared Sunday night. You can call him a bust or you can call him what you want, but he's been a disappointment. Someone with his speed should be getting open on deeper routes with more consistency.
Brady has only been ABLE to get him the ball on the shorter routes because he can't get separation on the deeper ones. The INT on Sunday night shows that.
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