This is what perplexes me, our trio of CB is as good as there is in the league, yet it seems like we don't take advantage of it enough. Denver has a PI machine in Moss, yet they leave him on an island almost exlusively and they send extra rushers all the time to speed up the QB. I just don't see this type of creativity on the defensive side of the ball.
I'm under the impression that it's our LB/Safeties that are ultimately failing in zone. We also lack the talent to rush the QB often. It seems our current defense is moreso a product of limited personnel.
However, it's also really important to remember. If your primary run defenders are out, it limits you in other areas. You're putting more on the shoulders of everyone else.
Kuhr really needs to work with his safeties and LBs about coordination and what they're seeing pre-snap. If not everyone is on the same page, you're gonna look really dumb in the NFL on defense. I think we're seeing some of the limitations of Kuhr's interim-coaching here, I would've liked these miscomms to be ironed out.
On an offensive note, the article @SVN posted was interesting with this tidbit:
To answer the blueprint question, the Bills essentially ditched playing single-high safety coverages after Maye diced them up in the first half (4-of-5, 73 passing yards, 17-yard scramble). After playing a 42.9% single-high rate in the first half, the Bills played 86.7% of Maye second-half drop-backs in two-high safety coverages, mixing in cover-two (backside match), two-man, and some cover-six (quarter-quarter-half), which gave the Patriots some problems.
Sounds like the Bills wanted to do two things in that second half: never give up the big play and confuse Maye with hybrid schemes and disguised coverages with the likes of Cover-Six. In fact, it makes sense to attack our offense this way, no? If I know Maye is likely to miss something in the intermediate because the team really likes the deep, employing a defense that is susceptible to the intermediate is less of a gamble. Furthermore, with Maye still getting used to the NFL, Cover-6 puts pressure on the QB to determine if he's looking at 2/4/6, and then make the right decision. Would that decision be made post-snap?
I'm not an X's/O's person, but I'm trying to get better. If anyone thinks I'm getting it wrong, please chime in.