Dammit, I'll bite. My answer was, I have no idea. There have just been way too many factors going on. First, you had TJack. How can you judge the coordinator if you don't think he has a legit QB? Then you have a rookie QB and have to start with a smallish playbook. It is going to take some time for them to figure this out together. Then you have the O-line issues. How can you properly judge either Russell or Bevell when they don't have two seconds?
The passing game has underwhelmed. It is the WR's? Is it Bevell? Is it Russell?
We have Marshawn. His strenghts are between the tackles, and that is exactly where Bevell tries to use him.
We have Golden. He is best either on jump ball situations or on screens. That is where Bevell tries to use him.
We have Miller and Baldwin, who are presumably best over the middle, and that is where Bevell tries to use them.
We have a young, very mobile QB. And I think for the most part, Bevell tries to use him correctly too.
Because of these almost alone, I will say that I don't think Bevell is terrible.
So, I think Bevell has the right idea. Is he smart enough though to turn the gist of a player into production? I don't think he is fantastic at using motions and formations to get mismatches. But, then again, what type of player would Rice/Tate/Baldwin/Miller have a mismatch against? You would like to see more balls downfield to Rice, but to be honest, I don't think Russell trusted him.
Does he anticipate the defense and call the correct play accordingly? For the most part, I haven't watched enough tape to decipher the coverages and see what routes we are running against them. A few weeks ago, I watched the wide tape of three games to try to solve the riddle of our passing game. The way I judge a passing game is to pause the play in the 2-3 second range. Then I try to detect the coverage if I haven't read it pre-snap, look at the routes, try to determine the primary and secondary receivers, and see if there are guys about to break open. A bit difficult without knowing the plays, but you catch on to combinations after a while.
Much to my surprise (although one of the games was against JAX), there were more people coming open when they were supposed to than I thought there would be. Not always, but there were plenty of times where if Russell had thrown with anticipation, he could have thrown a receiver open. Now, is he coached to hold onto it and not throw unless he is sure, or is he just not anticipating?
Also, take into account that Bevell is a relatively green play-caller. Is it reasonable to assume he is going to keep improving and growing with Russell?
When we get Percy and the line back, and Russell has time, is Bevell going to be able to turn this into a dynamic, potent offense?