- Joined
- Oct 16, 2013
- Messages
- 4,885
Didn't Kupp come of the field quite a bit in 12 personnel? That might explain that part. Either way, I've been watching some of these games in All 22 and Goff has missed opportunities to go down field looking at Kupp.
And by stared down, you mean from pre snap, to snap, to throw to Kupp, his eyes never left him. Was so maddening. You always know where the ball was going.Ive seen that also, and @Merlin has pointed some of that out on All 22 clips. Goff has missed seeing open receivers. His college scouting report form one scout was that when pressured he became a one read QB. He stared down Kupp especially on third down.
And by stared down, you mean from pre snap, to snap, to throw to Kupp, his eyes never left him. Was so maddening. You always know where the ball was going.
Kupp when healthy is damn good, so is Woods. I haven't seen the all 22 videos, but it makes you wonder if there were more throws downfield available but he never saw them or looked that way.Which begs... how good is Kupp when everyone including the casual fan on tv knows the ball is going to him on 3rd and long?
I've been saying it has been McVay retarding Goff's development for a long time. But it's not the scheme that is the problem. It was Sean's need to micromanage each play. He was in Goff's ear up until the last 15 seconds between each play essentially making the defensive reads. By the time the play is called and they get to the LS there is no time for Goff to really make proper reads. Many times he only had time to simply go with McVay's reads or they got a delay of game when he realized McVay was wrong and tried to read it himself with not enough time to do so.
McVay never really trusted Goff from day one then is surprised when he didn't develop? Give me a freaking break. I think this trade will benefit both sides. Holmes understands the need to build a decent o-line in front of Jared and I think he will do just that. Once he gets that o-line watch out because IMO Goff could very well become the franchise QB everyone envisioned.
McVay conversely won't feel the necessity to coddle Stafford who wouldn't accept it anyway. They already have a good relationship and IMO this offense will change in many important ways. The vertical game will return. Developing an inside power run attack will hold those LBs and make that play-action more effective.
I think this is going to go down as ultimately a WIN=WIN for both teams. The Lions simply need to be patient with Goff until they build the team around him. With Holmes and Ray Agnew both key former Rams their turn around could be dramatic.
Speaking of "crutches" .. I was going to make a separate post about this.
McVay being in Goff's ear "reading the defense" until the mic is cut off... I can't remember hearing that a coach did that consistently for more veteran QBs. In fact I can't remember hearing it about QBs at all. It seemed like McVay doing that for Goff was out of some sort of necessity ....that Jared wasn't great at reading defenses, so McVay needed to do that for him.
does anyone know if that was the norm with other QBs? Can never remember hearing about a play calling that much in the QBs ear ear all the way through the cut off time on the play clock..with that being the norm.
Bruce Arians (then with the Cardinals) said it was far from the first time a coach did that with their QB. I think the main difference with the Rams is that they would hurry to the line of scrimmage to maximize the time that McVay could communicate with Goff.
Jared Goff, Sean McVay push back against claims that Rams’ play-calling is ‘cheating’ or ‘immoral’
Coach, quarterback say they use in-helmet communication the same as every other NFL team.www.ocregister.com