http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pvIcpnxmZo
Anyone feel like a 9-minute Wes Welker highlight video spanning his career from high school to the Pats? It’s Friiiii-day!
Wes Welker Chronology (by 11Prodigy)
An Independent Patriots Blog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pvIcpnxmZo
Anyone feel like a 9-minute Wes Welker highlight video spanning his career from high school to the Pats? It’s Friiiii-day!
Wes Welker Chronology (by 11Prodigy)
Indeed if you look at the snaps that Welker missed because Edelman was preferred to him it works out at 16% of offensive snaps. Welker averaged 11% of snaps off the field in 2011, and well over 20% in both 2009 and 2010. Edelman might be the player picking up the snaps that Welker is spending off the field, but there is nothing to suggest that spending those snaps off the field is unusual for him.
Wes Welker Touchdown Dance: Snow Angel (12/21/08) (by CmtSportsForum)
https://www.patspropaganda.com/patriots-welker-snow-angel-cardinals/
Frenz: Does Wes Welker’s Reduced Role Mean New England Patriots Are Moving On?
Good breakdown from Frenz despite his inflammatory title.
Offensive snaps: Where’s Welker? – New England Patriots Blog – ESPN Boston
Receiver Wes Welker’s reduced workload stood out. After playing in 89.2 percent of the team’s total offensive snaps in 2011, he split time with Julian Edelman. Welker had a quiet game (3 catches for 14 yards) and this type of plan – and his playing time – makes one wonder if it’s the potential beginning of a less Welker-centric attack.
I wasn’t planning on commenting on this whole Welker storyline but an IM conversation with Frenz sparked my agitation enough that I had to chime in. These are the sorts of things you have to expect when there’s no a lot to complain about with your team.
So, a few points. The offense now has two primary pieces: Gronk and Hernandez. Clearly this is supported because they played all the snaps. Those two players can do a pretty good job at dominating the center of the field, something that Welker also excels at.
In 2011, there was no X wide receiving threat, thus the strengths of the Patriots wide outs were somewhat redundant to Hernando and Gronk. Welker and Branch also excelled in the middle of the field. The end result was a team that could dominate the short passing game in the middle of the field but struggled outside the numbers and deep.
Enter Brandon Lloyd, and the Patriots now have a legit X wide receiver who can challenge defenses on the perimeter. So it’s really Lloyd who ate in to Welker’s snaps a bit, and I’m not really sure why anyone is complaining about that.
Can anyone tell me why we’d want to go back to throwing to Welker constantly and getting him lit up multiple times per game? Welker is the definitive slot receiver, and not having to depend on your slot wide receiver to perform outside and deep is a luxury not a constraint.
Ultimately the Patriots will be a better offense without having to constantly lean on Welker, and Welker will be a better, and possibly, healthier player at the end of the year without having to take all the extra abuse.
Let’s not forget Welker still played almost double the snaps Edelman did, and just 14 less than Lloyd. Is the attack going to be less Welker-centric? Sure, but that’s a good thing for everyone involved.
As I see it a drop in Welker’s receptions will signify a better balanced offense, and one that will be more difficult to defend.
There is a good chance we’ll be seeing Welker break the all-time franchise record for receptions Sunday in Tennessee. Welker (554) need four catches to pass Troy Brown (557) to move into the No. 1 spot, and it seems like that has flown under the radar a bit this week.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/there-is-a-good-chance-well-be-seeing-welker/
Is the skull cap part of the hair plugs thing this year?
https://www.patspropaganda.com/is-the-skull-cap-part-of-the-hair-plugs-thing-this/
As I accidentally take a sip of my now cold coffee (okay ew!), I mull over how I feel as a Patriots fan about the first regular season game being a loss. In my preseason wrap-ups I urged you to not look at the numbers, meaning mostly the scores, and as cliché as it may […]