Billzfan23 Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I remember back in New England, Pete Carrol used to have Bledsoe roll out of the pocket from time to time. Any idea why Buffalo coaches have never done this? Anyone, even statue-Drew can run to a spot, set his feet, and make a good throw. The Pats even do this with Brady and sometimes roll him out to the right and have him throw to the left side of the field. There seems to be no creativity at all.
stevestojan Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 first, happy birthday. second, McNally has yet to make this the perfect line. And drew has shown his age. I know he's only 33 (right?) but he cannot move anymore. That's not somethign he will "get back"... (not that he ever had a ton of it).
Beerball Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I remember at least one attempted rollout against da raiders. It failed miserably and DB got creamed. Don't know where the breakdown occurred, or if maybe he wasn't supposed to roll out? In theory though I agree with you. At least present a moving target for the defense.
Guffalo Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I remember at least one attempted rollout against da raiders. It failed miserably and DB got creamed. Don't know where the breakdown occurred, or if maybe he wasn't supposed to roll out? In theory though I agree with you. At least present a moving target for the defense. 52041[/snapback] That was the one where the fullback (Shelton) completely missed because he was trying to get to the flat as an outlet reciever. Even a simple chip could have taken the linebacker out of his stride. Rolling out is employed a lot with Favre, and the Giants have started using it with Warner, allowing the offensive tackles to get a better angle on the D line. By rolling out, the D line must take a different angle as opposed to a straight rush, giving the O line a chance at catching them off balanced and in a vulnerable position. It is best employed when you have a tight end or Fullback to that side, in the case you cited, the fullback whiffed. I would like to see it, provided we have a QB who can actually use his 3-5 steps to get to the proper place and scan the field at the same time. It may or may not be the guy that is starting this week. But I say give it another shot.....
nodnarb Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 he has. he does. it's not his strong suit, but the coaches have done it a few times. in fact, the TD pass to moulds was a designed rollout.
udonkey Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I'm surprised that Drew can even walk with all of the blindsided hits the guy takes. I agree though...I am much more accurate with Bledsoe in Madden when I rollout. Then again, with Losman, I can fool the defense with a Hail Mary play, roll out, and turn it into a 25 yard rush.
MarkyMannn Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 If Bledsoe rolled out, they'd penalize the Bills for delay of game
RVJ Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I'm surprised that Drew can even walk with all of the blindsided hits the guy takes. I agree though...I am much more accurate with Bledsoe in Madden when I rollout. Then again, with Losman, I can fool the defense with a Hail Mary play, roll out, and turn it into a 25 yard rush. 52071[/snapback] With Losman you can really get more productivity out of the QB position. You get the rollouts and you got a a guy that can wheel. Right now if you get a broken play with Drew your dead. With J.Ps mobility he will be a asset even on a breakdown.
MarkyMannn Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 With Losman you can really get more productivity out of the QB position.You get the rollouts and you got a a guy that can wheel. Right now if you get a broken play with Drew your dead. With J.Ps mobility he will be a asset even on a breakdown. 52097[/snapback] 100% right, I saw that at one of the pre-season games he played. Yes, he can run down field, but even without that he has enough wheels to buy himself more time. D's cannot tee off with him back there because he can avoid the rush. That in itself buys more time for himself. With Bledsoe, D's know where he will always be. Losman could be the next Todd Collins for all we know, but from what I saw early on, I think he has what it takes & I think next year the team is his
AJ1 Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I'll bet that there are 40 year old fat women who can beat Bledsoe's 40 time.
_BiB_ Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 I'll bet that there are 40 year old fat women who can beat Bledsoe's 40 time. 52212[/snapback] Wow, you've been to my office at 4 PM?
Matt in KC Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 Not only would it be good to make his whereabouts less certain, but Bledsoe could also throw the ball away out there with little concern for an intentional grounding penalty.
rockpile Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 That was the one where the fullback (Shelton) completely missed because he was trying to get to the flat as an outlet reciever. Even a simple chip could have taken the linebacker out of his stride.52053[/snapback] Shelton has done this a few times, and DB takes a sack and everyone disses the OL. <sigh> When I first saw the subject, I thought Drew got new carpets for his house.
obie_wan Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 Shelton has done this a few times, and DB takes a sack and everyone disses the OL. <sigh> When I first saw the subject, I thought Drew got new carpets for his house. 52283[/snapback] so why isn't Drew throwing to Shelton as the outlet on the play? Instead of freezing up and taking the sack.
Guffalo Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 so why isn't Drew throwing to Shelton as the outlet on the play? Instead of freezing up and taking the sack. 52364[/snapback] Because DB is still looking for his first 2 recievers, and in the example cited, Shelton was still trying to get to the flat and Bledsoe was down already.
rockpile Posted October 2, 2004 Posted October 2, 2004 Because DB is still looking for his first 2 recievers, and in the example cited, Shelton was still trying to get to the flat and Bledsoe was down already. 52369[/snapback] In that example, too, the defensive back was sprinting past Shelton on a beeline to Bledsoe. Had Shelton popped him then returned to his route, it would have bought Drew 3 seconds easily. Alternately, if Shelton was his #1 choice, Shelton's action would have worked - run past the coverage and have the ball delivered immediately. Just a stevestojan play.
Fezmid Posted October 2, 2004 Posted October 2, 2004 he has. he does. it's not his strong suit, but the coaches have done it a few times. in fact, the TD pass to moulds was a designed rollout. 52067[/snapback] Exactly. Against the Titans last year, he rolled out twice and threw a TD pass on one, and Shaw dropped the two point conversion because he was "showing the ref the ball" the second time. Not sure why he doesn't rollout more, but he's been pretty successful with it. CW
obie_wan Posted October 2, 2004 Posted October 2, 2004 In that example, too, the defensive back was sprinting past Shelton on a beeline to Bledsoe. Had Shelton popped him then returned to his route, it would have bought Drew 3 seconds easily. Alternately, if Shelton was his #1 choice, Shelton's action would have worked - run past the coverage and have the ball delivered immediately. Just a stevestojan play. 53023[/snapback] You have identified the problem. Drew did not recognize the blitz, therefore he did not dump off the pass to the designed outlet to avoid the sack.
Guest Guest Posted October 2, 2004 Posted October 2, 2004 You have identified the problem. Drew did not recognize the blitz, therefore he did not dump off the pass to the designed outlet to avoid the sack. 53182[/snapback] Oh please, like you know that the play was designed like that and that the FB would even have been looking for it.
Nanker Posted October 2, 2004 Posted October 2, 2004 The only "rollout" Drew can do now is what happens to him after a LDE crashes into him and he "rolls-out" about 3 or 4 feet while lying prone and then a NT, LB, or Safety wraps him up. That said, I hope that tomorrow he passes for 399 yards, 4 TDs, no INTs, and scores 2 more TDs on QB draws. I hope a parade is held in his honor on Monday, and the OBD ship gets righted and steams straight ahead for multiple SB victories beginning with this season's. Hey, hope springs eternal. Someday there will be a Lombardi in the trophy case at OBD.
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