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Is Shane Calling Plays to Win Games or to Groom AR?


Smonroe

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And before anyone writes anything, I know it's not mutually exclusive.

 

Here's the reasoning - so far, AR has run the ball 18 times in three games.  They're mostly playing him as a pocket passer.  As if they're teaching him the position.  Very few called runs or RPOs.  Hence, the offense hasn't stayed on the field nearly enough to help out the D.

 

Whereas the Commanders have run Daniels 38 times.  They're basically running his college offense.  They're doing whatever it takes to win games.  In the long run, that may not be a sound strategy if he ends up like RGknee.

 

There's no question that AR is a more dangerous runner, but the concern is injury.  

 

Personally, I think Shane is taking the right approach.  We need to see if AR is the franchise this season. 

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Shane has always had the mindset of get ahead with the pass but drain the clock and finish it off with the run. Regardless of what he sees in practice with AR with a red jersey where he can complete underneath passes with less pressure, game play has shown things to be different. So, with regards to the run game, he has not taken off the training wheels for AR with him coming off an injury, while he is adapting his passing game play calling to what he sees with AR on the field. 

 

With AR probably still doing rehab, the full examination of his mechanics, I had to guess, wasn't completely possible at TC??? Then add the "can't touch the QB" principles employed in TC dilutes anything he could glean on the mechanics front without much pressure, is my educated guess.

 

I really feel that the second half of the season is where we will see more things come together. It is like my friend's friend's daughter who is French American, who was half fluent in French and English till around 7 or 8, and then by 10, she was fluent in both. AR is still putting it together, Shane is still putting it together on several fronts. That is my measured response with a hint of optimism. :) 

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13 minutes ago, chad72 said:

Shane has always had the mindset of get ahead with the pass but drain the clock and finish it off with the run. Regardless of what he sees in practice with AR with a red jersey where he can complete underneath passes with less pressure, game play has shown things to be different. So, with regards to the run game, he has not taken off the training wheels for AR with him coming off an injury, while he is adapting his passing game play calling to what he sees with AR on the field. 

 

With AR probably still doing rehab, the full examination of his mechanics, I had to guess, wasn't completely possible at TC??? Then add the "can't touch the QB" principles employed in TC dilutes anything he could glean on the mechanics front without much pressure, is my educated guess.

 

I really feel that the second half of the season is where we will see more things come together. It is like my friend's friend's daughter who was French American who was half fluent in French and English till around 7 or 8, and then by 10, she was fluent in both. AR is still putting it together, Shane is still putting it together on several fronts. That is my measured response with a hint of optimism. :) 

 

AR is getting close.  And I agree with you about Shane.  AR needs to clean up a few things and the offense could roll without him always running.  

 

But I still feel they need to have a called run and a few more RPOs to keep the defenses on their heels.  Even with what they're doing now, it's helping Taylor.  It can only get better when they use AR a little more like that.

 

However - injuries is always the wildcard.  Look how many good players around the league are already out for weeks or even on IR for the year.  Quality depth is going to tell the tale.

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I wonder if they're being more careful with Anthony Richardson early in the season because another significant early-season injury would be a disaster. They surely can't afford for him to be essentially a rookie again next season. Maybe he will run the ball more after he's gotten a fair bit of experience this season and an injury wouldn't completely throw his development back to the starting point again. He also may need to prove that he's gotten better in avoiding big hits, which could be a process that takes a while.  

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The thing is, if AR ran more, defenses would give him more opportunities in the passing game.

 

AR has a pocket passer's mentality, but he's SO raw. I don't think there's anything wrong in using his athletic ability while he's transitioning to NFL football and learning to be a QB.

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1 minute ago, Solid84 said:

The thing is, if AR ran more, defenses would give him more opportunities in the passing game.

 

AR has a pocket passer's mentality, but he's SO raw. I don't think there's anything wrong in using his athletic ability while he's transitioning to NFL football and learning to be a QB.

 

I agree.  The only issue is if he has the mental discipline to slide or go down early instead of bulling through a defender.  When you're in the heat of a game, it has to be hard to pull up the reins.

 

Mahomes is the gold standard.  He often will run when the opportunity is there, but he rarely gets hit.  Still, even he's had injuries.  They're not 100% preventable, but you can help yourself avoid them.

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1 hour ago, EasyE said:

He definitely doing something different. Sure not using JT that much and I would pull my hair out if I had any. Lol 

JT is over 100 yards in each of the last two games.   He is the reason they beat the Bears.  He needs more touches though.   I agree

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The NFL is a passing league.  Running is for killing the clock, for which you need to have a running game/RB powerful enough to run the ball when the opposing D knows you are going to run the ball.  Teams don't really need a big play running game. That is a separate issue from ARs play.

 

Since last year was a throw away year that followed a 4-12 season to focus on ARs development , that we did not get, this year should be that year.  Why would there be any complaints about that?

 

But, there needs to be better time of possession so AR can get more reps, not because we should be winning games in a season where we still don't have good enough personnel to contend for anything beyond a weak AFC South division title.

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43 minutes ago, DougDew said:

The NFL is a passing league.  Running is for killing the clock, for which you need to have a running game/RB powerful enough to run the ball when the opposing D knows you are going to run the ball.  Teams don't really need a big play running game. That is a separate issue from ARs play.

 

Since last year was a throw away year that followed a 4-12 season to focus on ARs development , that we did not get, this year should be that year.  Why would there be any complaints about that?

 

But, there needs to be better time of possession so AR can get more reps, not because we should be winning games in a season where we still don't have good enough personnel to contend for anything beyond a weak AFC South division title.

A power running game will always be effective .  JT needs more touches

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2 minutes ago, jvan1973 said:

A power running game will always be effective .  JT needs more touches

Yes agree on both, but JT isn't a power back per se....the pile mover I'm talking about when teams are closing out the game and the D knows you are running.  That's another convo.

 

But AR should benefit from more JT touches during the majority of the game.  Increasing TOP would get AR more passing plays.

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35 minutes ago, DougDew said:

Yes agree on both, but JT isn't a power back per se....the pile mover I'm talking about when teams are closing out the game and the D knows you are running.  That's another convo.

 

But AR should benefit from more JT touches during the majority of the game.  Increasing TOP would get AR more passing plays.

The Bears knew JT would be getting the ball at 2:01.  The oline and JT pounded it for a first down.   What you are talking about,  literally just happened 

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1 hour ago, DougDew said:

The NFL is a passing league.  Running is for killing the clock, for which you need to have a running game/RB powerful enough to run the ball when the opposing D knows you are going to run the ball.  Teams don't really need a big play running game. That is a separate issue from ARs play.

 

Since last year was a throw away year that followed a 4-12 season to focus on ARs development , that we did not get, this year should be that year.  Why would there be any complaints about that?

 

But, there needs to be better time of possession so AR can get more reps, not because we should be winning games in a season where we still don't have good enough personnel to contend for anything beyond a weak AFC South division title.


Running is not just for killing the clock.  You increase ToP by running.  
 

The game is about first downs.  We don’t need AR to complete 70%, just to “make the layups”.  Maybe run to extend a drive when it’s there for the taking.  
 

I can think of at least one play where he scrambled, and could have gotten the first if he continued to run.  But he tried for the bigger gain and missed on the pass.  4th down, punt.  

 

I’m not sure he’s being coached not to run or it’s his call.  He wasn’t like that last season.  
 

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Good Headline.

 

I think there are two distinct issues going on here. I think Shane is forcing Richardson to throw the ball because the lack of called running plays. I think Shane is always waiting for the big hit in the passing game. Do you need to work on the simple and short game that moves the chains

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2 hours ago, NewColtsFan said:

Both.   Shane is trying to win and groom AR at the same time.   He can do both.  


Well, look at it this way.  If it were a playoff game, Shane would have AR run a lot more.   There’s a lot better chance to win, right?  So you have to at least agree he’s not treating these games like that.

 

Yes, I think he’d love to win and let AR develop in the pocket.  But he’s either not going to risk injury, or he’s treating this as a developmental year for AR.   Going all out to win isn’t happening.  
 

As I said earlier, Daniels has twice as many runs as AR.  That strategy may not pay off if he gets hurt, but it’s working for them so far.  

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1 hour ago, Smonroe said:


Well, look at it this way.  If it were a playoff game, Shane would have AR run a lot more.   There’s a lot better chance to win, right?  So you have to at least agree he’s not treating these games like that.

 

Yes, I think he’d love to win and let AR develop in the pocket.  But he’s either not going to risk injury, or he’s treating this as a developmental year for AR.   Going all out to win isn’t happening.  
 

As I said earlier, Daniels has twice as many runs as AR.  That strategy may not pay off if he gets hurt, but it’s working for them so far.  


Huh?

 

Are you under the impression that a head coach — any head coach — approaches all 17 regular season games like a playoff game?   They don’t.   
 

So I don’t care what Wash is doing with Daniels, they’re not the same player.  Daniels is far more experienced than AR, so how Wash uses JD is going to be different than how Steichen uses AR.  
 

So my point is that Steichen can try to do both….   groom Richardson AND win games.  It doesn’t have to be one or the other.  It can be both. 


Sorry we see this differently.  

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7 hours ago, NewColtsFan said:


Huh?

 

Are you under the impression that a head coach — any head coach — approaches all 17 regular season games like a playoff game?   They don’t.   
 

So I don’t care what Wash is doing with Daniels, they’re not the same player.  Daniels is far more experienced than AR, so how Wash uses JD is going to be different than how Steichen uses AR.  
 

So my point is that Steichen can try to do both….   groom Richardson AND win games.  It doesn’t have to be one or the other.  It can be both. 


Sorry we see this differently.  


Just giving an example.  Here’s another one - remember when we had great teams and they’d rest starters at the end of the season?  They’d always say “we want to win” but they weren’t doing everything TO win.

 

That’s what I’m asking.  I know Shane and everyone else associated with the team WANT to win.  My question was - are they doing everything TO win?  Or is this season more about getting AR experience?

 

The answer is only Both if you think they’re calling plays that use all of AR’s skills.  
 

Personally, I think they’re taking AR along slowly.  Winning is important, but secondary.

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First and foremost he is trying to win the game.  He has coaches whose job is to groom and develop AR.  He is being measured on wins and losses.  Like all coaches.  The Carolina coach benching Young is the perfect example.  If he’s not getting the job done you move onto plan B.  Otherwise it’s his job.

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39 minutes ago, richard pallo said:

First and foremost he is trying to win the game.  He has coaches whose job is to groom and develop AR.  He is being measured on wins and losses.  Like all coaches.  The Carolina coach benching Young is the perfect example.  If he’s not getting the job done you move onto plan B.  Otherwise it’s his job.


I Respectfully disagree.  I do agree that Shane is trying to win games.

 

What I don’t agree on is that he’s using AR to his full advantage to do so.  It may be injury concern, or that he feels AR isn’t quite back to 100% from surgery.  But he’s not using him like he did last season. 
 

I’m not saying it’s wrong, and I hope it’s for the best.  But I think ARs development is more important to the franchise than winning right now.

 

I gave the example of Daniels.  They’re letting him run, it definitely helps them to stay in games.  That may not be a smart strategy if he ends up like RGknee, but you can see they’re trying to win now.  

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This is where quality of your coach is so important.  And I think Shane is a quality coach to handle this situation.  Also I agree he is doing it right.  It's ugly, but he is balancing a big investment at QB with his job security which is very tough.

 

Running QBs often reach that point where the staff decides they are never going to learn to win from the pocket, and it is then you see the scheme revert back to college type approach and general simplicity to allow them to translate to the field.  But to get to that point you need to at least give the QB the opportunity.  Because once they do reach that point the team will usually be looking for another QB.

 

The way you build a perennial winner is finding a QB who can give you an edge from the pocket.  Given that, mobility and off schedule instincts are an advantage and desired.  But the latter will never trump the former because if your QB needs to be in space to see the defense and make his throws then defenses will be able to shut him down in the playoffs.  QBs like that don't win 3 or 4 games in a row against the best defenses in the league, which is required to hoist a Lombardi.

 

I mean look at Allen.  He developed the ability to win from the pocket.  He has had good teams around him.  He is a dominant run threat.  And he still has come up short in the playoffs.  When there are guys like him and Mahomes with rosters around them, you aren't gonna get past them with a QB who can't do the job from the pocket.

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