Jump to content

Rubes

Community Member
  • Posts

    9,842
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Rubes

  1. Maybe, but I'm getting the feeling the defense may have turned the corner the past few weeks...
  2. I just find it amazing that we still have a ripe opportunity to finish 2nd in the division, like we all thought, despite having one of the worst defenses ever. We owe that to the mess the Jets and Dolphins are also in.
  3. Agreed. I had been thinking of posting that the defense has played well enough the past two games, against two of the top teams in the league, to make me think they might be starting to turn a corner. I mean, the Texans absolutely throttled the Ravens in Houston a few weeks back, and we actually held up reasonably well. But then I realized the beating I would probably take by suggesting that.
  4. I agree as well. We're frustrated with our defense, of course, but that's one of the best offenses in the league, and we held them under their season averages in many categories. And the offense was just clicking, especially in the second half. I was convinced we would score on that last drive, you could just feel the confidence and momentum. The ending sucks, but it was a very entertaining game.
  5. You go, Tashard. Too bad we don't play them again this year.
  6. Please, God...not another first round running back.
  7. That's not the point I'm trying to make. I don't disagree with you, though.
  8. Probably another example of how losing those two timeouts to injuy doomed that drive. (Not that it should have, just that we're not a good enough team to overcome it.)
  9. I respectfully disagree. That's not the point, and it's not a stupid one. But whatever.
  10. Another thing to consider: as bad as the New England defense is, that was the most anyone has scored against them this season. (Tied with the Ravens.) And we were 15 yards away from 7 more.
  11. I think so. I think Nix has always talked about the importance of re-signing your own FAs. I think it's clear our O-line is one of the (few) strengths of this team, and keeping that continuity is of extreme importance.
  12. I'm not saying they are the same. I'm saying that helps to make my point. To put it briefly, consider: the difference for us between first place and last place is two teeny plays among thousands. With those two plays in our favor, we're in first place. It doesn't make us that much better of a team—a bit more clutch, perhaps, but still monumentally, historically bad on defense—but instead of being an afterthought in the league, people would be talking about us as a big factor in the playoff picture with a real chance of breaking through and winning the AFC East as we now become a divisional power. We wouldn't really be a "better" team. We'd just be "considered" a better team. Just with two little plays going differently. That's all it takes.
  13. There certainly are such things as bad doctors. There are also such things as doctors who don't know the answer to every question. The good ones either know the answer, know how to find the answer, or know when to send you to someone else who does. If your doctor doesn't know what's going on, and doesn't seem to be offering any further help or advice, then that's probably a good time to look for (or ask to see) a different doctor.
  14. *sigh* Okay, thanks. At least it's pretty cool that I could actually ask that of someone in the media and get an honest response.
  15. I don't recall what the original debate was about, but yes, he did run it more against the Pats* than against the Texans. But I think it's considerably more complicated to explain why he did than to just say he made more of a commitment to the running game. There are too many factors to count. Things like injuries (who's currently injured for us, who for them), matchups (how do our guys match up man-for-man against their guys, are there particular advantages or disadvantages against each team), defensive styles, and so on, that influence the guy's decision on how much to run. It may have been that he felt Cordy was struggling early against the pass rush, so throw a few more running plays in there to get his confidence and game feet back. Maybe same with Urbik. Maybe Wilfork was causing too much trouble with the pass rush, so he tried to run it a little more to keep him honest. I have no idea. Whatever it was, the circumstances made Chan believe he would be better off running more against the Pats* than against the Texans. That doesn't necessarily mean if we ran more against the Texans that we would have done better. But again, I have completely lost what the debate was about here, so I may just be making your point.
  16. Did you mean 25 rushing plays? Fred had 16 and CJ had 9. But perhaps it's not the raw number but the actual percentage. With 40 passes against the Pats* (I'll make it 43 since there were 3 'rushes' by Fitz which were undoubtedly pass calls), we had a run-pass split of 37% (run) to 63% (pass). Against the Texans, it was 13 rushes (official count is 15 due to two Fitz 'runs') to 40 passes, for a 25%-75% split. So Chan certainly seemed to run less against the Texans, a better team against the run, but not by that much. The Texans are #3 against the run, the Pats* are #9 against the run. I'm not sure I would say that running a bit more against the Pats* proves anything, given that we obviously passed a lot more than ran against both teams. Of note, the Texans are also #3 against the pass, while the Pats* are #29 against the pass.
  17. True. The Pats* defense had been allowing less than 100 yards rushing per game. We thrashed them for 165.
×
×
  • Create New...