MyrtleHawk
Can I get a hoyyaaa
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2021
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Looks like Spanos flew Vrabel out for an in person interview which would seem to suggest they are serious and may have moved on from Harbaugh.Vrabel has picked out some outstanding OCs so if he is hired he has an eye for talent.
He's a safe hire but not necessarily a sexy hire.Rumors swirling Vrabel is the next coach...was he even on the interview list. For me this isn't an exciting hire considering his tenure in Tennessee.
Learned that lesson from his father, Pete Carroll.He's a safe hire but not necessarily a sexy hire.
The McVay riddle got solved years ago. There's nothing particularly revolutionary about it. He just runs a Mike Martz offense.I have no idea what JS prefers, but I think people hoping we chase the "McVay/Shanahan" trend are being short sighted. If something is seen as clearly a trend by everyone, you're already too late. You need to correctly forecast the next trend or counter move that ends the current trend if you want to win. If you try to be the next McVay, by the time you figure it out, someone else will have solved the McVay riddle
The McVay riddle got solved years ago. There's nothing particularly revolutionary about it. He just runs a Mike Martz offense.
Well a Mike Martz offense that actually protects the QB.The McVay riddle got solved years ago. There's nothing particularly revolutionary about it. He just runs a Mike Martz offense.
He succeeds anyway because the ability to keep your team disciplined and executing correctly is just as important, if not more important, than scheme.
I'm going to have to disagree with everything you said in the first part of your statement.The McVay riddle got solved years ago. There's nothing particularly revolutionary about it. He just runs a Mike Martz offense.
He succeeds anyway because the ability to keep your team disciplined and executing correctly is just as important, if not more important, than scheme.
The more I've been researching Vrabel and hanging around the Titans forms to see what they had to say, the more I dislike the guy. I think he knows how to set up a good culture, but he seems to have many of the same problems that we all had with Pete. His choices for coordinators were suspect and he never fired under performing coordinators.If Vrabel can transform the defense into a feared unit while the offense becomes more fined tuned in the trenches (eg interior OL) that is one step closer for the Hawks to compete with the rest of the NFC which focus heavily on trench play.
I'm sorry but I don't remember Warner doing 7 step drops..Maybe 4-5 at the most. The guy had aI'm going to have to disagree with everything you said in the first part of your statement.
First off, McVay and Mike Martz don't even run the same offense. Martz ran an Air Coryell offense, McVay is from the Shanahan school of WCO. The playbooks are very different. Martz would run a ton of 7 step drops and drive the ball downfield. This isn't how McVay does things.
Yes, McVay isn't afraid to push the ball down the field, but that isn't the bulk of what he does. He's huge on the short, YAC routes. In fact, his teams have regularly lead the league in YAC, a lot of that is the design of McVay's offense.
The offense hasn't been completely figured out lately either. The McVay/Shanahan offense is still having huge successes right now. If you haven't noticed a good deal of the playoff teams are running that offense right now. The Packers, 49ers, Rams, Texans, Dolphins and Lions are running a similar system. Four of those guys are still in the running for the Super Bowl.
If the system has been figured out, why are 5 of the top 10 offenses in the NFL from that same coaching tree? Right under the top 10 spot you have the Texans and the Packers who are also from that coaching tree.
Honestly, this could've easily been 7 out of the top 10 offenses being from this coaching tree if the Packers and Texans weren't fielding first year starters at Quarterback and Kirk Cousins was able to stay healthy for the Vikings.
I don't know where you're getting that this offense has been "solved" It is still the dominant meta in the NFL.
5-7 step drops were pretty common. Mike Martz was known for long developing plays that attacked downfield. Another thing he liked to do is run the same exact same play from different formations. It caused a lot of confusion back in his hey day.I'm sorry but I don't remember Warner doing 7 step drops..Maybe 4-5 at the most. The guy had a
super quick release and those WR's got open quick. 7 steps is holding the ball too long.
I am warming a little to Vrabel though not my top 4-5 choice but Quinn? Please no.I take Vrabel over DQ all day.