Mat68 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 4 minutes ago, Buffalo Boy said: The point is to have a legit over the top guy. We honestly don’t know what he can do because Josh wasn’t able to throw deep with any sort of accuracy before this year. Ted Ginn sucked until he got with Cam and all of a sudden he became a bonafide deep threat. One deep TD to McKenzie and this O becomes less defendable at all distances if we are healthy. Brown and Diggs are. Diggs has been the most productive wr deep over the last 3 years. A guy how cant catch it on the backend of the play is useless. Teams are playing back. If they can run the ball it will open up the deep ball.
CincyBillsFan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 There's a number of reasons for the drop in productivity including: * Weather. Passing conditions were bad in 2 of the last 4 games. If Sunday had been 65, dry and not much wind we're looking at a completely different discussion today. * Teams are defensing the Bills differently and focusing on taking away their WR's * Before yesterday the Bills rushing game didn't scare anyone. This could change after both RB's had a good game. * The Bills have the weakest pass catching TE group in the NFL particularity when Knox is out. This simplifies how you defense the Bill's passing game in ways you can't do with KC or Seattle. I think that teams approached defensing the Bills early in the season thinking that they were facing the 2019 version of Allen. The reality is that the 2020 version is much better and Allen carved them up through the first 4 weeks (and 3 of those teams currently have winning records so it wasn't just that the schedule was easy). Now teams are defensing us with an eye to our weakness which is at TE and RB - not Allen. If what we saw from our RB's is real with Mongo back in the lineup and Knox comes back from covid then we might see the Bills go on another offensive tear. It will just look a little different then the one we saw in the first 4 games. 1
Hapless Bills Fan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, Rubes said: One trend I've noticed in the last 3-4 games is that Allen has a huge amount of time in the pocket, but is just not pulling the trigger—at least not until very late. I can't quite figure out if it's Allen not trusting his receivers, or if the receivers just aren't getting separation. It seems incredibly unlikely that it's the latter, given the quality of our WRs and what we saw in the first few weeks. Especially this last game, against a NE**** team that was down their best CB and really had sub-par DBs. It sure seemed like the first 4 games Josh was getting rid of it early, and trusting his WRs to make the catch even in tight windows. Is he just not doing it as much now? Or are our WRs just not getting the separation they were getting earlier in the season? Just baffling to me. What are you watching that leads you to believe that Allen has a "huge amount of time in the pocket"? 1
ProcessAccepted Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, quinnearlysghost88 said: Teams have figured out how to gameplay for us. They’re deploying more DBs. Working out of dime and nickel. They’re giving us underneath stuff. We were so pass centric for first couple of weeks. We need to integrate more balance. Yesterday was a good sign to the rest of the league that we will run effectively if you try to play small and defend the pass. Agreed. Having Jon Feliciano back will really help. He made a huge difference yesterday
brianthomas Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 There are NextGen stats that show separation & league average is 2.7 yards. Gabriel Davis leads the way with 3.8 Cole Beasley is next with 3.6 Stephon Diggs has 2.8 John Brown has 2.8 So all our wrs are above the league average or average. Source: https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/stats/receiving#average-separation 1 1
Hebert19 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, Rubes said: One trend I've noticed in the last 3-4 games is that Allen has a huge amount of time in the pocket, but is just not pulling the trigger—at least not until very late. I can't quite figure out if it's Allen not trusting his receivers, or if the receivers just aren't getting separation. It seems incredibly unlikely that it's the latter, given the quality of our WRs and what we saw in the first few weeks. Especially this last game, against a NE**** team that was down their best CB and really had sub-par DBs. It sure seemed like the first 4 games Josh was getting rid of it early, and trusting his WRs to make the catch even in tight windows. Is he just not doing it as much now? Or are our WRs just not getting the separation they were getting earlier in the season? Just baffling to me. They are dropping 7 into coverage. Answer is its neither. 1
formerlyofCtown Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, Rubes said: One trend I've noticed in the last 3-4 games is that Allen has a huge amount of time in the pocket, but is just not pulling the trigger—at least not until very late. I can't quite figure out if it's Allen not trusting his receivers, or if the receivers just aren't getting separation. It seems incredibly unlikely that it's the latter, given the quality of our WRs and what we saw in the first few weeks. Especially this last game, against a NE**** team that was down their best CB and really had sub-par DBs. It sure seemed like the first 4 games Josh was getting rid of it early, and trusting his WRs to make the catch even in tight windows. Is he just not doing it as much now? Or are our WRs just not getting the separation they were getting earlier in the season? Just baffling to me. Or could it be bad weather, injuries and heavy numbers of DBs.
Generic_Bills_Fan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, Rubes said: Actually, I think the main consequence is that drives take longer, which means fewer drives per game and fewer opportunities for TDs. A little like our strategy against KC and the Giants strategy against the Bills in SBXXV, keeping pass-happy teams running the ball helps keep the scoring low and the game tighter. ^^ this is big too...were averaging like 2-3 drives on offense less per game than our team last year which had a defense that forced a lot of three and outs...I think the belichick onside kick decision was evidence enough that the pats d was barely holding on...luckily for them our d was barely holding on too lol. The defenses are trying to force Josh to try to do too much to extend drives and outside of the titans game hes been a lot better in that regard...I think Josh looks 'tense' because he knows the offense has to score almost every time out since our defense can't stop anybody
Monty98 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 So just piling on to what some other people have said. Our scheme is most definitely and vertical passing scheme right now. The issue with a vertical passing scheme is you need to use it open up the run or be able to run and set up play action. Until yesterday we weren't able to effectively run the ball and attempt to freeze the defence. When you're no threat to run the ball you can rush 4 and drop 7 into coverage and bracket certain WR like Diggs or Brown. Our most effective plays were the Smoke Screen to Brown and some underneath routes, and Moss running power or off tackle a la his TD run. I think there's a slight correlation between Feliciano coming back and some production but now we need Morse healthy
VW82 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 I think some of it is Josh is still a little slow sometimes to decipher coverage and make quick decisions especially vs. dime and nickel. On the plus side, all this zone coverage help mitigate the accuracy issues as Josh can wait for someone like Beasley to find the soft spots and sit in them. Not everything has to be perfectly placed with the receiver running full speed.
Augie Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 32 minutes ago, brianthomas said: There are NextGen stats that show separation & league average is 2.7 yards. Gabriel Davis leads the way with 3.8 Cole Beasley is next with 3.6 Stephon Diggs has 2.8 John Brown has 2.8 So all our wrs are above the league average or average. Source: https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/stats/receiving#average-separation That’s interesting. I suppose it helps Davis as he will generally get the weakest DB as teams try to take away the “known threats”. I think it was a little like being on the other side of the Chiefs game. We wanted to drop a bunch of guys into coverage to slow Mahomes which allowed a lot of rushing yards. We showed we can run the ball against that approach. Hopefully that becomes a consistent thing, especially if we can get back to full strength on the OLine.
billsbackto81 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 1 hour ago, CincyBillsFan said: There's a number of reasons for the drop in productivity including: * Weather. Passing conditions were bad in 2 of the last 4 games. If Sunday had been 65, dry and not much wind we're looking at a completely different discussion today. I was going bring this up as well. I hate using weather as an excuse but the 2 worst games Josh has had stat wise to date are the KC and NE game. Both were played in inclement conditions. When the weather is right, so is Allen. We need the run game and defense to do their part.
ILBillsfan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 53 minutes ago, brianthomas said: There are NextGen stats that show separation & league average is 2.7 yards. Gabriel Davis leads the way with 3.8 Cole Beasley is next with 3.6 Stephon Diggs has 2.8 John Brown has 2.8 So all our wrs are above the league average or average. Source: https://nextgenstats.nfl.com/stats/receiving#average-separation That is for the year look at the last 4 weeks those numbers have been trending down hard
Buffalo Bills Fan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 3 hours ago, Shaw66 said: I think it's happening around the league. Teams are playing more zone to keep the play in front of them, especially if the QB can run. Playing man against teams like the Bills is deadly, because you get beat once in a while, and you give Allen some big opportunities to run. Against the zone, if you want anything that is at least a little bit downfield, you need the whole pass pattern to play out before you can throw. Receivers have to run their routes so that the zone reshapes itself in response to threats, and then receivers have to run to the openings created in the zone by the reshaping. It takes time. Allen seemed to do an excellent job waiting for the opportunities to arise. Agree Shaw I expect lots of scoring vs Seahawks both teams high scoring game. Or teams going underneath lots in this game. Seahawks not the best pass rushers. Worried about 49ers, Steelers front 4. Great front 4 destroys pass pattern.
Nextmanup Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 2 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said: Let's not discount how incredibly windy it was yesterday. Allen may have been a little more hesitant to throw the ball to covered WRs because of the wind. He had Davis in the EZ for what should have been a TD and the INT seemed pretty clearly like a miscommunication based off Diggs patting his own chest on the sideline appearing to say "that was on me." Allen is the QB we need in the late Fall and early Winter in Buffalo. I'm confident about that. He just needs to keep progressing against zone coverages, which I think he's doing. We beat the Patriots and our Offense generally moved the ball pretty easily against a Bill Bellichick coached Defense. I'm still stoked. Sal C. has been on all day long at WGR-550 commenting on how little the weather impacted the game. It was mostly done raining by the time the game started and the wind really was not a factor. At times it was dead calm and the sun was shining on the field. The game was played the way it was out of necessity on New England's part (that is their game anyway) and because Tennessee showed the league how to confuse/stop Josh Allen...with all the DBs, as people are mentioning. For most of the game yesterday, New England was using up to SEVEN DBs, and Allen has trouble figuring it all out. I would be willing to bet at least 1 receiver is open on every play. But can Allen find that guy? And in the right amount of time? That's the problem. I totally disagree with people saying "OK, so run more." Wrong! You don't let teams scheme us into the 1970s while they continue to get use a 2020 pass attack themselves. You'll see how well that works against Seattle. We need to figure out how to get Allen to perform at a higher level, or keep looking for a QB who can.
ILBillsfan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 Just now, Nextmanup said: Sal C. has been on all day long at WGR-550 commenting on how little the weather impacted the game. It was mostly done raining by the time the game started and the wind really was not a factor. At times it was dead calm and the sun was shining on the field. The game was played the way it was out of necessity on New England's part (that is their game anyway) and because Tennessee showed the league how to confuse/stop Josh Allen...with all the DBs, as people are mentioning. For most of the game yesterday, New England was using up to SEVEN DBs, and Allen has trouble figuring it all out. I would be willing to bet at least 1 receiver is open on every play. But can Allen find that guy? And in the right amount of time? That's the problem. I totally disagree with people saying "OK, so run more." Wrong! You don't let teams scheme us into the 1970s while they continue to get use a 2020 pass attack themselves. You'll see how well that works against Seattle. We need to figure out how to get Allen to perform at a higher level, or keep looking for a QB who can. Disagree they game planned fora bad weather game and then stuck to it and that was to run run and more run.....when NE going to a nickel package just enabled the game plan to stay true Not to mention the number of audibles into running plays that went for some nice gains
Penfield45 Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 1 hour ago, Rc2catch said: I put some blame on daboll and Allen. Allen loves the big play and gives up on the gimme throws at times while watching downfield. Daboll seems stubborn at implementing and calling a short pass game. Seems everyone goes 15-20 yards deep on lots of plays. I’d like to see Kroft worked in more in the 5-10 yard range. I also like singletary 1 on 1 in the flat. He may not be fast but 99% of the time the first guy is never going to tackle him. brady made a living off underneath throws when teams would shut down the pats deep passing game Blame the coaches. Not Allen. McDermott and his staff need to develop better game plans because right now they are being out coached almost every single week
ILBillsfan Posted November 2, 2020 Posted November 2, 2020 12 minutes ago, Penfield45 said: brady made a living off underneath throws when teams would shut down the pats deep passing game Blame the coaches. Not Allen. McDermott and his staff need to develop better game plans because right now they are being out coached almost every single week I will agree with Brady making a living off the underneath throws But disagree on the out coached statement as the team is 6-2 ....sorry not seeing the stats back up what you are saying
Rubes Posted November 2, 2020 Author Posted November 2, 2020 25 minutes ago, ILBillsfan said: Disagree they game planned fora bad weather game and then stuck to it and that was to run run and more run.....when NE going to a nickel package just enabled the game plan to stay true Not to mention the number of audibles into running plays that went for some nice gains So the Pats**** prepared for a bad-weather game on defense by...playing 7 DBs and trying to take away the pass?
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