- Joined
- Jul 11, 2005
- Messages
- 16,886
- Reaction score
- 31,469
I want to get this out of the way once and for all. For the next 10 days we are going to inundated with replays of the Malcolm Butler interception, with the side bar that this is the single DUMBEST play call in Super Bowl history, which I believe diminishes the play and disrespects the Patriots and their accomplishment.
First of all everyone simple assumes that giving the ball to Lynch was an automatic TD. It wasn't. Now these are some of the things the Seattle OC was thinking about as he made his call. First he saw the Pats make a substitution to a GL defense that was not only one of the best in the league that year, it was designed specifically stop Lynch and Seattle knew it. What few people ever mention is that during that season Lynch had something like a 1 in 6 or 8 success rate on GL attempts that season. Everyone was expecting the run and if it failed, they would still have 2 more chances to run it. In other words, it was the perfect time to try a pass play and that pick play had been successful several times that season.
Sure there was risk, but quite frankly, the risk of a pick was REALLY low, and if you look back at the play, the ball literally sticks to Butler's arm one handed, he almost does a double take realizing it was still in his arm. That Butler successfully defends that pass was probably a 30-40% chance. That he pick it off, was a 1 in a 100 chance. The other CB did a marvelous job keeping the pick guy off of Malcolm and Butler did a great job driving to the ball. But getting the pick was as lucky as the deflection catch that set up the play in the first place
Bottom line, this just wasn't the absurdly dumb call that it has come to be known. There was solid reasoning behind it. Can you question the call? Of course you can. I'd be complaining that there wasn't a hand off fake involved with the play. I've been making that complaint with Josh for close to 20 years, even though I understand why he sometimes doesn't do it, (your QB doesn't turn his back to the LOS, the ball comes out quicker, etc) BUT the point is the play call does NOT come close to being the historically stupid call it's come to be known as by the narrative makers.
It is Butler's and the rest of the defense's play that should be celebrated and NOT the uniformed 2nd guessers who get create the full narrative of that play, and the Play should be considered one the greatest clutch plays in Superbowl history, and NOT one of worst calls, because it simply wasn't. Sean Payton made a worse on last Sunday,
First of all everyone simple assumes that giving the ball to Lynch was an automatic TD. It wasn't. Now these are some of the things the Seattle OC was thinking about as he made his call. First he saw the Pats make a substitution to a GL defense that was not only one of the best in the league that year, it was designed specifically stop Lynch and Seattle knew it. What few people ever mention is that during that season Lynch had something like a 1 in 6 or 8 success rate on GL attempts that season. Everyone was expecting the run and if it failed, they would still have 2 more chances to run it. In other words, it was the perfect time to try a pass play and that pick play had been successful several times that season.
Sure there was risk, but quite frankly, the risk of a pick was REALLY low, and if you look back at the play, the ball literally sticks to Butler's arm one handed, he almost does a double take realizing it was still in his arm. That Butler successfully defends that pass was probably a 30-40% chance. That he pick it off, was a 1 in a 100 chance. The other CB did a marvelous job keeping the pick guy off of Malcolm and Butler did a great job driving to the ball. But getting the pick was as lucky as the deflection catch that set up the play in the first place
Bottom line, this just wasn't the absurdly dumb call that it has come to be known. There was solid reasoning behind it. Can you question the call? Of course you can. I'd be complaining that there wasn't a hand off fake involved with the play. I've been making that complaint with Josh for close to 20 years, even though I understand why he sometimes doesn't do it, (your QB doesn't turn his back to the LOS, the ball comes out quicker, etc) BUT the point is the play call does NOT come close to being the historically stupid call it's come to be known as by the narrative makers.
It is Butler's and the rest of the defense's play that should be celebrated and NOT the uniformed 2nd guessers who get create the full narrative of that play, and the Play should be considered one the greatest clutch plays in Superbowl history, and NOT one of worst calls, because it simply wasn't. Sean Payton made a worse on last Sunday,












