http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohZ4W05xcLQ
Tom Brady 2011 Season – All 39 TD’s (by vcmoss81)
An Independent Patriots Blog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohZ4W05xcLQ
Tom Brady 2011 Season – All 39 TD’s (by vcmoss81)
Let me begin by saying the Patriots offense was again at the top of the league in 2011. Despite the Super Bowl shortcomings, I still believe in Tom Brady and the overall philosophy of what the Patriots do. However that does not mean that there aren’t ways they can improve, and perhaps that biggest area is acquiring a true “X” receiver.
Notice I did not say “deep threat”. A deep threat is a characteristic of a player, not a position. This is why people were so confused when Chad Ochocinco was signed last off-season because he’s not a deep threat. He has, or had, the speed to get deep, but ultimately Chad was brought in because he was a true X receiver, something that the Patriots lacked in 2010 and felt they had to address.
An X receiver is one who plays on the line of scrimmage. He does not have the small cushion of the Z receiver who plays off the line of scrimmage, so he has to be able to beat press coverage quickly and get into his route. Usually the X is your traditional star wide receiver.
But an X receiver is much more than just a deep threat. And if you think the Bill Belichick would ever bring a player in for the sole purpose of just running endless go routes you haven’t been paying attention. (By the way that’s what Randy Moss had become in 2010 and a large part in why he was jettisoned and won’t return.)
The book is out on how to beat the 2010/2011 Patriots offense: Flood the middle of the field, get up on the receivers and don’t allow YAC. This forces the Patriots offense to become adept at pinpoint execution on multiple consecutive plays. Notably this is pretty much the philosophy of the bend-don’t-break defense. Is it ironic that what BB tries to do with his defense is exactly what gives his offense fits?
Often times, like we saw on those consecutive completion record-setting two drives in the Super Bowl, they will execute flawlessly and methodically move down the field 5-15 yards at a time. But in critical moments, especially if they need a quick score, this style of offense can be unproductive.
A true X receiver, in conjuncture with Gronk, Hernando and Welker, would elevate this offense to the next level. Brady is never going to be a bombs away quarterback, but simply having the threat of an explosive outside receiver who can beat jams and quickly get open would be a game-changer.
Deion Branch was once a pretty solid X-receiver and the Patriots offense has never been better than when he was. Now that Branch has begun to slow down he just isn’t the same threat he once was and thus doesn’t require the same attention from defenses.
Of course the hard thing is actually showing the rest of the NFL that the new X is a threat. Brady tried with Ochocinco, but it was pretty clear there wasn’t a reason to fear them.
Had Ochocinco ever developed a rapport with Tom Brady it likely could’ve made a big difference in Indianapolis. Of course, that’s speculative, but it’s clear that the Patriots understood the need for an X last off-season and their efforts to fill that need just didn’t pan out. Look for them to make a concerted effort to replace Branch this off-season.
You can simply say the Patriots need a “deep threat” but that’s really underselling what they need. They need to challenge defense not only deep, but outside the hashmarks. That’s simple geometry. And in the process you open things up even more for your vaunted tight ends and slot receivers.
There’s little doubt the Patriots offense will still be productive even if they do not develop an outside receiver in 2012, though it’s also likely they’ll be slowed down considerably against good defenses with the proper personnel.
But with a true X the Patriots offense will become far less reliant on consistently flawless execution and more able to attack every square inch of enemy territory.
When they can do that, watch out.
Legacy? Sure, we can talk about Tom Brady’s legacy. Obviously, when you look at the way Brady carried the Patriots to the Super Bowl and the way he played Sunday, he added quite a bit to his legacy.
Wait. Are you saying you think Brady damaged his legacy Sunday? What?
Sometimes I wonder if people watched the same game I did. Brady completed 27 of 41 passes for 276 yards and two touchdowns. He also threw one interception, when he underthrew a deep ball to Rob Gronkowski. (A healthy Gronkowski probably would have knocked that ball down if he didn’t catch it, but Gronkowski had an injured ankle.) And Brady took a safety when he threw another deep ball to nobody from his own end zone.
But overall, these facts should not be in dispute: Brady took an otherwise nondescript Patriots team to the brink of a championship, and he played well Sunday. At the end of the first half, he completed 10 of 10 passes and drove the Pats 98 yards for a touchdown. He broke the Super Bowl record for consecutive completions.
Quarterbacks have played worse than Brady played Sunday and won Super Bowl MVP. One of them was Tom Brady: In his first Super Bowl, he completed 16 of 27 passes for 145 yards and a touchdown, and he won the game’s MVP award.
Greetings from my media-free cocoon! This article says a lot about Brady, won’t make any of us feel better, but no one took it harder than TFB.
– Brady with one week to prepare: 22-34, 271 yards, 2.1 TD, 0.7 Int, 13.5 first downs
– Brady with two weeks: 28-41, 330 yards, 2.6 TD, 0.9 Int, 16.6 first downs
As for Xs and Os football, Brady detailed some of the issues he’s had in recent games against the Giants.
“I was holding the ball too long. They have some blitz schemes that are challenging to handle [and] as a quarterback, you can’t sit back there and think that you’re going to have all day to throw the ball,” he said. “You have to be able to find guys quickly and get the ball to them. You have to throw the ball with accuracy. You throw a quick pass and it’s half a foot behind the receiver, it slows him up and he’s tackled for a 5-yard gain. Whereas if you throw it one foot in front of his numbers, he catches it and he gains 12. That’s how you need to play this game.”
Brady also explained how he’s been handling this week with tight end Rob Gronkowski out of practice.
“We’re always communicating back and forth about his routes and the schemes that we have that are a little bit different for this game.” he said. “He’s a fast learner. He’s played every game, he’s practiced every single day this year [prior to his injury]. He has a pretty good understanding of what we’re doing. It’s not like he has to figure out how to play football again. Probably the break is good for him in a sense that he hasn’t been beat all week in practice. Hopefully he can go out there and play.”
https://www.patspropaganda.com/as-for-xs-and-os-football-brady-detailed-some-of/
Tom Brady arrived in Indianapolis this week with the nice, clean record of 140-40 as a starter. That’s only 100 games over .500, including the playoffs, in his 10 years as a starting QB. An average year for Brady has been 14-4. No other quarterback has ever been 100 games over .500. No other quarterback has even come close. Brady has a regular-season winning percentage of .780. Behind Brady are Roger Staubach at .739, Joe Montana (.713) and Ben Roethlisberger (.708). Those three are the only others among the top 50 winningest NFL QBs who won more than 70 percent of their starts. Peyton Manning? 150-77, including the playoffs. Terry Bradshaw? 121-55. Only Montana (133-54) and Staubach (96-36) even sniffed the level Brady’s reached. Brady and Montana are tied for career playoff wins (16) and Brady’s a win on Sunday away from joining Montana and Bradshaw as the only quarterbacks to win four Super Bowls. In short, no quarterback’s ever won more often than Brady.
Curran: Nobody’s done it better than Brady
Great article from Tom E. Curran about how good Tom Brady really is. I mean not as good as Eli Manning of course, that guy’s elite, but Brady isn’t too far behind him.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/tom-brady-arrived-in-indianapolis-this-week-with/
With the draft just a few days away and as I settle with my Top-50 board, mock draft and general feeling of where the Patriots will attack this draft, I find myself wondering where the Pats might zag on my zig. The first four picks, back-to-back in both the second and third rounds, are vital, […]