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GB @ NE rewatch thread


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I don't know why they didn't go back to it for the rest of the game, except on a handful of snaps

Probing, time of possession and adjustments. While they have gone longer stretches of hurry up in the past, recently (last couple years) they've completely morphed the game plan not just across the game or the half, but series to series. Spread hurry up series one, power running two and three TEs the next.

To me, that better exposes the other team's complete game plan on defense, allows a focus on a weak point exposed across the entirety of a defense's three levels, and forces the coaching staff on the other sideline to pay attention to both phases (example McCarthy calls the plays on offense for GB).

Maybe I'm being overly full of praise, but its another example of creating stress across an ENTIRE organization just to execute a football game.
 
That what makes Gronk so good in the seam and on the goal line. Hoping the team now has two guys like that now!
Depends on the back. Rest should help the ankle get better. If the back is shot, Gronk might be done unfortunately.
 


That's one of his better articles- more on the chess game and how Rodger's knowledge of the game actually helps our defense get better with communication.

Direct link to the article:

Tom E. Curran

The desired scenario for every team as a season progresses is … progress. Going against Aaron Rodgers on Sunday night provided another chance for growth, said Devin McCourty. And that growth often comes after plays that don’t go well.

On Monday night’s Quick Slants, Devin and his brother Jason McCourty discussed the 51-yard play early in the second half where Aaron Rodgers found Marquez Valdes-Scantling getting inside Jason McCourty on a deep post.

Jason said after the game that, realizing Rodgers was calling for enhanced protection against the blitz the Patriots were showing meant he should have backed off on the third-and-6 play. Jason initially thought the pressure would get there but when he brought players in closer to the formation, it was a sign he knew what was coming and that the blitz might not get there.

But after the play, Devin said he believed it was his mistake.

“I got mad because we’re up there moving around and I realize we should have checked out of that defense,” said Devin. “I was looking at (Rodgers) and he was talking and pointing and I’m realizing he’s figuring it out.

“Right after the play, I looked at (linebacker Kyle) Van Noy and said, ‘We should have got out of that.’ And he said, ‘Yeah, you’re right.’ (Rodgers) knew what was coming.”

After nine games, McCourty said, he has a better feel for what everyone from front to back can deal with on the fly and how to make adjustments against a quarterback who’s figuring things out.

“We have key guys who understand what we want to do as a defense, they understand our concepts and what we’re in and can check to that’s easy for everybody and it’s been a good mesh,” he explained. “KV and (Donta Hightower) will always handle the front and I’ll only try to check into things that are easy for them to check the front and are easy for us on the back end to check into as well. That was a learning experience going against a guy like that in that situation.”

Earlier in the game, a similar “zero coverage blitz” (no safety in the middle of the field providing help) got home with Devin McCourty getting a pressure and forcing a Rodgers throwaway. But the cat-and-mouse game was on all game, said Jason McCourty.

“Early in the game, Dev and (Duron Harmon) were disguising something but they got out right before (Green Bay was) about to snap the ball. (Rodgers) saw it and he held the snap (as they backed off) and he laughed at them,” said Jason. “His poise and his knowledge of the game, he is under control and understands everything that’s going on.”

Even though Jason gave up the 51-yarder, he had a terrific game otherwise with two pass-breakups downfield and a sequence when he was covering Randall Cobb on consecutive plays that led to a Green Bay punt.

“His play showed the character of our defense,” said Devin. “He gives up a 50-yard play, they come back at him, he takes care of the bubble screen for no gain. Third down, they come back at him he has Cobb covered, incomplete, we’re off the field. That to me was that type of game. We were gonna miss on some plays but we had to hang in there.”

Jason McCourty joked that he’s been able to make plays because he’s the corner getting help. Stephon Gilmore, he said, is out there 1-on-1 and shutting receivers like Green Bay’s Davante Adams down.

“He’s definitely the best corner in the league this year,” said Jason.
 
Besides Brady White has been the most important & versatile piece on O. He's basically turned himself into Edleman you can hide behind an OL/backfield. Brady's binky, threatens mof, sidelines & downfield on wheel routes.




 
I started my re-watch (I saw it first live) and one thing I wanted to see was why Joe Thuney was barking at the ref after the Pats 1st FG and what I think I saw was a Packer lineman basically dive headfirst into him and knock him to the ground. I guess that would tick me off too. :)

Also, on the ejection, which I didn't think was warranted, the ref announced on the field that he was ejected. NBC cut off his mic before he said that, so the broadcast booth and the TV audience didn't hear it. We all heard it in the stadium.
 
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It looked like it was "caught" but the Packer defender stripped it out. I thought this was a great play by the defender and not necessarily a drop by JE.
It was. Alexander has been on fire all year.
 
nice tape on CP's simple big runs .
apart from one similar big play he struggled to find running lanes vs BUF (16 yds on 9 “rushes“ w/o that play) . so Josh & OL made them as obvious as possible. great job by all involved but this of course also means that it is not sustainable RB solution for long period of time. Not that it was ever meant to be with health at the position hopefully getting better . but remains to be seen how much they can use it as gadget or when needed against better prepared teams with tape now available..




nice add. by Chatham

 
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So was it a misguided pass by Brady or a bad drop by Develin?
 
That drive makes it clear that they were trying to catch the personnel they wanted on the field and make them have to burn a timeout in order to substitute. They also wanted to establish the run as a threat and build some of their play calls/play action off of that later on. I wouldn’t mind seeing something similar in other games, where they script around 10 or so offensive plays for the first offensive possessions of each half and move at light speed.

I would like them to have a several play script they throw in somewhere in the second half when they get the personnel matchup they want and run it very fast. Timeouts in the second half can mean the difference between winning and losing a close game.
 
That was roughing the kicker. Sorry NBC, your hired rule interpreter is wrong. Slow that video down and there is plenty of contact to the groin area of the punter's plant leg - his plant leg knee almost buckled. And it was a hard hit, not merely "running into the kicker".
 
It's funny that TB, who's always complaining about receivers giving up on their routes, gave up on his downfield "blocking" and then sort of picked up again once he realized the play was continuing.

It looked like Brady was hoping the pass was to him.
 


combined with pass rush “exactly“ like BB wants - at the start of the below clip:
- pressure in the middle
- ends folded
- we hit them, we collapse the pocket
- good eyes .. running him out of bounds

good to see Calyborn getting the hang of it better and better


 
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Flowers & Wise inside, and Rivers (in a perfect world) & Clayborn outside, is our likely best bet to provide the complete & complimentary pass rush that Bill prefers. I began noticing that formation a bit more often during the GB game than I have during previous games. I still have the Buffalo game on my dvr, so I'll try to re-watch it, especially during Anderson's & Peterson's pass attempts.
 
Flowers & Wise inside, and Rivers (in a perfect world) & Clayborn outside, is our likely best bet to provide the complete & complimentary pass rush that Bill prefers. I began noticing that formation a bit more often during the GB game than I have during previous games. I still have the Buffalo game on my dvr, so I'll try to re-watch it, especially during Anderson's & Peterson's pass attempts.

I've been trying to gauge how fast they get into the backfield or how quickly they collapse the pocket.

It has gotten a lot better since week 1. I think Stafford probably broke an average maximum time to throw record. He literally had all day.
 
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