NFLN Playbook: Pats-Phins Segment
This is my favorite football show on television and this is a pretty good breakdown of the mistakes that young defenses will make.
An Independent Patriots Blog
NFLN Playbook: Pats-Phins Segment
This is my favorite football show on television and this is a pretty good breakdown of the mistakes that young defenses will make.
There was a holy trinity of horrifying Pats stats articles today. I thought about linking to all of them at one point or another because, while totally sobering and scary, they are pretty interesting too. I figured the best thing to do would be to put all three on one page and then leave it up to you if you want to look at them or not.
So proceed with caution from this point on. It ain’t pretty…
First we have this article from ESPN.com which is full of disturbing facts like:
In his past eight true road games, Tom Brady has a 50.8 passer rating in the second half compared to a 101.6 passer rating in the first half. The numbers get downright ugly in the fourth quarter, when Brady has a 29.3 passer rating courtesy of one touchdown and five interceptions. Quite simply, that makes Brady the worst quarterback in the NFL on the road in the fourth quarter since 2009. Not rookies Mark Sanchez (29.7) or Matthew Stafford (33.4). Not even quarterbacks who lost their jobs, such as Derek Anderson (33.4) and Kerry Collins (42.2). No one has been worse than Brady.
Or if that’s not bad enough, this:
In true road games, opposing quarterbacks are averaging 278.3 yards and a 103.9 rating, the third-highest in the NFL, putting the Patriots behind both the Oakland Raiders and Detroit Lions.
Then comes this little doozy about how bad Darius Butler has been through two games and change this year:
There’s a ton of stats to illustrate how bad Butler is, but this one blew my mind: Opposing quarterbacks have posted a 151.6 passer rating when throwing at Butler, the second highest mark among 88 qualifying cornerbacks. Let that sink in for a minute. 158.3 is a perfect score. So in essence, throwing at Butler has almost been like throwing at nothing.
Yikes.
Finally comes this one which is basically more of the same…
So there you have it. The sky is falling according to these articles. For some reason it makes me think we’re gonna see a vintage Tom Brady performance and a shutdown of the Dolphins passing offense. Sometimes that just how the NFL works. We’ll see. But the numbers don’t lie. Luckily for us they don’t predict future performance, right?
It’s one thing when you get your occasional clueless Patriots messageboard posts or tweets stating something that is completely and utterly false about the team, but it’s another thing all together when it’s one of the so-called “pundits” whose voices are heard by millions start spreading misinformation and false insight.
Of course based on how the Patriots defense has played the last two weeks we should expect more of it. This week I’d like to point out two pundits whose cluelessness can’t go unrecognized.
Bill Simmons
First let me say that I’m a Simmons fan whenever he’s talking about anything other than basketball (because I just don’t care) or the Patriots. As far as I’m concerned the guy is a genius. How many people get paid millions of dollars to record phone conversations with their college buddies? He’s really the grandfather of sports blogging and is ripped off for both style and content by a lot of people.
Simmons knows gambling, television, baseball and obviously basketball. I respect his opinions on all those topics, but when he tries to talk about the Patriots with the same conviction I go off the deep end. When it comes to the Pats he epitomizes the casual fan who thinks they have all the answers. Just because you can write an encyclopedia about one sport doesn’t make you an expert in all of them. Just because you have weekly conversations with Mike Lombardi doesn’t mean his insight is transferred to you via osmosis. Just because you know how to gamble on football doesn’t mean you are qualified to tell anyone how defensive schemes work, or what the Patriots must do.
Here are two examples from this week’s BS Report podcasts which provide a little insight to what kind of Patriots knowledge Simmons has. While discussing the weekly NFL lines with “Cousin Sal”, Simmons made this observations about the Pats (and I’m paraphrasing): “The secondary’s okay but they’ll give up plays, the defensive line is pretty good, but the linebackers are awful.” What?
I’m not sure if he’s solely blaming the outside linebackers here or if he’s including defensive captain Jerod Mayo, all around solid Gary Guyton, or promising rookie Brandon Spikes who has singlehandedly improved the Pats rush defense. At least go to the well of anti-Patriots comments, “they can’t rush the passer”. But ‘the linebackers are awful’? That’s the most bland, uninsightful comment you can make. And he’s getting paid millions to make. Awesome.
Simmons followed this up with his podcast with Michael Lombardi when he said that after Danny Woodhead scored his touchdown last weekend that he and his Dad looked at eachother and had no idea who Woodhead was. Granted Woodhead was just picked up a week prior and Simmons is a busy guy, but come on, grabbing a running back from the vaunted Jets is at least marginally interesting news that someone who calls themself the Boston Sports Guy should know, right?
As I said, I enjoy Simmons podcasts and writing, and as a fellow Holy Cross Crusader we do share a common bond. I just wish he’d stop talking about the Patriots like he speaks for our entire fan base. His comments on PTI that Boston fans are growing tired of Brady’s act were really annoying. Just because your pals don’t like his hair doesn’t mean that Patriots Nation is sick of Brady.
Cris Collinsworth
Collinsworth runs more hot and cold for me than Brandon Meriweather. This week on Inside the NFL, Collinsworth acted like the entire NFL nation had it wrong saying the Patriots have a young secondary and that’s the reason for their problems. Instead he blamed the lack of outside linebackers like Mike Vrabel and Willie McGinest, who were big, long and physical enough to dominate the line of scrimmage.
That’s fine, but Cris the Patriots won the AFC East last year without those guys at linebacker. Yes, he’s right to an extent that the Pats need better OLB play, but that isn’t any more the reason for the Pats struggles than subpar play at any other position on defense. So stop acting like we’re all idiots and you’re the only one who has it figured out.
Belichick Breaks Down the Dolphins (2009).
https://www.patspropaganda.com/belichick-breaks-down-the-dolphins-2009/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OveOJeY3iEg
Hoping we see some of this Monday night…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/hoping-we-see-some-of-this-monday-night/
I must first say that I respect the hell out of the team that the Miami Dolphins have become since 2007. They’re still a little rough around the edges (see their game against the Jets) but they are a big, physical football team that is going to compete from start to end and force you to beat them.
I never like to blow the importance of games out of proportion, especially in early October, but the fact is that this game is going to tell a lot about where the New England Patriots are.
We don’t need to be reminded of how poorly the Patriots have been in big games as of late, especially on the road. Name the last big road game the Patriots won. You’d have to go back to the 2007 16-0 game against the Giants.
In many ways the Dolphins and Patriots are similar teams. Young on defense, but solid on offense with solid weaponry. While Miami’s defense might be slightly ahead of the Pats right now, the Patriots are ahead at quarterback.
The thing that we know for sure is that the Patriots will have to play 60 minutes to win. Their defense must play better than they have the past two weeks. They must win the game, it will not be handed to them.
So start getting excited now, we’re five days from learning a lot about the 2010 Patriots.
Almost open season for Swag Hunts…