Great post.
As you say, BB has proven himself to be adaptable over time. Nothing is absolute. The Pats have proven from 2007-2011 that they could build a tremendously explosive and productive offense. But no matter how prolific the numbers, it has been an offense built around a limited number of impact weapons, and it has been too easy for playoff-caliber defenses to stop those weapons when it counts the most. Injuries haven't helped (Welker's ACL tear, Gronk's ankle), but fundamentally it's easier for a good defense to stop an offense built around 2-3 great players than it is to stop an offense built around 5-6 very good ones. Again, it's heresy around here, but I think it is a fundamental mistake to target any single player as much as the Pats have targeted Welker. The goal should be to create mismatches and find the open man, whoever that is. Spreading the ball around more will create more mismatches and more open opportunities. Remember when Tom Brady's "favorite" receiver was always the guy who was open? That seems a long time ago.
The Saints have provided the blueprint and an existence proof that this approach works. It is cost-effective, it is less dependent on any individual player and therefore more resistant to injuries, and it is very hard to stop. Even the 49ers' defense, which was top notch last year, struggled against the Saints in the playoffs. The Saints lost because they had no defense, not because their offense was shut down.
I think your comments about the role of the scat back in the Saints' offense is important. I've been screaming for more involvement of the RBs in the offense since 2009. The Saints have done a brilliant job of integrating "flex backs" like Reggie Bush, Darren Sproles and Pierre Thomas into their attack. I think that adds a dimension which makes the offense almost impossible to stop, and it's something that I strongly hope the Pats will do more of with Ridley, Woodhead and especially Vereen. I was a big fan of adding a guy like Forte (unlikely) or Doug Martin because I thought they would complete the offense, but there should be enough talent in the backfield if the Pats are willing to actually use it.
I think that all of the moves in the offseason are a strong sign that BB is moving in this general direction. He's seen his record-setting offense sputter in the playoffs against the Ravens and Giants last year and against the Jets in 2010.
Thanks same
Welker is amazing, but you could be just find with a lance moore type. I love Welker, Ive even got his jersey,lol. Guys like him are one in a 1000's. Like Thomas, a nobody, who's is to slow to be a running back.
Ive always thought that running back was the 2nd hardest position on the field. The main reason is that RB's have to have a ability from birth that can't be coached to be good or great.
If you don't have perifial vision, or whatever the intangible is to find an opening or make people miss in a sea of bodies trying to take your head off, your never going to have it.
The ability to feel your way threw the defense without seeing or thinking is not a common ability, and Ive noticed speed has nothing to do with the RB position, and over training a RB can actually hurt this naturally born ability. speed is over rated.
When you take the ball and hit the hole its less than a second. You can't see anything really. You feel your way threw and just instinctively know what angles to take or where the enemies are in space around you. Its mostly an instinctive position.
They also need to be tougher than anyone on the field, and have and uncanny motor or drive to constantly hit a brick wall, get back up, and still think no one is going to stop you.
Going from college to the NFL must be very difficult. The instinct in your head has to change to account for bigger and faster guys in the secondary. You might still feel them, but are surprised by how fast they get to you, close angles you thought were open, and that they can even catch you from behind must be a shock,lol. It would have shocked me.
Ive notice RB's that get confused in space in the NFL typically take on the bruiser approach, smashing into a enemy, and hoping to put him down to get a open lane, instead of knowing the angles. Or like Bush, over juke at wrong times. Thomas just has it. Thats a running back. Welker just has it.
Yeah, the NFL defenses know your guys, and double covering them and leaving Chad or Branch one on one isn't a problem for them. I think most have to ask themselves why did Brady throw into double coverage to welker at all in the SB game?
Thats the telling part. He was covered pretty well, and thats a risky throw.
I think he had no option. Dropped passes, and no one open or he had confidence in. No back field RB to screen to, pretty much nothing.
This is pretty telling
Offenses
2006
NO #5 Passing #1 Rushing #19
Pats #12 Passing #12 Rushing #12
2007
NO #13 Passing #3 Rushing #28
Pats #1 Passing #1 Rushing #13
2008
NO #1 Passing #1 Rushing #28
Pats #8 Passing #12 Rushing #6
2009
NO #1 Passing #4 Rushing #6 ( way more balanced and what SP was shooting for)
Pats #6 Passing #3 Rushing #12
2010
NO #11 Passing #3 Rushing #28
Pats #1 Passing #11 Rushing #9
2011
NO #2 Passing #1 Rushing #6 ( same #1 rating created by runs)
Pats #3 Passing #2 Rushing #20
Its hard to define our run game because we screen from the back field so much, but interesting stats. I agree tho. We have a lot of players that can fill injuries. The Flex back is essential in todays NFL. Its creates a dimension the defense has to deal with. Bush did nothing in NO, he was a decoy, and if you ignored him, we would pass to him in the flat. Forcing you to cover him with your best LB and FS. Which opened the run up the middle, as bush pulled the guy off to the side.
People that don't believe in a solid RB core are in the dark ages of pass first offense.
RB are WR's now, and they kill blitz, and are pass blockers. A great RB is needed probably more than a elite WR in my book.
Id rather have a thomas or sproles on my offense than a Moss. If Brady does not have welker or gronk open, dump to thomas or spoles. rinse and repeat. 5 yard, 10 yards, 4 yards. Defenses get tired of that. They stop blitzing. Allows you to dictate the game. Addai made me think bb is following this train of thought.
He has the instinct, but probably not a good runner anymore, but a great pass blocker, and a seasoned screen play guy. He's a dump off, I think. For cheap I think addai is for passing plays as a relief valve.