### Joe Philbin says Dion Jordan is “playing faster” because he’s “doing less thinking,” something Jordan also said Monday. Philbin wants to keep using him on special teams because “he’s a big guy that can run and is hard to block.”…
Lamar Miller remains with the starters and Philbin said he is having a “very good” camp…. Jason Fox shifted to left tackle this week, behind Branden Albert, after Nate Garner struggled in the role earlier in OTAs. That suggests the Dolphins, for now, have a comfort level with Ja'Wuan James holding down the right tackle job.
### One characteristic of Bill Lazor’s offense is a lot of pre-snap motion, but Philbin explained this week there are positives and minuses to that approach: “If you’re stationary and you’re sitting at the line of scrimmage and your ducks are in a row as we like to say, it’s a little bit easier from an offensive perspective, but you’re not challenging the defense probably as much.
"There is give and take. I think, as a coaching staff, we have to examine whether all of this motion and shifting a detriment or is it a benefit? And what’s the right blend and what’s the right balance.”
### Dolphins defensive coordinator Kevin Coyle has been showing his players tape of Seattle’s defense partly to demonstrate how much emotion and enthusiasm with which they play, according to a player. What’s ironic about that: Another veteran Dolphins player says the Dolphins, during the past two years, have taken on Philbin's unemotional, at times detached personality."
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Lamar Miller looks good with no pads on...shocker.
I like the bit about watching Seattle's defense for a lot of reasons. First the attitude, certainly. But second, those dudes cut down the passcatcher immediately. That cuts down on the RAC and big plays, obviously, but it also gets that fire going. Allowing a catch and smacking the guy right away can be an intimidation/fight victory for the defense, imo.
Remember Kam Chancellor popping Julius Thomas over the middle at the start of Super Bowl? That was on second down. And yet it felt like the defense had just won the battle of that posession. -
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Do you think it's a coincidence every freakin year we all talk about how we wish our team played with more passion and fire?
Don't get me started JD, just lets hope hickey knows there is a venue problem here and he has to prioritize men who are Intrinsically motivated..
Coaches must understand the problem and go above and beyond to make your team find an edge..find the anger that will fuel these players playing in this town and in that stadium..
Next topic please -
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DPlus47 and Pennington's Limp Arm like this.
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But I think when you start to be different from what the rest of the league is doing you have to realize you're either outsmarting everyone or outstupiding everyone. And if what you're doing is not working then the chances of the latter increase.
The reason I think that blurb says a mouthful is it becomes clear that when Philbin has explained the lack of motion in the past he wasn't just speaking on behalf of Mike Sherman. He was speaking his beliefs. And now the Dolphins are adding more motion to the offense and I think it becomes pretty clear (if it wasn't already) that this is a Lazor thing. Philbin even tried to make it clear that the turtle could go back into the shell if they feel the motion and movement is just confusing the players.Hiruma78 likes this. -
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This is a Philbin thing. -
Those that assume pre-snap motion is a no-brainer just remember this.
Only 13.5% of Aaron Rodgers pass snaps involved a receiver in motion. That's significantly LESS than Tannehill's 20.3%.
I don't think it's as big a no-brainer as others believe it to be. However I will say that consistently from 2012 to 2013, Tannehill has had a higher passer rating on snaps that use pre-snap motion. I don't have the 2012 numbers anymore, I just remember seeing them prior to 2013. However the 2013 numbers show a 91 rating on motion plays and a 79 rating on non-motion plays.
On the other hand Aaron Rodgers has a higher rating on plays with no motion as opposed to plays with motion. So a part of this probably involves adapting to your talent which many coaches talk about doing but in reality don't do that often.
Even with Lazor installing more motion...is that because of Tannehill's idiosyncracies? No. It's because it's something Lazor has always favored.Mile High Fin and DPlus47 like this. -
Interesting point of order here but there definitely seems to be a disagreement in the way certain stat sources track motion.
ESPN has only 2.5% of Tannehill's snaps utilizing offensive motion. And last year only 1.3%.
But another source I've used has 20.3% of Tannehill's snaps utilizing offensive motion. They don't offer historical splits so I don't know about 2013.
The point kind of still stands though because according to ESPN, Aaron Rodgers did not have a single pass play that involved offensive motion.
Probably the difference is that one tracks pre-snap motion while ESPN designates motion as only plays where the guy is moving laterally as the ball is snapped. The latter seems kind of a useless thing to track although it probably is a nice proxy for read-option usage.
Incidentally Nick Foles utilized motion 31.9% pre-snap and 11.3% during-snap.
Know what I find interesting about that? The delta is primarily the during-snap percentage. The data suggests Tannehill used pre-snap motion about 17.8% of snaps and Foles used it about 20.6% which isn't really all that big a difference. But the Eagles had guys moving during the snaps 11.3% of the time versus Miami's only 2.5% of the time and that's a much bigger difference.Da 'Fins and Pennington's Limp Arm like this. -
Pennington's Limp Arm likes this.
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toto likes this.
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Personally, I say "let her rip!" -
At this stage of the game you are what you are. If Philbin tries to pull off "fiery" and "inspirational" he's just going to look like a comic book version of himself and it will be even worse.
He needs to change within the constraints of what he is and what he's not. Bill Belichick is practically stone faced most of the time anyone sees him, including on game days. But he coaches players pretty hard in the film room on their energy and what they're putting out emotionally. Or at least he did in moments captured on that one Football Life special. That's coaching within your strengths and weaknesses.
I think the bigger story is just that the guy isn't pulling it off. That's what it's all about. Perhaps it's just a reflection of the team's 15-17 record during his two year stint but he's not pulling it off, the players know it, and they're acknowledging it.
And now we're installing offensive principles that run counter to what he wants to do offensively. He was hired as an offensive archetect and the story of the off season is all the ways Bill Lazor is going to reshape the team's defunct offense.
So why's the guy here again?dirtywhiteboy, fin13, toto and 3 others like this. -
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The feeling I've gotten, which I think actually has a fair amount of evidence backing it up, is that most of the players on the team respect Tom Brady but don't really like him at all.
I think smart coaches realize players don't play for their coach. It's pretty rare when players do play for their coach and it's usually short-lived, and the result of some kind of temporary circumstance. Some play for money, some play for glory, most play for recognition, many play for their teammates. Not many play for their coach.
Figuring out a way to keep players motivated is an art form, not a science. It's not about being fiery or being calm. It's about whether you're pulling it off or you're not. Have you set up an environment that makes players feel enthusiastic and rewarded for success? Have you set up an environment that makes players fear failure like a root canal? Have you managed to pull off both things, somehow?
We've had indications from very close to the start that Philbin has had a tough time with those things. -
My point is to take down a strawman. When we point out that the players themselves think Philbin is milquetoast, his defenders prop up a strawman to point out you don't need rah rah coaches to be good. I'm pointing out coaches who have won it all, are not rah rah coaches, and are not going to the media to tell them their coach is unemotional and detached. When players tell you their coach is detached, you have a problem. When your defensive coach shows you tape of another team, and tells you to play with emotion like them, you have a problem.
The Seahawks aren't showing tapes of us playing that's for sure.toto, ToddPhin and ckparrothead like this. -
1. The Eagles. It's like Philbin is acting as though this is the first time such a concept has been introduced and has had no history of success. After Miami's offense averaged an ankle-grabbing 18.9 pts the past two years, if Philbin is apprehensive about leaving his unproductive comfort zone to mimic a Philly offense that averaged 32.2 pts/game during their final 9 games, then he needs to be shown the door. Philbin should be conveying nothing but the utmost confidence in his team's ability to execute a new scheme. Instead we've got our head coach sending messages of doubt, almost like he wants to create a self-fulfilling prophecy. We're beyond turning back at this point, Joe. Lazor is hired. The offense has been designed and implemented. That emotionless potato head needs to STFU and stop spreading seeds of fear and doubt.
Here are the facts, Joe, since you seem to prefer a pessimistic mentality: Philly boasted 8 games of 30+ points last year, and amazingly NONE of their final 9 games saw less than 24 points. That sputtering Miami offense you seem so protective of saw just 3 games of 30+ points in two damn years, 23 games of less than 24 points, and 13 games with 17 or less. Stop living in the past. This ain't Green Bay; it's Miami, so stop protecting the prior offense as though it's Green Bay. Even if Lazor's scheme fails, it can't possibly be worse than the product Sherman and yourself conceived.
2. The self-fulfilling prophecy thing. There's probably a part of Joe, even if it's subconscious, that doesn't want to see this new offense succeed, because when you break it all down, Lazor having success where Philbin and Sherman couldn't would be quite telling. If Lazor's offense fails, at the end of the day Philbin can say [even if it's to himself], "see, it wasn't just me". To me it seems his years of being entrenched in an offensive coordinator's mentality is influencing his head coaching psyche b/c there's no rationalization for his excuse-making of Sherman, his continued support of a floundering offense, nor his hesitancy toward Lazor's offense. He needs to be a goddam head coach right now and do the things head coaches do, like showing nothing but confidence in the team's new Offensive Coordinator and newly implemented scheme, as well as give the appearance that he cares more about the team and its success rather than emphasizing support for Sherman and their failed offense together. A real head coach with a head coaching mentality would've roasted the offense of the past two years and the brain trust behind it, would confidently be welcoming this new exciting scheme, and would be giving the impression to his players and staff that he's 100% in support of it and believes his guys are every bit as capable as Philly's squad to make it succeed.thisperishedmin, UCF FINatic, Hiruma78 and 3 others like this. -
ck, I'll point out Tom Coughlin who changed his style up a little before their first superbowl win in NY. Of course, he did it within his confines. We don't want Philbin to become Harbaugh or Carroll. But he's clearly not connecting to his players.
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