10-14-2022, 09:40 AM
(10-14-2022, 01:44 AM)BengalsBong Wrote: Yes it was his words. But you can expect it to look better the shuffle pass we saw that looked terrible. You drill plays over and over till you get them right. It falls on the head coach for execution as well you are coaching them up if the look like dog crap it is a direct reflection of your coaching skills.
I do not want to hear how it was a new guy running the shuffle pass cause this guy has been on your team under the head coach for 3 years.
If your o-linemen bearhug the pass rushers and do not grab the by the chest and clamp on with a strong grip on the jersey, then that is bad form. The o-line coach the offensive cord the head coach should all three get this fixed. But you still see some of our dumbass o-linemen doing it all the damn time. But go ahead and pass the buck to Pollack call for his head to prove your point. It falls on the head coach everything falls on the head coach he can move anywhere and coach any position. Kind of like the queen on a chess board.
What you don't seem to even want to understand is you're drilling those plays into players in practice both in walk-thru and also with defenders on your same team that know exactly what the play is. Nobody is fooled.Plays are not 100% full proof in a game and especially in a congested area near the goal line.
In a game you're going up against real defenses with Parsons or Watt with pre-snap shifting and movement. All it takes is a sniff by a defender
or a defender staying in the box inside knowing full well they don't have to worry about containment with Burrow because he never ever rolls out. Totally different story with the Chiefs and their success running that play with a crazy athletic QB.
EVERYTHING offensively, and especially if you want any consistency, starts with your OL and run game. Nice improvement last week and this game was for the taking. Stupidity by the collective offensive staff not to run Mixon with a RB and OL that for the first time all season was getting to the 2nd level, creating running lanes and was supremely confident.