Andy Benoit from SI on third safeties

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https://www.si.com/nfl/2019/05/01/n...l&utm_campaign=themmqb&utm_source=twitter.com

SAFETY FIRST (OR AT LEAST SECOND)
Expanding your defensive scheme almost always involves safeties, the most maneuverable pieces on the chessboard. Lately, with offenses using more flex tight ends and running the ball out of three-receiver sets, defenses have taken to replacing their third linebacker with a third safety, putting more athleticism on the field. And so it’s no surprise that, after free agency this year brought sizable contracts to a host of safeties (Landon Collins, Earl Thomas, Tyrann Mathieu, Lamarcus Joyner, Adrian Amos and, on the second tier, Kenny Vaccaro, Tashaun Gipson and Eric Weddle), this draft also proved how highly teams value the position. Since 2010, NFL drafts have averaged 4.7 safeties taken in the first two rounds, but this year, teams selected six pure safeties in those rounds (including Darnell Savage, the first one off the board, at 21 to the Packers), plus two more who may well play the position (Joejuan Williams in New England and Lonnie Johnson in Houston).
 
Yes, we will most likely go into training camp with unproven talent at one ILB spot (especially if the plan is to keep Matthews at OLB) but with Christian playing almost 40% of defensive snaps last year, it looks like we'll be having Rapp on the field as much or more than the other ILB opposite Littleton.

I could see us playing dime defense with Rapp and Robey-Coleman on the field around 40% of the time next year.
 
https://www.si.com/nfl/2019/05/01/n...l&utm_campaign=themmqb&utm_source=twitter.com

SAFETY FIRST (OR AT LEAST SECOND)
Expanding your defensive scheme almost always involves safeties, the most maneuverable pieces on the chessboard. Lately, with offenses using more flex tight ends and running the ball out of three-receiver sets, defenses have taken to replacing their third linebacker with a third safety, putting more athleticism on the field. And so it’s no surprise that, after free agency this year brought sizable contracts to a host of safeties (Landon Collins, Earl Thomas, Tyrann Mathieu, Lamarcus Joyner, Adrian Amos and, on the second tier, Kenny Vaccaro, Tashaun Gipson and Eric Weddle), this draft also proved how highly teams value the position. Since 2010, NFL drafts have averaged 4.7 safeties taken in the first two rounds, but this year, teams selected six pure safeties in those rounds (including Darnell Savage, the first one off the board, at 21 to the Packers), plus two more who may well play the position (Joejuan Williams in New England and Lonnie Johnson in Houston).


This is similar to what the Patriots did to the Rams in 2001. In some cases they didn't even have a LB on the field.
 
Which makes it even more criminal that we didn't run the ball!!!

Well if the Rams had a RB that was any good I might agree with you. All they had was that dude Faulk. Who even remembers him right.

 
Which makes it even more criminal that we didn't run the ball!!!

"I should have passed the ball more." (paraphrasing)
- Mike Martz, when asked what he'd do differently

I love me a dude who knows how to double down... :ROFLMAO:
 
It's not the size of the contract, it's the onus on the bonus.
 
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