Why no McIntosh?

nanomoz

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 3, 2007
Messages
7,833
Reaction score
1,791
Location
UT
its 100% this. In this offense with a line this bad if you can't block, you're not seeing the field.
It's a good thing a stat line doesn't tell the story. Charbs was good.

I think he had 3 first down catches, 2 of them were big time first downns, one required some impressive YAC. He caught all 5 targets.

And you're right, I saw him completely save Geno's arse at least twice.
 

CPHawk

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2009
Messages
5,476
Reaction score
1,530
I know I along with a lot of others in the Gameday thread were asking for them to put McIntosh in over Charbonet after it was clear that the running game was going absolutely nowhere especially with a slower running back. What’s the point of having McIntosh on the team if when you are clearly unsuccessful running the ball, you won’t put him in?

Sidenote: I also found it strange that they gave Grubb game ball over Geno Smith???
Grubb only wanted to get 2 yards a carry.

And how do we know Geno didn’t also get a game ball?
 

The Breh

Active member
Joined
Aug 24, 2015
Messages
472
Reaction score
42
What a few of you are noticing is the benefit of having different skillsets. Charbs wasn't drafted to be a Murray backup but as a complementary piece. He's a downhill runner who runs hard, blocks well and has good hands. He contributes on special teams and is a good chance of pace back/goal line back/third down back.

With the benefit of hindsight, Charbs probably did hesitate too much yesterday. The Patriots front seven was better than expected and the running lanes were clogged, and he erred on the side of trying to find a big play when that really isn't his skillset. He's better off just decisively hitting whatever hole there is and driving forward with one occasional cut back. Murray would have done better on some of those carries as an extremely explosive runner who can occasionally turn nothing into a home run.

That doesn't mean that Holani or McIntosh should have gotten more play - I like them but neither of them are Kenneth Murray. Sometimes you are missing a key player and that's just how it is.
Who is this Kenneth Murray individual you mention multiple times?
 

sc85sis

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 13, 2010
Messages
8,606
Reaction score
1,473
Location
Houston Suburbs
What a few of you are noticing is the benefit of having different skillsets. Charbs wasn't drafted to be a Murray backup but as a complementary piece. He's a downhill runner who runs hard, blocks well and has good hands. He contributes on special teams and is a good chance of pace back/goal line back/third down back.

With the benefit of hindsight, Charbs probably did hesitate too much yesterday. The Patriots front seven was better than expected and the running lanes were clogged, and he erred on the side of trying to find a big play when that really isn't his skillset. He's better off just decisively hitting whatever hole there is and driving forward with one occasional cut back. Murray would have done better on some of those carries as an extremely explosive runner who can occasionally turn nothing into a home run.

That doesn't mean that Holani or McIntosh should have gotten more play - I like them but neither of them are Kenneth Murray. Sometimes you are missing a key player and that's just how it is.
Walker, not Murray.
 

LeveeBreak

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2022
Messages
2,067
Reaction score
2,483
Location
Oregon Wine Region
It's a good thing a stat line doesn't tell the story. Charbs was good.

I think he had 3 first down catches, 2 of them were big time first downns, one required some impressive YAC. He caught all 5 targets.

And you're right, I saw him completely save Geno's arse at least twice.
He does provide another passing game dynamic. That gives Grubb and Geno par or better vs K9.

This doesn’t mean we won’t see KM next week either. They had to give charbs the focus this week. Hopefully we get K9 back for the next game, but adding another dynamic in the background against Miami might be interesting.
 

AgentDib

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 1, 2010
Messages
5,557
Reaction score
1,352
Location
Bothell
Who is this Kenneth Murray individual you mention multiple times?
He reminds me a lot of DeMarco Murray. Similar weight and explosiveness with a lower center of gravity, but the same slipperiness and balance that was constantly turning nothing into something. Murray gave us fits a couple of times when our front seven was still very good.
 

Lagartixa

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2020
Messages
2,152
Reaction score
3,737
Location
Taboão da Serra, SP, Brazil
McIntosh is also a slower back. He's a bit more smooth but overall is a 4.6 speed guy and it shows on tape. He's just smaller.
I would say he’s way faster than Charbonnet.

Maybe "quicker," but probably not faster, and definitely not "way faster."

McIntosh's 10-yard split on the 40 at the Combine is marginally better than Charbonnet's, and Charbonnet's 20-yard split is marginally better than McIntosh's. When I say "marginally," I'm talking about two hundredths of a second, so the two are, to measurement accuracy, tied in both of those.

However, Charbonnet's 40 time is significantly better than McIntosh's. @Maelstrom787 is right that we're talking about two slower-than-average backs here.
 

SoulfishHawk

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
35,952
Reaction score
16,936
Location
Sammamish, WA
But at UW, they did a lot of motion stuff. Hand it the WR in motion, let him hit that corner. He's clearly fast enough to get it done. A lot more than just pounding into a brick wall over and over again.
 

Latest posts

Top