per MLF, "“We don’t win that game without Malik.” So wtf does he not use him more!!!!?
Well, we don’t win the game without Love, either. I think he was just pointing out that Malik did his job well.
per MLF, "“We don’t win that game without Malik.” So wtf does he not use him more!!!!?
Oh. Trust me. We have such a thing…likely specific scenario deploymentI really believe we’re missing out on using Willis more in specific packages. Similar to how Sean Payton used his QB Taysom Hill. Malik is a very talented and athletic QB and personally I think we’re missing an occasional opportunity to use his skill set.
I think because it was a one score win MLF is inferring that if that Malik drive did not happen while Love was out then we lose. A lot of times the back up who is rushed out there just protects the ball and you punt.Well, we don’t win the game without Love, either. I think he was just pointing out that Malik did his job well.
No, I get what you're saying. I'm not even against it. I'm just saying my only real qualm with it is that it might disrupt Love's rhythm. And that bringing Willis in for specific plays might give opponents a clue as to what we might be running.I think your interpretation is I want to pull Love and that’s not my thought at all. I’m speaking to a designed pair of plays across 65 snaps
"might disrupt"...."might give".... "might be running"....No, I get what you're saying. I'm not even against it. I'm just saying my only real qualm with it is that it might disrupt Love's rhythm. And that bringing Willis in for specific plays might give opponents a clue as to what we might be running.
Kind of like the 4th and 1 play against the Eagles?Not saying you're wrong, but every time this idea comes up, I always worry that doing that would give the defense a better idea of what we're about to do.

Imagine had the Packers trotted out Willis on that 4th and 1 play against the Eagles. The defense would have been like "oh heck, we didn't study for this, what are they pulling?" Instead, MLF went to his tired and old bag of "tricks" and ran a play that the Eagles had seen on film a number of times in the game. I think their defense was more prepared for the play than our offense.
Agree that Musgrave is a bust. He's been given a huge chance and hasn't delivered at all. It's a bitter pill to see a second round pick fail to provide much of anything. When your "best" TE was snagged off the practice squad, you're generally in big trouble. Coordinators have lots of ways of exploiting holes in the roster.Unless Musgraves is injured, all one has to do is look at the snap counts from yesterday, to know that even MLF and the coaches have all but given up on him.
In the second half against the Giants, John FitzPatrick played 16 snaps, Josh Whyle played 11 and Musgrave played only 2.
Whyle was a fricking roster addition at the end of August and has been sitting on the Practice Squad before Tucker got hurt.
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I don't like swapping in QBs in two-minute situations. You are almost required to take both remaining timeouts in this situation. One to change everything/put Willis in and possibly another to get Love back in on 1st down.
Of course they should have called their 2nd timeout instead of scrambling to the line and having the defense calling out exactly what they wanted to run.
I guess I don't view it any differently than trotting Savion Williams in for the Wildcat or really substitution of any player. If you practice it enough, anything is possible.
Which again, I'm agreeing with. I don't even mind rushing to the line, I dislike everything that happened after that. Though I'm not sure who exactly to blame here. IMHO, Love should be calling a timeout or changing the play in that situation. It looked like an automatic call or there were two plays in the huddle, which fine, but reality required something else.Like you alluded to, that 4th and 1 was a HUGE and critical play. Rushing it, to run a predictable call, was a HUGE mistake on MLF's part. I also don't think that the Packers were in that big of a time crunch. There was 1:45 left on the game clock at the end of the 9 yard, 3rd down completion to Musgrave. With 2 timeouts and sitting at your own 44, there was no need to be in such a hurry that you make a rushed and bad play call.
That sounds like a good spot to use him. As for keeping defenses guessing, that seemed to be something MLF used to be good at, but not so much anymore.Imagine had the Packers trotted out Willis on that 4th and 1 play against the Eagles. The defense would have been like "oh heck, we didn't study for this, what are they pulling?" Instead, MLF went to his tired and old bag of "tricks" and ran a play that the Eagles had seen on film a number of times in the game. I think their defense was more prepared for the play than our offense.
Might not."might disrupt"...."might give".... "might be running"....
1000% agree on this. Even if you have a bad QB, has Savion Williams done anything BUT run the ball from the Wildcat? Has he ever gained any yardage? Like I alluded to in my last post, keep the defense guessing. When Williams lines up in a WC, seems like all they are guessing is the snap count and maybe which direction he is heading.I'm not a fan of doing wildcat stuff when you have a good QB
IMHO, Love should be calling a timeout or changing the play in that situation. It looked like an automatic call or there were two plays in the huddle, which fine, but reality required something else.
1000% agree on this. Even if you have a bad QB, has Savion Williams done anything BUT run the ball from the Wildcat? Has he ever gained any yardage? Like I alluded to in my last post, keep the defense guessing. When Williams lines up in a WC, seems like all they are guessing is the snap count and maybe which direction he is heading.
Well, how many has he done? Can't be too damn many. Can you give yardage on each play? One gain could skewer the average. I guess we are only talking jet sweeps. I wouldn't mind seeing the not very many wildcats as well. That was quite a catch he made. And on a bad foot. He was kind of hurting after. But he'll have to show he can make those first down catches. Unlike too many others recently.Why do you keep avoiding the stats we've provided lol
We broke down Savion has been very productive on jet sweeps, much to the disliking of all of us LOL
Kind of makes it sound like there were no incompletions.Full breakdown of all of Savion's involvements thus far.
Detroit:
1 yard rec, middle, -0.46 expected points
Washington:
rush for 8 yards, +0.54 expected points
rush for 16 yards, +1.47 expected points
Cleveland:
rush for 2 yards, -0.44 expected points
rush for -3 yards, -0.95 expected points
Dallas:
16 yard rec, middle, +0.49 expected points
rush for 1 yard, -0.41 expected points
4 yard rec, short right, -0.04 expected points
2 yard rec, short right, -0.28 expected points
Cincinnatti:
rush for 3 yards, -0.13 expected points
Pittsburgh
rush for 1 yard, -0.40 expected points
8 yard rec, short left, TD, +7.00 (no "expected points" here as it was, you know, actual points lol)
Carolina
rush for no gain, fumble, -4.37 expected points
6 yard rec, middle, +0.27 expected points
6 yard rec, short left, +0.99 expected points
Philly
2 yard rec, short right, -0.44 expected points
rec for no gain, middle, -0.54 expected points
NYG
33 yard rec, deep left, +3.41 expected points
I would have to go back and be sure but if my memory serves me correct a lot of those short passes left/right are going to be jet sweeps or screen passes but I would have to rewatch to be 100%. I know for instance his TD vs Steelers was a WR screen left. But anywho take that for what it's worth one way or another
As far as I know that is the case. 10 targets, 10 completions. But to be fair as I mentioned (or at least... hinted at lol) things like jet sweeps are often technically considered a "target" and "reception" as the QB is releasing the ball forward. So by nature it is an extremely high catch percentage on those lol. But in any case it would be accurate to say he doesn't have any drops/incompletions when targeted, limited as that may beKind of makes it sound like there were no incompletions.
Why do you keep avoiding the stats we've provided lol
We broke down Savion has been very productive on jet sweeps, much to the disliking of all of us LOL
Even if you have a bad QB, has Savion Williams done anything BUT run the ball from the Wildcat? Has he ever gained any yardage? Like I alluded to in my last post, keep the defense guessing. When Williams lines up in a WC, seems like all they are guessing is the snap count and maybe which direction he is heading.
LOL, gotchaI was talking about Savion running from the Wildcat position, not jet sweeps.
Could be the reason Aaron called so many timeouts, he saw it was the wrong call, but not enough time to audible a new play call.One another note. I also couldn't help but notice something in the Bronco's-Chiefs game. Tony Romo was doing the commentary and was talking about Denver's young QB Bo Nix. He made a comment that basically said "Sean Payton isn't doing Bo any favors by not getting the play calls in faster, he needs to allow his QB more time to walk up to the LOS and get a good look at what the defense is doing, so he can audible out if necessary." Lights started flashing in my head, this is exactly the problem I have been complaining about with MLF for years. Love and the offense are often huddled up painfully long and its obvious that he is waiting for the play call to come in from MLF. The communications from MLF to Love cut off at 15 seconds left on the play clock, but if MLF is waiting to finish his play call transmission at that mark, he's not putting his QB or his offense in a good position by doing so. He's forcing Love to tell everyone else what the play is, have them all process it and get set at the LOS. Meanwhile, the play clock is rapidly approaching zero and Love's ability to process what the defense is up to is all but gone. Do better MLF and if you can't....let someone else call the plays.
We've done it 2-3 times IIRC, we've used Tucker as a dedicated sneak man to save wear and tear on Love.LOL, gotcha
I don't think we've ran wildcat with him, only Tucker
We've done it 2-3 times IIRC, we've used Tucker as a dedicated sneak man to save wear and tear on Love.
I'm not a huge fan, but doing it w/ a receiver is less offensive to me. You don't tip your hand just by personnel groupings and doing it just often enough (once every 3-ish games seems fine) gives the defense something to worry about and waste precious practice time.
I probably wasn't really clear and I apologize to you all for that. In my head I was thinking about that 4th and 1 play against the Eagles, as it pertains to the possibility of bringing Malik Willis in, for situations such as that.
That is a big tell to me, and one of "predictability".
Bottom line for me is that I don't think MLF is a smart play caller under pressure.
I don't think that MLF calls plays fast enough either.
How many times during the course of an NFL game are we shown another teams OC, sitting up in the press box, 3-5 other coaches next to him, monitors and sheets of paper covering the desks in front of them? With that setup you have lots of brains processing a lot of available information. So instead of deciding your current move in an instant (MLF), you have guys thinking what the next 3 or more play calls could be, depending on the results of each proceeding play.
If Willis was trotted out as the QB the Eagles would have thought play fake or a bootleg. May have forced them to use a TO.Kind of like the 4th and 1 play against the Eagles?
I have to agree with the concept of using Willis occasionally. The proof for doing so was apparent against the Giants and last year when he filled in for Love.
Imagine had the Packers trotted out Willis on that 4th and 1 play against the Eagles. The defense would have been like "oh heck, we didn't study for this, what are they pulling?" Instead, MLF went to his tired and old bag of "tricks" and ran a play that the Eagles had seen on film a number of times in the game. I think their defense was more prepared for the play than our offense.
I've said it before, I don't watch a ton of other games. However, when I do, I take mental notes of what other teams are doing. Keeping the defense guessing seems to be an offenses biggest weapon.
One another note. I also couldn't help but notice something in the Bronco's-Chiefs game. Tony Romo was doing the commentary and was talking about Denver's young QB Bo Nix. He made a comment that basically said "Sean Payton isn't doing Bo any favors by not getting the play calls in faster, he needs to allow his QB more time to walk up to the LOS and get a good look at what the defense is doing, so he can audible out if necessary." Lights started flashing in my head, this is exactly the problem I have been complaining about with MLF for years. Love and the offense are often huddled up painfully long and its obvious that he is waiting for the play call to come in from MLF. The communications from MLF to Love cut off at 15 seconds left on the play clock, but if MLF is waiting to finish his play call transmission at that mark, he's not putting his QB or his offense in a good position by doing so. He's forcing Love to tell everyone else what the play is, have them all process it and get set at the LOS. Meanwhile, the play clock is rapidly approaching zero and Love's ability to process what the defense is up to is all but gone. Do better MLF and if you can't....let someone else call the plays.