not surprising teams have adjusted. Right now, I'd equate our offense to be similar to the Rich Gannon Raiders. Our Oline is in shambles. Lazor needs to figure out how to buy enough time to make defenses pay.
Well and it also makes it incumbent on Tannehill to recognize where pressure is likely to come from and adjust. There's only so much the coordinator can do with play-calling. The prime executor of the offense also has to be able to adjust on the fly, based on what the defense is presenting to him. Seeing a greater number of defenders than usual lined up to his right means he may need to scramble left as soon as he gets the snap, for example, and avoid a sack at the very least, if not making a play. I don't see Tannehill doing that sort of thing very often. He seems to be swallowed up by those sorts of efforts, without doing much to avoid them.
he deserves some of the blame, but if the right side of the line is playing the "olay" scheme, he isn't get much time to think about it. Plus Rex Ryan deserves credit for disguising his schemes well .
I'm going to say it again, I feel like it's been said 1,000 times...the pressure isn't coming from only one point when it comes. It comes from everywhere. So, it's not always as simple as "Oh look, overload to the right, I better watch for pressure from there." It's also pretty annoying that people really seem to think that Tannehill is that dumb that he can't figure out the concept of overloaded side = more pressure.
Monday night was a bad time to put the ball in the air, period. Rain, wind, the kickers struggled, the Jets shelved their pass game for basically the whole game.