drew4008
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2004
- Messages
- 2,366
- Reaction score
- 8
Registered Members experience this forum ad and noise-free.
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.nickw308810 said:Or am I the only one? I mean obviously the guy wasn't up for the task last year, but it was his first year in a complicated system. He made a lot of mistakes but he was becoming a special teams demon in Kansas City. I would believe that BB could turn him into a solid starter for us. Obviously Willie will be missed, but a LB core of Vrabel, Bruschi, Beisel, and Colvin sure doesn't have me panicking.
Probably the best way to judge is to look at the last game in slo-mo where he got a significant number of reps - so that was after a whole season of coaching and Belichick practices and game reps.stcjones said:I honestly don't.......I think that there are "core" and instinctive things that either a guy is doing at this point...or he is not....and not going to. Beisel makes very slow reads......is a POOR tackler......and is often downright lazy (like not continuing to pursue after he has been beaten}.....like the great players do.........I think unfortuneatly he is a bust.....that is probably why the chiefs were in no great hurry to sign him............one man's opinion
arrellbee said:Probably the best way to judge is to look at the last game in slo-mo where he got a significant number of reps - so that was after a whole season of coaching and Belichick practices and game reps.
He made one decent play. When Willie got sealed inside on an outside run around the offensive right side, Beisel slid over from his inside spot and made the tackle after a gain of 4 yards. Since there was no block to interfere with Beisel's movement, my suspicion is that Ted J or Tedy would have slid over and stopped the run for little gain or even a loss. Just my impression.
On the first play that Beisel was in he was late getting to a gang tackle on the defensive right side - but he threw his hands up in celebration.
On the couple times when a blocker got into the backfield and took on Beisel, he was basically blocked back 5 yards out of the play and just stopped without even trying to shed off of the block and head toward the runner..
On one play on a run around the left side of the O-line, Beisel got to the runner as Colvin hooked around behind the end and caught the runner by the foot. As the runner is stretching out to get an extra yard, Beisel actually stands up straight and HOPS behind the runner in order to avoid contact. I've never seen anything so ridiculous even in Pop Warner football.
On one play where Beisel moved on the snap up behind Wilfork, the runner hit the gap right beside Wilfork. Beisel not only did not ram sideways and tackle, he just stood there as the runner went thru the gap and was finally brought down after a couple yards. Beisel never even tried to tackle the runner at any time.
On a goal line stand, the runner hit the line just to the right side of Beisel. Not only didn't he ram over to hit the runner (he had a chancer to force the guy sideways short of the goal line), he actually moved parallel to the runner while the runner crossed the goal line. I've never seen anything so stupid in my life. There was another play almost exactly the same in the middle of the field on another drive.
I slo-mo'd all of his plays in that game and other than the one tackle I mentioned first, he was an absolute bust as far as any contribution.
I can't imagine, after a season of coaching and practices, that if he was so fundamentally opposite to what a linebacker is all about (much less a Belichick one), that any additional amount of time could ever get him even close to being even a marginal linebacker.
fgssand said:So ...with overwhelming amount of thumbs dsown for this guy - Why is he still here? What does BB see in him that we are not?
Assuming he stays - is he working out in Foxboro to develop the body? Can his mind absorb the intricacies of our defense? Can he develop that killer instinct? Will his heart embody the swarming spirit of our defense?
I don't think so, but who knows, remember - it took Tedy B a few years.
I'll side with the give Monty time folks. :rocker:b72s said:I had a similar thread late in the season. Listen he has similar base skills to Tedy in his early years maybe a little lighter.....
I agree he was tenative and may have been overthinking versus playing with intuition.
I am not yet ready to give up yet because it took Tedy a while to get there also.
I think he was embarassed last year at his play and the tough media and snapped a little so he takes pride in his work so step it up
Let us hope he is more comfortable this year and plays more on instinct vs. analysis by paralysis.
BUt he has got a lot to show a lot before people can warm up and hopefully he gets to prove us wrong rather than right...
BelichickFan said:I also think there's a decent chance Belichick thinks he can be a good enough starter because as of now he's a starting ILB with McGinest gone. So unless we sign a veteran ILB or draft a guy who can step right in, Beisel is who we've got.
I might have watched a tape or two last season to reach my conclusions, but thank you for the suggestion. We'll just have to agree to disagree.arrellbee said:b72s, Box_O_Rocks
May I quietly suggest that you really should look at tape of his plays late in the season. I'm not kidding about what I layed out in the analysis of his play the last game.
Video shows something very simply - he doesn't even try. It's really hard to believe, I know. I was really interested last year thinking maybe Belichick had stolen another gem. But there is no hope - you can't coach a guy to try at 102%.
I think I object a little bit (actually, I guess, a lot) to comparison to early Tedy B. Tedy always seemed to try his heart out. What he learned over the years was technique and the lightning quick reads to diagnose what the play was about - then he would fight to be in the right position to make a tackle.
You can't seem to make any other interpretation other than if Beisel is blocked, he regards the play as over for him. He doesn't even try to resist. It's almost unbelievable. He doesn't fight the block, try to slide off, or even pursue if the block is half-hearted. Look at the video.
And to not tackle a runner crossing right in front of him ?? ?? ?? ??
If he doesn't do that after a season of coaching and practice, do you REALLY think any additional coaching is going to change that behavior ?? ??
I think mgteich has the gist of it. No bonuses, so he costs next to nothing to carry thru camp and he's a warm body.
Oh man, that's funny. Who wants to break it to arrellbee?arrellbee said:Box_O_Rocks
May I quietly suggest that you really should look at tape of his plays late in the season. I'm not kidding about what I layed out in the analysis of his play the last game.
| 10 | 2K |
| 6 | 573 |
| 12 | 3K |
| 3K | 183K |
| 8 | 669 |
From our archive - this week all-time:
April 2 - April 17 (Through 26yrs)











