Moderators: peeker643, jb, swerb, pup
by jb » Tue Aug 21, 2012 2:57 pm
by e0y2e3 » Tue Aug 21, 2012 3:12 pm

by JCoz » Tue Aug 21, 2012 3:23 pm
by jb » Tue Aug 21, 2012 3:24 pm
e0y2e3 wrote:I refuse to click on Grantland links, so a summary would be a appreciated.
by jb » Tue Aug 21, 2012 3:25 pm
JCoz wrote:Its talking about the growing trend of packaged plays, only not previously used packaged plays that were say, pass plays to attack multiple pass coverages, but combining runs and passes and using post snap reads and uptempo no huddle to decide post snap, which is what Weeds ran at Okie St.
The upshot would be that we have a QB that has run offensive concepts at the forefront of current offensive thinking in football.
Problem would be that Paddy isnt exactly a coach at the forefront of current offensive thinking in football.
by JCoz » Tue Aug 21, 2012 3:27 pm
jb wrote:Good thing we hired an OC.
by jb » Tue Aug 21, 2012 6:15 pm
JCoz wrote:jb wrote:Good thing we hired an OC.
Not sure the same doesn't apply to Childress, but I guess we will see.
by bookelly » Tue Aug 21, 2012 7:35 pm

by FUDU » Tue Aug 21, 2012 9:16 pm
by motherscratcher » Tue Aug 21, 2012 9:24 pm
FUDU wrote:I would destroy JB at Tecmo Bowl.
by FUDU » Tue Aug 21, 2012 9:33 pm
by jb » Tue Aug 21, 2012 9:48 pm
by peeker643 » Tue Aug 21, 2012 9:59 pm
by Triple-S » Tue Aug 21, 2012 10:00 pm
FUDU wrote:Meh, yeah he's awesome but the Raiders suck in too many other areas. I can handle Bo Jackson with a slew of teams.
Swerb wrote:Go start a blog if you want to tell the world your incomprehendible ramblings.
Cerebral_DownTime wrote:I have a big arm and can throw the ball pretty damn far...... maybe even over those moutains. The Browns should sign me, i'll let you all in locker room to drink beer. Then we can all go out the parking lot to watch me do motorcycle stunts.

by GodHatesClevelandSport » Tue Aug 21, 2012 10:20 pm
by Hikohadon » Wed Aug 22, 2012 1:06 am
Triple-S wrote:FUDU wrote:Meh, yeah he's awesome but the Raiders suck in too many other areas. I can handle Bo Jackson with a slew of teams.
I'm always amazed the Bills aren't just other-worldly in that game.
If it's going off the 1990 season, they should be about unbeatable. Same with the 49ers.
by Hikohadon » Wed Aug 22, 2012 1:10 am
by The Score » Wed Aug 22, 2012 2:25 am
Hikohadon wrote:And the Niners were certainly one of the best. They had one pass play that was unstoppable no matter which D you used.
by JCoz » Wed Aug 22, 2012 8:31 am
peeker643 wrote:smartfootball.com is a great site and it's a great Twitter follow. Awesome stuff.
That's truth.
Also truth is that the very second Brandon Weeden resembles, at all, either Peyton Manning or Aaron Rodgers in terms of recognizing, reading and reacting to what NFL defenses are doing (and congrats on defining for yourself 'elite', JB) and consistently beating them to the point where he's known and feared for it, I will acknowledge it and make sure to sticky that thread for a good, long time.
I'm not going to argue or belabor the point any longer as it's pretty clear where we're all coming from and on what points we agree, but suffice it to say that's a long, long way off. College is See Jane Run compared to the latin edition of Les Miserables that the NFL will feed him.
The fact he did it in school is better than him not having done it in school. That's about it though.
And if he is a prodigy here's hoping Shurmur suddenly becomes Nike McCarthy too. Because the prodigy will be in yet another system with another group of coaches and coordinators when he turns 30 next year. Will they let him loose anyway? Are they imaginative or secure enough to give him the reigns?
He has this year to show it, IMO. Not to get there and not to translate into wins or anything else. To show it. If he doesn't he's starting all over under a new regime. Shit, he may be anyway, regardless of what they do.
I want to see something there that tells me he's special. It was there with Bernie in '85. That's the only reference point I have. And nothing I see from the guy YET says it. Though I wouldn't expect it too til real players are playing for real.
Then we're gonna know really fast. And any weakness or blood and his teammates and opposing defensive players/coaches will know even sooner.
by jb » Wed Aug 22, 2012 9:53 am
JCoz wrote:Peeks I'm not sure I understand your point here. What does the above have to do with the concepts talked about in the article? It doesn't seem to have anything to do with the article.
by jb » Wed Aug 22, 2012 9:55 am
The Score wrote:Hikohadon wrote:And the Niners were certainly one of the best. They had one pass play that was unstoppable no matter which D you used.
It is stoppable. Not all the time, but if you can maintain your scoring from your offense you can win most shootouts by stuffing it often enough.
by jb » Wed Aug 22, 2012 9:55 am
GodHatesClevelandSport wrote:Can we rev up the Mike Gundy-to-the-Browns bandwagon? Reunite the new golden boy with his college coach and trash that archaic West Coast offense!
by JCoz » Wed Aug 22, 2012 10:30 am
by jb » Wed Aug 22, 2012 11:08 am
by peeker643 » Wed Aug 22, 2012 12:40 pm
JCoz wrote:peeker643 wrote:smartfootball.com is a great site and it's a great Twitter follow. Awesome stuff.
That's truth.
Also truth is that the very second Brandon Weeden resembles, at all, either Peyton Manning or Aaron Rodgers in terms of recognizing, reading and reacting to what NFL defenses are doing (and congrats on defining for yourself 'elite', JB) and consistently beating them to the point where he's known and feared for it, I will acknowledge it and make sure to sticky that thread for a good, long time.
I'm not going to argue or belabor the point any longer as it's pretty clear where we're all coming from and on what points we agree, but suffice it to say that's a long, long way off. College is See Jane Run compared to the latin edition of Les Miserables that the NFL will feed him.
The fact he did it in school is better than him not having done it in school. That's about it though.
And if he is a prodigy here's hoping Shurmur suddenly becomes Nike McCarthy too. Because the prodigy will be in yet another system with another group of coaches and coordinators when he turns 30 next year. Will they let him loose anyway? Are they imaginative or secure enough to give him the reigns?
He has this year to show it, IMO. Not to get there and not to translate into wins or anything else. To show it. If he doesn't he's starting all over under a new regime. Shit, he may be anyway, regardless of what they do.
I want to see something there that tells me he's special. It was there with Bernie in '85. That's the only reference point I have. And nothing I see from the guy YET says it. Though I wouldn't expect it too til real players are playing for real.
Then we're gonna know really fast. And any weakness or blood and his teammates and opposing defensive players/coaches will know even sooner.
Peeks I'm not sure I understand your point here. What does the above have to do with the concepts talked about in the article? It doesn't seem to have anything to do with the article.
by FUDU » Wed Aug 22, 2012 12:46 pm
by jb » Wed Aug 22, 2012 4:26 pm
peeker643 wrote:And it's really that simple. No rejoinder needed.
by rk » Wed Aug 22, 2012 5:18 pm
peeker643 wrote:The thread wasn't created to discuss the system/trend so much as Weeden's role in it as the Browns QB.
James wrote:What Weeds did at tOSU wasn't necesarilly dumbed down and not-ready-for the NFL, it was a line-read offense in the vein of Peyton, and this ternd will eclipse what we think of as traditional by-the-playbook offense. But this piece went into great detail.
by Hikohadon » Wed Aug 22, 2012 5:30 pm
jb wrote:peeker643 wrote:And it's really that simple. No rejoinder needed.
Well now, I'll let Hiko be the judge of that.
by leadpipe » Wed Aug 22, 2012 6:18 pm
jb wrote:peeker643 wrote:And it's really that simple. No rejoinder needed.
Well now, I'll let Hiko be the judge of that.
In all seriousness, it's just a little more complex than saying the one variable is Weeds having time. This piece shed light on skill set.
by LarsHancock » Wed Aug 22, 2012 6:52 pm

by leadpipe » Wed Aug 22, 2012 7:45 pm
LarsHancock wrote:As we used to say in college, a trend with Weeds is a trend indeed.
That applies somehow.
Key takeaway from the article: Oklahoma State was successful because Weeden was smart enough to read a defense and create mismatches, and call the right plays in the line of fire to make the whole offense hum. What's not to like about that?
Quick, someone make me one of those Obama hopey changy pictures with Weeden's picture on it.
by LarsHancock » Wed Aug 22, 2012 8:08 pm
leadpipe wrote:LarsHancock wrote:As we used to say in college, a trend with Weeds is a trend indeed.
That applies somehow.
Key takeaway from the article: Oklahoma State was successful because Weeden was smart enough to read a defense and create mismatches, and call the right plays in the line of fire to make the whole offense hum. What's not to like about that?
Quick, someone make me one of those Obama hopey changy pictures with Weeden's picture on it.
Because Zac Robinson did it just as well or better a few years earlier?
Not sure about those guys, but I saw guys hang numbers in that conference over the last 5 years I wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole.
Zac Robinson hung a 166 QB rating in that conference.
Zac friggin' Robinson.
So I guess it applies, but no more to me than Cliff Klingsbury's numbers.

by rk » Thu Aug 23, 2012 10:29 am
LarsHancock wrote:Key takeaway from the article: Oklahoma State was successful because Weeden was smart enough to read a defense and create mismatches, and call the right plays in the line of fire to make the whole offense hum. What's not to like about that?
by Spin » Thu Aug 23, 2012 11:01 am
by Hikohadon » Thu Aug 23, 2012 11:09 am
Spin wrote:What are the chances the new owner comes in and cleans house (Holmgren, Heckert, Shurmur) and brings in his own people December 31?
I've always been a proponent of a REAL coach building his system around the players he has, not being stuck in one system and trying endlessly to build a team around it. But with H&H in the booth, Shurmur has no freedom to use a progressive system (if he had the mental capability to do so).
by LarsHancock » Thu Aug 23, 2012 12:36 pm
rk wrote:LarsHancock wrote:Key takeaway from the article: Oklahoma State was successful because Weeden was smart enough to read a defense and create mismatches, and call the right plays in the line of fire to make the whole offense hum. What's not to like about that?
That is not at all the key takeaway of the article. It isn't even remotely the point of the article.
The article is discussing how Oklahoma implemented play packages that allowed the QB to make a post-snap read and either hand off the ball or throw the ball. They had designed plays where the running back expected to get the hand off and the blockers expected to be run blocking but the QB had the option, after getting the ball, of saying screw it and tossing it instead to Blackmon.
IMHO that is not viable in the NFL, particularly in proset formations in place of shotgun formations, so the 'trend' is nonexistent. The concern from the article is that Weeden did not work as much on pre-snap reads. Which was already the concern by in any scouting report about Weeden but this helps explain why that is so.

by jb » Thu Aug 23, 2012 1:12 pm
rk wrote:LarsHancock wrote:Key takeaway from the article: Oklahoma State was successful because Weeden was smart enough to read a defense and create mismatches, and call the right plays in the line of fire to make the whole offense hum. What's not to like about that?
That is not at all the key takeaway of the article. It isn't even remotely the point of the article.
The article is discussing how Oklahoma implemented play packages that allowed the QB to make a post-snap read and either hand off the ball or throw the ball. They had designed plays where the running back expected to get the hand off and the blockers expected to be run blocking but the QB had the option, after getting the ball, of saying screw it and tossing it instead to Blackmon.
IMHO that is not viable in the NFL, particularly in proset formations in place of shotgun formations, so the 'trend' is nonexistent. The concern from the article is that Weeden did not work as much on pre-snap reads. Which was already the concern by in any scouting report about Weeden but this helps explain why that is so.
by pup » Thu Aug 23, 2012 1:55 pm
by JCoz » Fri Aug 24, 2012 10:00 am
rk wrote:peeker643 wrote:The thread wasn't created to discuss the system/trend so much as Weeden's role in it as the Browns QB.
Isn't the title of the thread 'A trend with weeds'?James wrote:What Weeds did at tOSU wasn't necesarilly dumbed down and not-ready-for the NFL, it was a line-read offense in the vein of Peyton, and this ternd will eclipse what we think of as traditional by-the-playbook offense. But this piece went into great detail.
I think you're misreading the article a bit. What made the other OSU model special was that they dropped the playbook (Tim Couch!) in favor of a system where plays were simple but designed to work as either a run or pass plays post-snap. That's what made it unique. They let Weeds read the play after the snap and either go with the primary option of run or go with a secondary option - sounding like it was almost always just Blackmon.
I don't see how this is anything at all to be excited about. It is not something that translates directly to Peyton/Brady/Brees/Rodgers methods of dominating passing in the NFL.
by JCoz » Fri Aug 24, 2012 10:07 am
pup wrote:Don't somewhere in the neighborhood of half the college and down teams in this country run some sort of the read option? And (without reading the article but following along the thread) isn't that all we are talking about?
by e0y2e3 » Fri Aug 24, 2012 11:06 am

by JCoz » Fri Aug 24, 2012 12:00 pm
e0y2e3 wrote:RK is far more right than anyone else here.
This is a gimmik where you are combining limited action in the run game with pseudo bullshit chuck the ball to Justin Blackmon. It's far more Tim Couch than anything. The viability in the NFL is far less than even the read option, which Tebow and Cam can use.
I feel dirty for reading somethign posted on Simmons Land of Simmons, but meh. It's not nearly what it is being portrayed as here, that much is for sure. The difference between "Hey, Look at this fun thing OSU did!!!" and "NFL viable offensive evolution" is the grand canyon right now and most of you are clinging to the latter out of pure blind hope.
This fact couldn't have been more clearly displayed than when Grudan made The Ginger explain his offensive progressions in that stupid ass QB Special. The Ginger was reading a few things as possible and trying entirely to balance between pacing teams to death (never going to work in the NFL) and having a guy that could out jump anyone as his main outlet.
by pup » Fri Aug 24, 2012 12:05 pm
by rk » Fri Aug 24, 2012 1:30 pm
pup wrote:Like stated above, the read option in the NFL with a slow footed QB, or a small guy that cannot take the abuse (so anyone other than Cam) is simply not an option. At best it is play action with an option to hand the ball off.
by JCoz » Fri Aug 24, 2012 2:06 pm
by pup » Fri Aug 24, 2012 4:12 pm
rk wrote:pup wrote:Like stated above, the read option in the NFL with a slow footed QB, or a small guy that cannot take the abuse (so anyone other than Cam) is simply not an option. At best it is play action with an option to hand the ball off.
But that doesn't work. If you are running a play-action the linemen as still blocking for a pass although they usually attempt to disguise it as much as possible to attempt to get the D to buy into the fake. If the pass rushers hesitate a half-tic then that allows the half-tic delay to pass to work out. If you get that same hesitation in someone in the secondary then you have your viable play action pass attempt.
If you attempt to hand off in a play-action pass the blockers are not attempting to open the gap. Besides the point of a play-action is to sell the defense on thinking run. If you succeed in the sell and then they play the run and your OL is playing the pass you're not getting a hole big enough for a mouse to run through.
As you noted you also don't have linemen (or WR/TEs for that matter) continuing blocks downfield which means you are limiting the ability of a play becoming a big play. So you're handicapping yourself from the start. Going back to why this works in college you can see it just by listening to any rookie lineman or WR describe their transition from college to the pros. Every single detail becomes vital to their ability to win. From reading the other side of the ball through study to the importance of hand placement for OL/DL, route running for WRs, coverage for linebackers, etc. Everything has to be at such a precise level that gimmicks can't be sustained.
Even with a seriously elusive, mobile QB (not always the same thing) or a running back who can make multiple people miss and find hole where no one else can the chances of this working at a sustained rate are incredibly small in the NFL. The only possible way this works, IMHO, is if you have 4 or 5 all-pro linemen, an all-pro WR, and a great QB. But if you have all of those things then why are you bothering with this?
by peeker643 » Sat Aug 25, 2012 12:40 am
by mattvan1 » Sat Aug 25, 2012 10:24 am
peeker643 wrote:Personally I think the agenda was to make some of us feel better about Weeds.
And I do.
Whatever they did tonight was clearly a ploy to suck in the Eagles. I'm sure the innovative offense that takes advantage of Weeden's natural abilities will be implemented in the regular season.
Can't wait til a run play is called and checked out of to a pass. Completely different look watching Pinkston and Schwartz play turnstile on a pass play as opposed to watching someone knife past them on the inside on a run.
Innovative and Shurmur are antonyms. Maybe when Weeds hits 30 he'll be utilized properly. Good news is we don't have to wait long at all for that.
by leadpipe » Sat Aug 25, 2012 10:36 am
mattvan1 wrote:peeker643 wrote:Personally I think the agenda was to make some of us feel better about Weeds.
And I do.
Whatever they did tonight was clearly a ploy to suck in the Eagles. I'm sure the innovative offense that takes advantage of Weeden's natural abilities will be implemented in the regular season.
Can't wait til a run play is called and checked out of to a pass. Completely different look watching Pinkston and Schwartz play turnstile on a pass play as opposed to watching someone knife past them on the inside on a run.
Innovative and Shurmur are antonyms. Maybe when Weeds hits 30 he'll be utilized properly. Good news is we don't have to wait long at all for that.
I simple "I told you so" would have sufficed, don't you think?![]()
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