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Posted

I assume most everyone had the same reaction that I did after the play and even the replay. Terrible pass. Josh just missed a wide open Jones in the end zone. He's GOT to make that pass. He missed a couple others in the game and he had a bunch of really solid if not great throws. But the "inaccuracy" tag put on him still haunts him, and he does miss some balls that he needs to hit.

 

But...

 

When I heard from McD, Zay and Josh about what actually happened on that play, it wasn't an inaccurate pass it was a perfect pass. Zay was expected to sit on the route, and that is where Josh threw it. Josh was being diplomatic in his interview, saying that he should have known Zay was going to continue instead of sitting because there was so much open endzone but it is clear that it was not at all an inaccurate pass, it went exactly where he wanted it.

 

To me, that knowledge, has a big affect on the overall game Josh had in my perception. I thought he had a very good game overall but missed several throws. The fact that the biggest misfire was not a misfire, and would have been his third TD to Jones makes a substantial difference in my grading of the game.

 

A lot of times we as fans don't know this kind of stuff, and our evaluations and biases suffer because of it. 

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Posted
Just now, Kelly the Dog said:

I assume most everyone had the same reaction that I did after the play and even the replay. Terrible pass. Josh just missed a wide open Jones in the end zone. He's GOT to make that pass. He missed a couple others in the game and he had a bunch of really solid if not great throws. But the "inaccuracy" tag put on him still haunts him, and he does miss some balls that he needs to hit.

 

But...

 

When I heard from McD, Zay and Josh about what actually happened on that play, it wasn't an inaccurate pass it was a perfect pass. Zay was expected to sit on the route, and that is where Josh threw it. Josh was being diplomatic in his interview, saying that he should have known Zay was going to continue instead of sitting because there was so much open endzone but it is clear that it was not at all an inaccurate pass, it went exactly where he wanted it.

 

To me, that knowledge, has a big affect on the overall game Josh had in my perception. I thought he had a very good game overall but missed several throws. The fact that the biggest misfire was not a misfire, and would have been his third TD to Jones makes a substantial difference in my grading of the game.

 

A lot of times we as fans don't know this kind of stuff, and our evaluations and biases suffer because of it. 

 

Allen said in post game that Zay was right to keep running against cover 0 with it being his fault. Either way they weren't on the same page. 

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Posted
1 minute ago, 26CornerBlitz said:

 

Allen said in post game that Zay was right to keep running against cover 0 with it being his fault. Either way they weren't on the same page. 

I referenced that but he was being diplomatic. If you think about what he said, he inferred that he should have known Zay was going to not do what the play called for. In his PC, McD inferred that Zay was supposed to sit.

 

 

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Posted (edited)

It doesn't impact it that much because it was one of about 8-10 missed throws today that were absolute head scratchers. 

Edited by VW82
Posted
2 minutes ago, BringBackOrton said:

It doesn’t because every QB misses throws. If you’re hanging your hat on one throw like “see!!!!” your evaluation opinion is probably terrible anyway.

I'm just curious. It doesn't matter to you to learn that it wasn't a missed pass by Josh when it appeared to be?

Just now, VW82 said:

It doesn't impact it that much because it was one of about 8-10 missed throws today that were absolute head scratchers. 

It's a TD though. Those matter. It was four points. We lost by four points.

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Posted (edited)
17 minutes ago, Kelly the Dog said:

It's a TD though. Those matter. It was four points. We lost by four points.

 

It was a big play. So were the countless other ones Josh missed today. Blame the Zay throw on him or don't. My point was it doesn't change my overall perception today of our QB. He made numerous impressive plays today with his legs, and a few with his arm, but he missed a bunch due to inaccuracy, and left a lot of points on the table because of it. It wasn't just about one throw. 

Edited by VW82
Posted

Allen's inaccuracy straight up cost us 3 TDs today, including what could have been the game winner at the end.

 

Yes, Clay probably should have caught that ball, but that doesn't change the fact that it was inaccurate and very poorly thrown.

 

I'd further suggest had it been a good throw, it likely would have been caught.

 

 

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Posted

We can debate whether Zay should have kept running through the play or sat open in the endzone but it appears that this wasn't an inaccurate pass as much as miscommunication between the two.

 

In retrospect maybe Allen should have lobbed it in there, the play was so wide open that no one would have made a play on the ball.  Lobbing it would have given Zay time to adjust.

 

They will learn from it.

Posted
1 minute ago, Nextmanup said:

Allen's inaccuracy straight up cost us 3 TDs today, including what could have been the game winner at the end.

 

Yes, Clay probably should have caught that ball, but that doesn't change the fact that it was inaccurate and very poorly thrown.

 

I'd further suggest had it been a good throw, it likely would have been caught.

 

 

What do you expect from Allen? A rookie going on the road leads his offence to over 400 yards with 2 TDS and 1 real interception. Also dropped TD passes on top of it with missed calls by the officials

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Posted
2 minutes ago, Magox said:

We can debate whether Zay should have kept running through the play or sat open in the endzone but it appears that this wasn't an inaccurate pass as much as miscommunication between the two.

 

In retrospect maybe Allen should have lobbed it in there, the play was so wide open that no one would have made a play on the ball.  Lobbing it would have given Zay time to adjust.

 

They will learn from it.

and that's the important thing.

Posted
1 minute ago, billsfan11 said:

Is that right eh? Definitely thought it was on Allen. Just shows how hard it can be to judge players sometimes without knowing their routes/responsibilities

From what the players said along with McD after the game, the pattern was for Zay to sit in the endzone, which is right where Josh threw it, expecting him to sit and not keep running. Zay saw a wide open endzone so he didn't sit he kept running to the open space. Josh said, diplomatically IMO, that he should have known that Zay was going to go to this wide open space and throw it accordingly. Zay basically admitted that he kept running when Josh thought he was going to stop.

 

They both, admirably, took responsibility for it. But the real point is that the main criticism of Josh is that he is inaccurate at times, and misses throws he needs to make, and that was a horrible misfire to a wide open WR that should have been a TD. But it turns out regardless of who's fault it was (the pattern called for him to stop, not continue), that it was a very accurate pass and not a very inaccurate pass.

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Posted

It only effects it if you think it was an inaccurate pass because it was a bad throw instead of because 2 players saw 2 different things.

 

Jones saw Cover 0 man to man and kept running because he saw green in front of him. Allen said he was correct and it was 100% on him because he thought he was going to sit down in the spot. Just a rookie mistake and misreading the situation NOT an inaccurate throw.

Posted
5 minutes ago, Magox said:

We can debate whether Zay should have kept running through the play or sat open in the endzone but it appears that this wasn't an inaccurate pass as much as miscommunication between the two.

 

In retrospect maybe Allen should have lobbed it in there, the play was so wide open that no one would have made a play on the ball.  Lobbing it would have given Zay time to adjust.

 

They will learn from it.

That's not really true IMO. It was an accurate pass. The pattern called for him to sit. The pass went right to that spot, a couple yards behind Zay. But it's where he was supposed to be. He didn't stop. The "miscommunication" was that Josh didn't know Zay was going to continue to the middle of the endzone which was wide, wide open and a year or two from now they both would know he would break off the pattern. But the fact is Josh threw the ball right where he expected Zay to be and the play called for Zay to be. Zay kept running because he was wide open.

Posted

Doesn’t matter to me either way.  I can’t remember a fan base picking apart every single throw with such excruciating detail.

 

Allen was great today - he has that will to win that you want in a QB and leader.  

 

I wonder how many of his detractors wanted Cousins and his accuracy?

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Posted
1 minute ago, Kelly the Dog said:

From what the players said along with McD after the game, the pattern was for Zay to sit in the endzone, which is right where Josh threw it, expecting him to sit and not keep running. Zay saw a wide open endzone so he didn't sit he kept running to the open space. Josh said, diplomatically IMO, that he should have known that Zay was going to go to this wide open space and throw it accordingly. Zay basically admitted that he kept running when Josh thought he was going to stop.

 

They both, admirably, took responsibility for it. But the real point is that the main criticism of Josh is that he is inaccurate at times, and misses throws he needs to make, and that was a horrible misfire to a wide open WR that should have been a TD. But it turns out regardless of who's fault it was (the pattern called for him to stop, not continue), that it was a very accurate pass and not a very inaccurate pass.

IMO, Allen's completion percentage is negatively affected far more by two things other than inaccurate throws:

 

1) Receivers dropping balls

2) Throwaways...it seems he has quite a few of these and its clear he is being coached to throw the ball away if there is nobody open and no space to run.

 

Since Allen doesnt throw many passes usually, an 8 of 14 passing line becomes 8 of 19 with throwaways.

 

I'm watching many of Allen's passes hit people on the money much more often than i expected hearing about his inaccuracy. Sometimes he needs to learn when to dial it down a little but overall i think he is more accurate than a lot of people think.

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