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Kincaid update?


JMM

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8 minutes ago, The Jokeman said:

and based on stats Goff is a more accurate passer than Josh, so is it an OC problem or a QB problem? As just last week Josh missed hitting a wide open Kincaid. I'm guessing that's our OC fault right? 

 

That pass should have added another 50-60 yards and another TD. That one hurt, but Kincaid got himself wide open.

 

Trying to make comparisons like this is difficult because each situation has so many variables. I am not down on Kincaid at all, I can’t wait to get him back. More weapons never hurts, we just need to use them right. 

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9 minutes ago, The Jokeman said:

and based on stats Goff is a more accurate passer than Josh, so is it an OC problem or a QB problem? As just last week Josh missed hitting a wide open Kincaid. I'm guessing that's our OC fault right? 

Also missed Kincaid streaking down the field on a huge play against Houston. If Josh hits those two passes, the narrative is different. I’d put Kincaid’s lack of production more on Allen than Joe Brady. Those two missed plays aren’t the only times Kincaid has been open and the ball hasn’t found him for whatever reason.

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10 hours ago, EmotionallyUnstable said:


These two things do not match. You would look more to the seam ball when a team is playing cover 1 or 3. C2 would have both safeties ON the seams, and when a play such as vertical routes is called vs this look, you have your seam player either:

 

1) bend to the middle of the field to split the safeties

 

2) clear out safeties and run them out of the intermediate range for anything coming underneath

 

It isn’t a great route combination for the TEs vs the two high look. It these circumstances you often see Allen throwing the boundary vert between the CB and deep half, or taking the check down if the flat player carries the boundary WR downfield.

 

I think your overall sentiment here is one that I’d love to know more about in their scheming for downfield passing attack. They continue to lack the consistent ability to stretch the field in structure without relying on Allen to create. There are many levels to this (design, personnel, defensive scheme) but they just seem completely content taking the short to intermediate routes and allowing those deeper options to essentially act as clear outs 

I’m speaking more about the Tampa 2 where seam routes are designed to be in the spaces in the zone scheme and as you point out these are commonly routes that do need to go to the space between the safeties and lbs or the safeties and the corners and aren’t straight into the coverage.  I probably used bad wording saying ‘down the seams” as if I were talking relatively vertical routes on the hashes, although running outside vertical clearing routes can make those effective routes as well when you have good TEs or run a delayed route where another route has pulled coverage away making the seam a bigger target.   TEs are the biggest weapon against a Tampa 2, and I understand that the Bills are seeing a variety of 2 high safety looks not just Tampa 2, but they also have been most successful when they’ve stressed opponents reliance on playing two high with effectively pushing the ball downfield to TEs in the seams and balanced it with utilizing the backs in the passing game when teams try to adjust dropping cbs deeper, leaving the lbs exposed and putting our good blocking WRs in position to make a crucial downfield block. 

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5 hours ago, Augie said:

 

That pass should have added another 50-60 yards and another TD. That one hurt, but Kincaid got himself wide open.

 

Trying to make comparisons like this is difficult because each situation has so many variables. I am not down on Kincaid at all, I can’t wait to get him back. More weapons never hurts, we just need to use them right. 

“We just need to use them right”

 

This has been a common refrain from fans and local media - what do you mean by this in reference to Kincaid?

 

Just down the field I presume? 

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1 minute ago, Straight Hucklebuck said:

“We just need to use them right”

 

This has been a common refrain from fans and local media - what do you mean by this in reference to Kincaid?

 

Just down the field I presume? 

 

I’ll be honest, I feel the play calling is wonky at times. It seems like we were forcing the ball to Samuel last game, and I’m not sure if that was a need. It seemed forced, rather than opportunistic.

 

I think Kincaid can be used all over the field, but it would help a LOT if we had some other healthy options. I still see a speedy deep threat as a priority this offseason, and maybe that helps open things up. When we get Cooper and Coleman back 100% things could look very different.

 

I like the way the RB’s are being used. The WR’s have faced a lot of injuries. The TE’s seem like we could be getting more. Someone smarter than me with All-22 needs to figure out why that is. I believe in Kincaid’s talent. 

 

Oh, and I don’t hear any of the WNY media, so I wasn’t aware that was a theme. 

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12 hours ago, Brand J said:

Also missed Kincaid streaking down the field on a huge play against Houston. If Josh hits those two passes, the narrative is different. I’d put Kincaid’s lack of production more on Allen than Joe Brady. Those two missed plays aren’t the only times Kincaid has been open and the ball hasn’t found him for whatever reason.

That Miss last game was so minute... That's a tracking issue at the NFL level .. and I really like Kincaid.. but the best can track the ball without losing speed

 

 

It's one thing if you overthrow a guy by six yards... If it's within fingertips of the guy and he's running down the field he's not doing a good enough job tracking it 

 

Watch guys like DeSean Jackson track a football 60 yards in the air.. they can maintain 19 20 miles an hour while tracking it over their shoulder 

 

While other NFL guys the same ball they dipped down to 17 miles an hour to track it.. and that's the difference between a catch and a fingertip miss

 

One thing if it's 5 yards overthrown.. when it's that close at the NFL level it's generally a tracking issue.. he needs to get better at tracking

 

The best wide receivers or pass catchers when the ball goes in the air they have another gear

 

And yes there is some hyperbole to this there is obviously a such thing as a bad pass but it's the small things at the highest level 

Edited by Buffalo716
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3 hours ago, Buffalo716 said:

That Miss last game was so minute... That's a tracking issue at the NFL level .. and I really like Kincaid.. but the best can track the ball without losing speed

 

 

It's one thing if you overthrow a guy by six yards... If it's within fingertips of the guy and he's running down the field he's not doing a good enough job tracking it 

 

Watch guys like DeSean Jackson track a football 60 yards in the air.. they can maintain 19 20 miles an hour while tracking it over their shoulder 

 

While other NFL guys the same ball they dipped down to 17 miles an hour to track it.. and that's the difference between a catch and a fingertip miss

 

One thing if it's 5 yards overthrown.. when it's that close at the NFL level it's generally a tracking issue.. he needs to get better at tracking

 

The best wide receivers or pass catchers when the ball goes in the air they have another gear

 

Okay, I agree with a lot of this, except sometimes if a pass falls JUST beyond a receiver's hands, it can also mean that despite the target's accurate and full speed tracking, the ball was still thrown just a little too hot and/or trajectory a little too flat, or released too early, or just plain slightly overthrown. Maybe a faster WR makes an overthrown pass look more catchable.  

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27 minutes ago, Richard Noggin said:

 

Okay, I agree with a lot of this, except sometimes if a pass falls JUST beyond a receiver's hands, it can also mean that despite the target's accurate and full speed tracking, the ball was still thrown just a little too hot and/or trajectory a little too flat, or released too early, or just plain slightly overthrown. Maybe a faster WR makes an overthrown pass look more catchable.  

I used a little bit of hyperbole 

 

There's obviously a chance it is a bad pass completely... But at the NFL level the margin is so small that it's little things like that

 

I did say generally too emphasize that sometimes it is also a bad pass placement but it's the little things like tracking the ball perfectly that could make a easy catch look harder

Edited by Buffalo716
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10 hours ago, Buffalo716 said:

That Miss last game was so minute... That's a tracking issue at the NFL level .. and I really like Kincaid.. but the best can track the ball without losing speed

 

 

It's one thing if you overthrow a guy by six yards... If it's within fingertips of the guy and he's running down the field he's not doing a good enough job tracking it 

 

Watch guys like DeSean Jackson track a football 60 yards in the air.. they can maintain 19 20 miles an hour while tracking it over their shoulder 

 

While other NFL guys the same ball they dipped down to 17 miles an hour to track it.. and that's the difference between a catch and a fingertip miss

 

One thing if it's 5 yards overthrown.. when it's that close at the NFL level it's generally a tracking issue.. he needs to get better at tracking

 

The best wide receivers or pass catchers when the ball goes in the air they have another gear

 

And yes there is some hyperbole to this there is obviously a such thing as a bad pass but it's the small things at the highest level 

The problem with this comp is that Allen doesn’t throw rainbows like Aaron Rodgers, Hurts, and Russell Wilson that allow receivers to track. His arm is frankly too strong for that and his deeper throws are therefore lower trajectory. It’s an apples and oranges thing.  It’s also crazy to blame Kincaid for that play. Allen gave him no chance on that one.

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