5_Golden_Rings":21m7d49o said:
E.C. Laloosh":21m7d49o said:
Marvin, I can't make the argument that SF won't get pressure like Carolina did in the passing game which is why I made my point about how long Wilson is holding the ball. Also seemed like he didn't have many options for hot routes. When he did, he rarely hit them; instead he scrambled and looked down field.
I think the big difference might be in the run game. A LOT of the negative (or minimal gain) running plays we had were the result of guards pulling and the Carolina D being fast enough to come across the formation (in the backfield) and catch the RB before he could get into the 2nd level. That is what Pete called out in interviews when he said they'd tried to do too much with the o-line. Carolina had an amazing combination of power and speed up front. Killed our blocking scheme for the game.
Kaep was making a lot of quick, high percentage throws to wide open receivers, Rodgers as well. Wilson likely could have had similar numbers if he didn't hold onto the ball for so long. He simply wasn't throwing to open receivers at times and it resulted in some negative plays. I think Cam Newton actually made more "difficult" throws than Wilson or Kaepernick but most of Kaepernick's completions were literally to wide open receivers. Not a knock on him, just a criticism of the GB defense.
Similarly, GB's receivers were often wide open. If Wilson identifies receivers more quickly and hits those quick routes, I don't see how you guys avoid being chewed up by those 3WR sets you're talking about.
Kaepernick completed 9 passes of 20 yards or more in week 1. Also, this from ESPN:
ESPN":21m7d49o said:
Colin Kaepernick completed 8-of-15 passes for 212 yards and a touchdown on throws at least 15 yards downfield. His average pass was thrown a career-long 13.7 yards downfield.
If his average pass was less than 2 yards shy of 15+, then it stands to reason that the vast majority of his passes traveled near that far through the air.
In watching the game, I'd say the vast majority of his passes were MEDIUM range ones (10-25 yards down the field) that were executed relatively quickly, not high percentage short throws.
I was commenting purely based on what I saw, not what I looked up but okay. I didn't say he was throwing screens all game long.
I only count 7 passes of 20 or more yards in the game (looking at the play log on Game Rewind right now):
Q1 - 1 pass for 20 yards to VD for a TD. Rest were between 6 and 12 yards.
Q2 - 1 pass for 22 yards to Boldin over the middle. Rest were between 7 and 14 yards.
Q3 - 3 passes between 20 and 37 yards. Rest being between 4 and 16 yards.
Q4 - 2 passes between 23 and 46 yards. Rest were of between 4 to 17 yards.
I don't see the other two. In the play log, anything less than 16 yards was labeled as a "short" pass. Example: "pass short right to A. Boldin to BG 21 for 15 yards". Hence, my use of the word "short".
Most of these passes were to wide open receivers (as I said). I literally just watched every passing play of the game in about 10 minutes.
Kaep had two throws all game that I would consider really good or difficult passes. One was into double coverage to Boldin up the right hash (would have been batted easily if GB secondary wasn't clueless but he did thread the needle to hit Boldin), the other was a beautiful pass to VD up the middle that actually had a little arc on it.
Short of screen shots, I'm not sure how else to make my point. Lot of easy throws to wide open receivers. Many of them short to medium I suppose (2 - 12 yards) with, as you pointed out, a hand full of longer passes which brought the average up nicely.
He did make one poor throw to Boldin on the run but it was a catch and it was for good yardage, ultimately resulting in a 2 yard TD pass to Davis. Outside of that and a throw to the right sideline that was low (but could have been thrown there intentionally) was questionable. I didn't see a defender anywhere close to the receiver but he could have been doing it out of habbit.
Saw nothing that made me feel like my description wasn't accurate. Perhaps the short to medium range was balanced but a wide open receiver at 12 or 13 yards isn't much different than a wide open receiver at 7 yards.
Oh, and according to this, his average was 10.6. Not just shy of 15.
http://www.nfl.com/player/colinkaeperni ... 6/gamelogs