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Ross Tucker: Why the no huddle
Ross Tucker: Why the no huddle
I had been thinking about writing an article about the no huddle when I saw this one pop up today. The no huddle makes perfect sense for the Patriots. You have Brady. You have receivers that he trusts to make the right reads and get on the same page with him quickly. And they have they have the kind of versatile personnel that can run any kind of play.
Remember in 2009 when Rex Ryan had just taken over the Jets and the Patriots came out in week two running a no huddle with trainers and backups holding huge cards with play codes on them to try and get everyone on the same page? That’s what you have to do if you want to run the no huddle and you have Joey Galloway and rookie Julian Edelman instead of Deion Branch and Wes Welker.
As Eric Mangini said on WEEI last week the only way (repeat ONLY WAY) to get Brady off his game is confuse him. Because if he knows what you’re doing, you’re dead. The no huddle doesn’t give defenses time to confuse Brady. It doesn’t allow teams like the Jets to all be up walking around, disguising their intentions. They have enough to deal with just trying to get lined up and catch their breath.
I don’t know how much of the no huddle we’ll see in the coming games against the Bills and Raiders, but I know for sure we’ll see it a lot against the Jets.
“I equate it to the offense’s version of ‘blitzing’ the defense,” Saints coach Sean Payton said on Sirius XM NFL Radio on Monday morning, adding, “It allows the offense to change and dictate tempo, be unpredictable and thereby make the defense uncomfortable.”
Offensive coordinators are tired of trying to react to all of the different blitz variations that defensive coordinators concoct every week. They want to turn the tables and make the defenses adjust to what they are doing.
As I’ve started scouting the Bills I have to say I’m concerned about this one. In no particular order:
- Pats have beaten them 15 straight times, one of these times it has to go the Bills way, right?
- Bills are 2-0, playing confident, and offensively clicking on all cylinders.
- Bills have an excellent assortment of weapons, including two tough running backs, a big receiver, and a Wildcat/gimmick guy (Brad Smith) who is familiar with the Pats.
- The Bills have nothing to lose and should play accordingly.
- Winning two of your three away division games in the first three weeks of the season is a major accomplishment and would put the Pats in the driver seat for the AFC East early.
- The Bills seem to excel at what has killed the Patriots most over the past few seasons: passes to the running backs, a quarterback who can scramble when necessary, and an assortment of gadget plays.
- The Bills have new uniforms that I really like. Don’t underestimate a team that looks good, because you know the saying… “Look good, play good”.
- Winning this game would mean more to the Bills than it would to the Patriots. I never like being in that position.
- Pats are banged up, though so are the Bills.
We’ll get more specific with the game plan as the week goes on. Pats offense needs to score early to put pressure on Fitzpatrick and the Bills offense right out of the gate. If they’re allowed to stick around, they have big play capability to seize momentum.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/as-ive-started-scouting-the-bills-i-have-to-say/
Thanks to @FanofFights for all the great Wilfork photoshop fun!
https://www.patspropaganda.com/thanks-to-fanoffights-for-all-the-great-wilfork/