http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/thed...-dolphins-23-16-loss-to-new-england-patriots/
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I love that Volin does his homework, unlike many sports beat writers.
1) That first throw he analyzes, the deep one to Hartline, interesting to see how much respect our running game got on that playaction. I didn't realize it was off playaction.
2) The second throw, behind Reggie... we don't know if Reggie ran his route with the proper timing and depth so I don't know that we can say that's definitely a Tannehill mistake.
3) Yeah, he placed it poorly for LCay. Wonder if the wind was a huge part of it, since Brady struggled a bit too.
4) Disagree that Fasano is wide open.. the guy along the goalline is covering him and FASTER (looks like a DB) so could have gotten out there to make the tackle short of the endzone. Still, a TE vs a DB is a one-on-one that I like. On the other hand, I like that Tanny made the more aggressive throw to the middle of the field area, since I want to see him cultivate that willingness.
5) Bad underthrow to that COver One hole to Hartline. Not sure what happened there... just bad accuracy, or bad choice of where to put it. I'm not sure these are mechanical accuracy sometimes, and not more about Ryan overthinking where to place the ball and then screwing it up because of that. Or it's just the wind.
Volin's photos of Rashad's INT and Clemons getting duped for a 31 yd catch by Hernandez on virtually the same play design are a great example of why we want Jones as a Safety but need to replace Clemons.
But THIS is what scares the **** out of me... because it will turn him into Chad ****ing Henne if it becomes a habit:
"Another troubling trend emerged on Sunday: Tannehill escaped the pocket a bit too early on several occasions, and almost exclusively rolled to his right. Sometimes, that’s the smart play, but many times he could have bought himself even more time by stepping up or spinning back to his left"
Volin makes a great point...
"Tannehill only played 19 games in college, so it’s natural that his instincts are still a bit raw when it comes to facing the blitz. But that’s the difference between Tannehill and Wilson, Andrew Luck and Robert Griffin III, who all started for three or more seasons in college."
- Let's PRAY Tanny leanrs to STEP up and work the pocket more. That's when, against Aldon Smith's rush, I want to see Tannehill stepping UP when Martin rides Smith wide. None of this rolling right every third pass play. -
Anyways, he is GETTING college level coaching NOW (Zac Robinson and Sherm), but against NFL caliber D-Co-ords and players.cdz12250 likes this. -
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I don't see that part about escaping the pocket troubling, nor do I think he did it too early, nor do I think it is at all similar to Henne. He's a good athlete who can make plays with his feet. I'd like to see him do it more, not less. His numbers against the blitz are pretty comparable to his non-blitz numbers. He isn't panicking. It is actually fairly unusual that he is as good under pressure as he is when he is not under pressure. When you look at those numbers, the problem is much more the "not under pressure" numbers. When "under pressure" Tanny's efficiency numbers are better than Wilson's and Luck's. The difference is that Wilson and Luck have been much better when not under pressure.smahtaz likes this. -
The only thing i don't like seeing is Tannehill rolling out to the right almost exclusively, it seems that anytime he feels a little bit of pressure he just runs to the right and attempts a sideline throw. When he does this he virtually cuts the field in half and i think we have seen defenses in the last few games react to this tendency.
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Bpk likes this.
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Volin doesn't mention it, but I love the block Kevin Burnett made on Aaron Hernandez after the Reshad Jones interception. As soon as he gets up Burnett levels him at a dead run and he doesn't realize it until a split second before.
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Jesus ****ing Christ @ that Low Block Penalty!!!
How the **** do you re-spot the ball to penalize one team at the SPOT WHERE THE OTHER TEAM COMMITTED A FOUL?
Anyway, great breakdown by Volin. -
****ing Belichick. Had Jerod Mayo pull a Chad Cascadden in the 4th quarter. Ran through the left side B gap drawing the shadow from the tailback, but he had absolutely no intention of pass rushing. His lone goal was to get behind Jon Martin and shove him in the back straight to the ground while Trevor Scott counters to the inside and gets a clear shot straight to the quarterback.
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Volin really is the best.
Ugh, Tannehill sure misses a lot of wide open receivers downfield. I didn't even notice that Bush play during the game but man that's another should-have-been touchdown.
Such is life with a rookie QB.Anonymous likes this. -
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Interesting to see the impact plays Bush could have made if the ball had been delivered to him. I think his versatility is sometimes underutilized and under appreciated this season
cdz12250 and Rocky Raccoon like this. -
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They shouldn't re-sign Bush. It's pretty clear at this point he can't play in a zone-heavy scheme. He's going to give you loads of unsuccessful runs, then one or two chunk yard gains when he outraces defenders to the front-side or reverses field or something like that.
Also, I think it's about time for the idea that Bush is all that gifted a receiver to fall by the wayside. He's good in space and he can physically catch the ball well, but there's way more to it than that. He doesn't run routes well enough to be the slot receiver people keep claiming he could always be, and he doesn't do a good enough job making himself available.
He's not Darren Sproles, he's not Ray Rice, he's not Matt Forte or Arian Foster or anything like that.shouright, Rhody Phins Fan and Stitches like this. -
Volin is only stating the obvious folks, Tannehill is killing the offense with missed opportunites due to inaccuracy.
This is why when I hear "..if only he had better Wr's..."
I kinda know whomever is saying that probably does not know very much about the Dolphins and why the offense is struggling.Anonymous likes this. -
I agree that something is off on those relatively few occasions that we go to Reggie when he is running a pass route. I'm not completely sure the blame rests with him, or that it is irreparable. We don't use him very much for that. He certainly has all the athletic ability necessary for that role and I don't get the impression that he is too stupid to be able to learn how to run a decent route. I suspect it is more that we don't do it very often and the timing between him and Tannehill on those plays is not particularly good as a consequence. -
The blocking isn't particularly good, but it's nowhere close to as bad as the product on the field. The fact that the coaching staff has switched to a more man-oriented blocking scheme when Reggie Bush on the field I think pretty much proves my point for me. They don't trust him to see the field.
I think it's also worth noting that Reggie Bush is one of the most "stuffed" players in the league, and Daniel Thomas is one of the least behind the same line.
Pretty much all those players around Bush have 50-60+ more carries than him.
http://stats.washingtonpost.com/fb/leaders.asp?type=Rushing&range=NFL&rank=005
Daniel Thomas has been stuffed on the 7th least plays in the NFL.
http://stats.washingtonpost.com/fb/leaders.asp?year=&type=Rushing&range=NFL&rank=006
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Tannehill has missed some throws, but if you think our struggles are mainly Tannehill and not the WR's and O-Line...you font know much about Dolphins football our our struggles IMO. -
-SD
-NYJ
-SF
-KC
What Volin did for this one could be done for pretty much every game save vs AZ. -
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Though since Gabbert has been out, golly, that previously poor Wr corps has suddenly become highly productive..wonder why? -
Our problem is the lack of a dominant guy. Hartline and Bess are solid, but there needs to be an alpha male. -
Yes, DThomas has been stuffed less. Part of that is due to his different style and part is due to the different types of circumstances in which he carries the ball. He's been used more in short yardage and similar situations on plays designed for quick hits and short yardage gains (or where short yardage gains are expected). It is no big surprise that his ypc is similarly almost a yard below Reggie's. I'll also say that his very low carry number makes the significance of his stuffs number pretty dubious.
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However, I don't think those teams you listed would trade for the Dolphins WR, especially the Jags.
Cecil Shorts has been phenomenal this year and Justin Blackmon has begun to break out of his shell with Henne feeding him targets.
San Francisco, not at all. They're happy with Manningham, Crabtree (who's had a productive year this year), Moss, Morgan, etc.
I don't think San Diego would either. Alexander has been a beast the past 4-5 games, along with Malcolm Floyd who has played admirably.
I don't think our WR's stink, but I think many teams are content with their group, like we are. The Jets, heck yes they'd trade anything right now for an adequate WR.
I'd have said no to Oakland before Denarious Moore fell off a cliff and Heward-Bey regressed from last year. Streater has come along though. -
The point I just made is that if you can't find 5 teams that would trade WR's with us we are in the bottom 5 at WR at least. You can't clarion the Wr's and Te's are not part of the problem when they are clearly some of the worst in the league as a unit.
I think you take those current guys and add a speed threat and a solid big possession guy you have a good unit. We don't have the tools right now to make Tannehill successful. -
KC and NYJ are just terrible.
And keep in mind, the league sees what is really going on in Miami, mainly Tannehill is just not that accurate right now.
He is leaving way to many plays on the field and it is killing the offense, unpleasant, but it is the way it is. -
We've been through this with Henne, a Wr does not magically make your Qb a better player, it is the other way around.
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