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The Wrong Football

~ A UK American Football fan writes about the game he loves

The Wrong Football

Monthly Archives: October 2016

Week Eight Picks

29 Saturday Oct 2016

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Week 8 Picks

I’m working on this and putting it up early as I am off to Wembley tomorrow.

I shouldn’t be panicking too much as I only hit 45 points a week earlier last year, but I have been under .500 for most of the season and it is beginning to bug me, even if Dan has only pulled back level with me this week.

Gee:      Week 7   4-11                     Overall   45-62
Dan:      Week 7   5-10                     Overall   45-62

Washington @ Bengals (-2.5)

Washington are following up their road loss in Detroit by flying to London to play the Cincinnati Bengals as the road team. They look to have solidified the after their poor start to the season, but are facing the Bengals coming off their first thirty point game of the season having beaten the Cleveland Browns. We will have to see if Josh Norman or Jordan Reed will play given their recent concussion issues, but I’m picking in hope of witnessing a win tomorrow, even if it would be a very Bengals thing to lose the first game that I can actually get to see them play in person.

Gee’s Pick:          Bengal  s
Dan’s Pick:          Bengals

Patriots @ Bills (+6.5)

The hamstring injury to LeSean McCoy is a big worry for the Bills, as will have been giving up over two hundred yards on the ground to the Miami Dolphins on the other side of the ball. They may be back in Buffalo, but I find it hard to look past a New England Patriots team that will be looking to avoid a season white wash against the Bills.

Gee’s Pick:          Patriots
Dan’s Pick:          Patriots

Jets @ Browns (+3.5)

The New York Jets might have got an unexpected win last week, but they are only 0.4% better by overall DVOA than the Browns, and are on the road in Cleveland. I could really regret this, but the Browns don’t look to be a zero win team and this game is as good a chance for them to get a win as they are likely to get, and I think getting these points I’m going to back them to cover.

Gee’s Pick:          Browns
Dan’s Pick:          Jets

Lions @ Texans (-2.5)

The Texans are one of the more Jekyll and Hyde team with a defence that ranks just outside the top ten by DVOA and an offence that is flat last. The Detroit Lions did enough last week to win, and are the inverse of the Texans with a defence flat last in the league by DVOA, and an offence that ranks thirteenth. However, they have distinctly better ranked special teams and a quarterback who is working well with his offensive coordinator and I choose this week to put my faith in that.

Gee’s Pick:          Lions
Dan’s Pick:          Lions

Chiefs @ Colts (+2.5)

The Kansas City Chiefs are a better team than the Indianapolis Colts, and have the running backs to trouble the Colts defence even if things haven’t been flashy for the Chiefs on offence this year. It is possible that I am being overly harsh on the Colts, and perhaps I should trust them at home getting points, but I don’t and so I’m picking the Chiefs in this one.

Gee’s Pick:          Chiefs
Dan’s Pick:          Chiefs

Raiders @ Buccaneers (-0.5)

The Buccaneers may have done better last week, but it was against the 49ers and whilst they will likely have some success against the Raiders poor defence, the Raiders have actually been better on the road than in Oakland. Perhaps the weather in Tampa Bay will cause them problems, but I’m happy to be getting a half point as I think the Raiders are the better team.

Gee’s Pick:          Raiders
Dan’s Pick:          Raiders

Seahawks @ Saints (+3.5)

The next couple of games I am picking based on what happen to both the Panthers and the Bengals the last time there was a tie that involved both teams playing an entire quarter of overtime, which was both teams came out very flat and lost. So with the Saints getting three and a half points going against a team whose offence is struggling and unlikely to take advantage of the Saints poor defence, I’m backing the Saints to cover at home with them getting this many points.

Gee’s Pick:          Saints
Dan’s Pick:          Seahawks

Cardinals @ Panthers (-2.5)

The Panthers are coming off a bye and desperately need to get their season going, even if it may already be too late. The real weakness of their defence has been the secondary, but whilst the Cardinals may have found a winning formula, David Johnson carried the ball a lot last week against the Seahawks and Carson Palmer has not looked himself this season and so again with the Cardinals having played five quarters of football last week, I’m backing the Panthers to win a game they really can’t afford to lose.

Gee’s Pick:          Panthers
Dan’s Pick:          Cardinals

Chargers @ Broncos (-5.5)

The Denver Broncos got back on track with healthy win over the Houston Texans last week, and had a much better balance of run to pass plays. However, whilst the San Diego Chargers have a worse record right now, they are very possibly a better team than the Texans and certainly a DVOA ranking of eleven would point that way. I like them to come into Denver and at least keep it closer than six points.

Gee’s Pick:          Chargers
Dan’s Pick:          Chargers

Packers @ Falcons (-2.5)

The Packers got the win against the Bears at home in Green Bay last week despite their injury problems at running back, but they are not exactly back to their fluent best. The Atlanta Falcons lost in overtime to the San Diego Chargers, but their offence was playing at a higher level than the Packers before they developed problems of their own at running back. This should be a good game, but I’m backing the Falcons at home to pick up the win, even if I don’t feel that confident about it.

Gee’s Pick:          Falcons
Dan’s Pick:          Falcons

Eagles @ Cowboys (-4.5)

The Philadelphia Eagles got a great win against the Vikings last week, but their defence is going up against a very different proposition in the Dallas Cowboys offensive line. The Cowboys have built momentum and I think they will carry it through against a team who have been a little up and down. I could be underestimating the Eagles, and certainly Dan’s pick would indicate that I am, but I’m sticking by my instinct in this one despite being off so often this year.

Gee’s Pick:          Cowboys
Dan’s Pick:          Eagles

Vikings @ Bears (+6.5)

The Chicago Bears have got Jay Cutler coming back after Brian Hoyer broke his arm last week, but how much of a bump that will be I don’t know, and I think it is more likely that the Vikings will bounce back. There were signs of a pass rush from the Bears last week so the Vikings problems on the offensive line do worry me a little, but I trust Mike Zimmer and his staff to get things back on track and so I’m backing the Vikings to cover this line. I just hope my change in pick doesn’t bite me.

Gee’s Pick:          Vikings
Dan’s Pick:          Vikings

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The Wrong Football Podcast – Episode 29

27 Thursday Oct 2016

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NFL, Podcast

It’s our Birthday, and we’ll review Football if we want to – we’ve been podcasting for a year now believe it or not! This week is no different though, as we look at some of the bigger talking points of the week in the NFL, from the QB situation for the Green half of New York to just how to solve a problem like Ezekiel… Elliott! As always, we look back at the action from Week 7, and ahead to Week 8’s big games, including the Bengals’ trip to London to host the Redskins. All that and more, on this week’s Wrong Football Podcast!

Source: The Wrong Football Podcast – The Wrong Football Podcast – Episode 29

Does the NFL Have a Problem?

27 Thursday Oct 2016

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Atlanta Falcons, Dallas Cowboys, Hard Knocks, Minnesota Vikings, NBA, New England Patriots, NFL, Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Steelers, Roger Goodell, Sally Jenkins, Schedule, Seattle Seahawks, Week 8 Picks

It seems that everyone is writing some variation on what is wrong with the NFL, or questioning whether there are any good teams. The ratings for TV in the States are down, and the quality of the prime time games has been called into question, yet as ever, I think that the situation is more complicated than that.

Certainly there do seem to have been a lot of less than stellar games in the prime time slots, but part of that is due to the lack of flexing games until later in the season, and the very nature of the Thursday games. As it allows me to watch every team, and I get a chance to watch without knowing the score, I watch and write up the Thursday night games and you can frequently see them descend into an easy win for the home team. Playing a game three days early when it takes a week to recover has always caused problems for NFL teams, and it certainly calls into question the NFL’s claim that safety is their prime concern.

However, whilst these games are deliberately chosen to show case every team to the nation, the big prime time Sunday night and Monday night games are meant to be the best of the week’s matchups. The problem with that though, is these fixtures are selected whilst the army of computers that are used to churn out the schedule are working overtime to find the best fit that they can out of the incredibly complex mix of team requirements, TV requirements, the cycle of divisional opponents and various other factors that goes into making the NFL schedule. The difficulty being that when these decisions are being made, nobody knows who the good teams are going to be in the upcoming season. Even a safe looking selection like the New England Patriots visiting the Pittsburgh Steelers can take a turn for the worse when an important player like Ben Roethlisberger picks up and injury that keeps him out of the game.

There has been mention of the NFL having gone up against the presidential debates, but whilst there is a lot of focus on the race, the league have only had games go up directly against two of the three televised debates. So what is going on?

Part of it could well be that the NFL seems to be lacking teams that are definitively good this season. Week seven saw the last undefeated record go, and there are only three teams with a solitary loss. The New England Patriots look as good as anyone now that Tom Brady has come back from his suspension, but their defence seems to lack pass rushing and may be vulnerable to a high powered offence. The Dallas Cowboys have looked good as they have gone 5-1, largely thanks to the performance of two key rookies on offence and a defence that seems to have made a definite step up in play when compared to last season. The only other team to with a solitary loss are the Minnesota Vikings who were the last undefeated team this year, but the injuries to their already suspect offensive line allowed the Philadelphia Eagles to pressure them into a loss. This is a team that has already lost their starting quarterback to a practice injury in the preseason and their leading rusher.

Not team is ever perfect, but it feels like the presence of a major flaw is looming over a lot of teams this season. The Seattle Seahawks are as competitive a team in the league, but their offensive line is not good, and now an injured Russell Wilson is struggling to perform behind it. The Atlanta Falcons have the second ranked offence by DVOA, but their defence is ranked a lowly twenty-sixth and such a disparity makes it hard to look like a super team.

Once again though, there could be more to it. Certainly the games haven’t always been the best spectacle, people want excitement, and when games are being called with so many penalties as they currently are, it is hard to keep people engaged. My only personal frustration is the five yard illegal contact that seems to get called the moment a corner back breathes on a receiver, along with an unnecessarily generous automatic first down. If you are going to call a penalty that often, it shouldn’t just come with a first down, and a bit of hand fighting is hardly the biggest problem in the NFL. In fact I’ll try to approach that right now.

There are so many topics to cover and once again I am running out of time so let’s circle round to the biggy, at the centre of so many questions. The league office, and in particular Roger Goodell. There have been many words dedicated to his performance over the last couple of years. For a very on point summary of his handling of the Josh Brown case look no further than Sally Jenkins in the Washington Post (article here) and the really troubling this is that we have been here before and Goodell has not learnt his lessons. So the NFL are stuck with a commissioner who is happy to fine players for daring to twerk in the end zone, but can’t stick to his own policy on domestic abuse and yet again is blaming local law enforcement. The owners are happy to have him as he acts as firewall for criticism aimed at the league, but with dropping ratings, questions about safety and concussions, plus for possibly the first time there is potentially a serious rival league in the NBA who might be able to mount a genuine attempt at replacing football as America’s number one sport, it might be time for them to realise that the NFL is not too big to fail.

It is a long way from that, but they have to address youth football, get out of their own way when it comes to officiating, and find the right balance between player safety and allowing coaches to coach. To look at whether the rosters are too young, what new training tools like the robotic tackling dummies that we saw in this seasons Hard Knocks can give to the game. Football can be a conservative game, but with the challenges it faces, and to ensure its policy, it has to look to the future and embrace it, and that might just mean a forward looking commissioner that inspires confidence.

Of course, in four weeks’ time these stories could all just disappear, but the problems won’t and that should concern owners, players, and fans alike.

Jaguars @ Titans (-3.5)

My rule for the Thursday night games going forward is to always pick the home team unless there is a compelling number of points, or an amazingly good team on the road against a poor team. By this formula there is nothing about the Jaguars who seem to have gone backwards this season on offence for me to do anything other than pick the Titans.

Gee’s Pick:          Titans
Dan’s Pick:          Titans

AAF: How Do You Solve a Problem Like Ezekiel?

23 Sunday Oct 2016

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Blake Martinez, Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys, Dez Bryant, Ezekiel Elliott, Green Bay Packers, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, NFL, Tony Romo, Tyron Smith

I wanted to take a look at the Cowboys running game against the Packers defence, who were giving up less than two yards a carry against the run coming into this game, as this looked to be the match-up of the week and so it proved.

In a game where your defence gave up one hundred and ninety-one yard games, it might seem strange to say that for large parts of the game the run defence held up well, but to my eyes for good chunks of the game the Packers did well against the run. The Packers’ front seven were not pushed off their run fits and there were no huge holes for Ezekiel Elliott to run through. However, they were clearly unable to contain Elliott who finished the game with one hundred and fifty-seven yards on the ground.

The big chunk plays that Elliott did manage to pick up were when he ran off the end of the line to attack the periphery of the defence where he was able to run the ball consistently. That’s not to say however that he did not have success up the middle, as Elliott only requires a small crease to get a good pick up as he hits the hole so hard. Even when there were no holes up the middle, the Cowboys offensive line is good enough for them to get positive yardage by pushing their men back. The other thing that struck me about Elliott though is that he is a running back who rides contact effectively as well as being able to make defenders miss, which means that it is hard for defenders to get a hit on him and even when they do he doesn’t go down easily. This when coupled with his speed and acceleration makes him a fearsome runner which allowed him to generate these kinds of numbers against a defence that wasn’t playing badly.

His longest run was a twenty-nine yard play in the fourth quarter where coming out of a double tight-end formation with one either side of the formation and there was no player over left tackle Tyron Smith. With Packers’ linebacker Blake Martinez bursting through between guard and centre but unable to disrupt the hand off, Smith was able to seal off safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and Elliott had enough space to run up the middle for the huge gain. This was really the only time that the defence was miscalled, and whilst the Cowboys line did occasionally open up some nice holes, most of the time it was Elliott’s ability to run the ball as much as anything that did the damage.

So how do you solve a problem like Ezekiel? Well since he has developed some patience after the first couple of games, he has consistently run for over one hundred and thirty yards a game so the answer appears to be at the moment that you don’t. In this game you do wonder why he was in during the last series given the Cowboys were two touchdowns ahead, but numbers aside, Elliott has got off to an excellent start behind a no doubt very good offensive line. The big problem for the Cowboys last year was their inability to win without Tony Romo, but with both Romo and Dez Bryant out again this year, the new foundation of Elliott combined with rookie quarterback Dak Prescott has the Cowboys at 5-1 and whilst we shouldn’t get carried away yet, the signs are hopeful in Dallas. I would not be too worried about the defence for the Packers as they still looked good against the run for large parts of this game, and I doubt they will be the last to get gouged by Ezekiel Elliot.

Week 7: Bears at Packers

23 Sunday Oct 2016

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Aaron Rodgers, Brian Hoyer, Chicago Bears, Davantae Adams, De'Vane Bausby, Green Bay Packers, Jay Cutler, Leonard Floyd, Matt Barkley, NFL, Randall Cobb, Ty Montgomery

Green Bay Packers 26
Chicago Bears 10

This was another strange Thursday night game which didn’t quite take off, and was further hampered by the injury to Brian Hoyer in the second quarter, which allowed the Packers to grind out the win despite their problems at running back.

The Packers offence managed to rack up over one hundred yards of running in this game despite their two leading rushers being receivers Ty Montgomery and Randall Cobb, but nothing was quite fluent for most of the game. Yet again there were sections of the game where no receivers were getting open, and the Bears were able to pressure Aaron Rodgers as he was unable to find someone to pass to. That said, thanks to a game flow where the Bears offence offered very little, the defence wore down and the Packers finished with very credible numbers. For all of his drops last season, Davante Adams looked like a different player as he caught thirteen of sixteen for one hundred and thirty-two yards and two touchdowns. Equally Randall Cobb finished with ninety-five yards receiving to go with his twenty-one yards of rushing, but Ty Montgomery should get special mention for gaining sixty yards on nine carries as well as sixty-six yards receiving as he lined up all over the formation. In the end Aaron Rodgers’ numbers looked much like their usual self as he throw for over three hundred yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions. However, the Packers had to work hard for these and it could be an interesting few weeks for Green Bay.

For the first half of the game and into the third quarter the Bears defence kept Green Bay out of the end zone, and were causing them all kinds of problems with their coverage holding up and they were able to get pressure on Aaron Rodgers. Their first round draft pick Leonard Floyd caught the eye with two sacks and three quarterback hits, as well as scoring the Bears’ only touchdown of the game when he sacked Rodgers causing a fumble and was able to recover the ball in the end zone. However, with their offence offering very little after Brian Hoyer went out injured the Bears defence wore down and having given up the odd pass interference call in the first half, receivers started to get open and then penalties started to crop up. There was one pretty dubious pass interference call, but De’Vante Buasby’s name started to crop up in bad ways down the stretch as things got desperate for the Bears.

The Bears offence finished with anaemic numbers, only going for sixty-nine yards rushing as they struggled against the Packers defence that has looked good against the run for most of the season. They really were not able to sustain anything, and even more so once Brian Hoyer went down with a broken arm in the second quarter. But it should be noted that Hoyer was only four of eleven for forty-nine yards when he went down, whilst Matt Barkley went for six of fifteen but also managed to throw two interceptions. The second was particularly bad as he tried to throw the ball away as he was being sacked and basically just threw it up in the air for the Packers to intercept. With Hoyer out things could be rough for the offence for a while, unless Jay Cutler comes back from his thumb injury playing much better than he had been before he went down. Certainly Barkley didn’t seem to offer much, but it’s hard to read too much into either running back’s game from this performance alone.

The Packers defence did what they had to in this one, stuffing the run and covering receivers enough to prevent the Bears from moving the ball, but when facing a unit that seemed to be struggling so much it is hard to tell too much from it. They were on the field for nineteen minutes less than the Bears and only gave up a field goal in the second quarter, but it was a team effort rather than any particular player standing out, at least that’s how it looked  from the standard TV coverage.

Overall, the Bears offence gave one of the worst performances I’ve seen this season, and caused their defence to wear down after starting off strongly. The Packers did what they needed to do, but I am curious to see how they will play going forward, but it feels like they will be somewhere around ten wins again.

Week Seven Picks

23 Sunday Oct 2016

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NFL, Week 7 Picks

So I’m feeling particularly bruised after Dan picking up another game Thursday night with Brian Hoyer going out injured and we go into today’s games level on a pretty poor forty-one points each, but for the record here’s how things stood at the end of week six.

Gee:      Week 6   7-8                       Overall   41-51
Dan:      Week 6   9-6                       Overall   40-52

Giants @ Rams (+2.5)

This is a game between two teams I don’t really like in a new London venue at Twickenham. The Rams are coming off two straight losses and found a way to lose against a Lions team despite Case Keenum putting in one of his best performances of the year. Meanwhile the Giants made hay whilst the Ravens secondary fell apart with the loss of Jimmy Smith as Odell Beckham continued to grab headlines. I’m really not comfortable picking either side so I’m grabbing the points with the underdog Rams.

Gee’s Pick:          Rams
Dan’s Pick:          Rams

Bills @ Dolphins (+2.5)

The Dolphins played much better against the Steelers, with Jay Ajayi having a breakout two hundred yard running game. This week they welcome a Bills team that are coming off a four game winning streak. The injury worries surrounding LeSean McCoy concern me, but at the end of the day this is a divisional game so I do not expect the Bills to have the kind of let down performance the Steelers put up last week. I’m tempted by the Dolphins in this one, but not enough to pick them.

Gee’s Pick:          Bills
Dan’s Pick:          Dolphins

Browns @ Bengals (-9.5)

I would like to see the Browns win a game, but please don’t let it be this week. I really hope and believe that the Bengals will win this game, but I’m not picking them to beat anyone by ten points, especially when the Browns seem to specialise in close losses this year.

Gee’s Pick:          Browns
Dan’s Pick:          Browns

Washington @ Lions (-1.5)

Washington have dragged themselves back into contention for the playoffs with a four game winning streak, and fresh from beating the Eagles they are off to Detroit to face the Lions. There is a large gap in DVOA rankings between these two teams, and with the Lions having a defence that I can’t trust I am backing Washington to win this one.

Gee’s Pick:          Washington
Dan’s Pick:          Washington

Colts @ Titans (-2.5)

It is a strange world where the Titans are in contention for the AFC South, but no one has run away with the division. However, they have still have a top ten defence by DVOA and their offence comes in ranked ten this week, whilst the Colts have really been struggling and I think this could be another game where they come unstuck asking Andrew Luck to do too much.

Gee’s Pick:          Titans
Dan’s Pick:          Titans

Saints @ Chiefs (-6.5)

I should not have doubted Andy Reid coming out of a bye week, but more importantly my concerns over their defence might have been too large as they fairly easily beat the Raiders. This week they welcome a Saints who can move the ball with Drew Brees, but I doubt their defence can stop the Chiefs. I’m a little worried about the points, but with the Saints on the road I am backing the Chiefs to win big in this one.

Gee’s Pick:          Chiefs
Dan’s Pick:          Chiefs

Raiders @ Jaguars (-0.5)

This game could be a shootout, with the Jaguars seeming to always start slow and the Raiders unable to play defence. The Raiders have done better on the road so far this season, but more importantly I don’t trust the Jaguars fragile 2-4 record whereas the Raiders have lost to two of the better teams in the NFL so I’m backing them to win this pick’em game.

Gee’s Pick:          Raiders
Dan’s Pick:          Jaguars

Vikings @ Eagles (+2.5)

The Eagles have come back to earth after the bye with defensive coaches having some tape on Carson Wentz and the changes on the o-line at right tackle after Lane Johnson’s suspension. The Vikings are on the road after a bye and are the only unbeaten team left in the NFL. You can’t expect them to stay unbeaten all season, but I think they have too much for the Eagles with their defence likely to cause the Eagles all kinds of problems.

Gee’s Pick:          Vikings
Dan’s Pick:          Vikings

Ravens @ Jets (-0.5)

The loss of Jimmy Smith caused all kinds of problems in the secondary for Ravens last season, and this resurfaced last week when he left the game with a concussion. It is unclear whether he will be back for this week’s game, but the Jets were so bad last week that it possibly won’t be a problem. The Jets are rooted to the bottom of the DVOA standings and with neither side of the ball playing well I can’t pick them to beat the Ravens. You watch them do it now…

Gee’s Pick:          Ravens
Dan’s Pick:          Ravens

Chargers @ Falcons (-6.5)

The Falcons really could have won last week in Seattle and I have been impressed not only with their offence, but there are signs that the defence is beginning to develop. The Chargers are one of the better looking teams with a losing record, but after seriously tough road trip I think the Falcons will bounce back from last week’s loss in a big way.

Gee’s Pick:          Falcons
Dan’s Pick:          Chargers

Buccaneers @ 49ers (+1.5)

The Bucs are actually rated worse than the 49ers by DVOA, but having watched the way the 49ers lost to the Bills last week I will need more points before I pick them. I’m not entirely sure what Chip Kelly is meant to do with this rebuilding squad, but I don’t think they have the players to turn things around quickly. I don’t exactly trust the Bucs, but I’m nervously backing them in this one.

Gee’s Pick:          Buccaneers
Dan’s Pick:          Buccaneers

Patriots @ Steelers (+7.5)

The injury to Ben Roethlisberger has robbed us of what should have been one of the best games of the season and will cause the Steelers problems over the next month or so until he returns. They should be able to remain competitive in the division over the coming weeks, but in this game I can only see one winner as the Patriots continue to roll and I think they will cover despite the big swing caused by the Roethlisberger injury.

Gee’s Pick:          Patriots
Dan’s Pick:          Patriots

Seahawks @ Cardinals (-1.5)

The Cardinals may be working on a new formula to get them wins after a slow start, but their offence is facing a Seahawks defence that is looking as good as it ever has and I just have this sneaking feeling that the Seahawks will get the win in what should be a great game.

Gee’s Pick:          Seahawks
Dan’s Pick:          Cardinals

Texans @ Broncos (-7.5)

The Texans stand atop of the AFC South, but they have not been that convincing with Brock Osweiler struggling in an offence that is rooted to the bottom of the DVOA standings. That said, the Broncos have dropped a couple of games, showing some cracks in the defence but mainly struggling on offence. They have to get back to running the ball as the balance of the offence was way off last week, but whilst I see the Broncos winning this game, I don’t see them having the offence to run out huge winners.

Gee’s Pick:          Texans
Dan’s Pick:          Texans

The Wrong Football Podcast – Episode 28

20 Thursday Oct 2016

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Dallas Cowboys, London, NFL

It’s nearly time for the NFL to invade London again as the Rams and the Giants meet at Twickenham this weekend – Dan and Gee take a look at their picks for the game, along with all of the others in Week 7. They take a look at the QB situation in Dallas, and also – who’s on the back of your jersey? The list of most popular player jerseys were announced this week, with a few surprises! All that and more, in Episode 28 of The Wrong Football Podcast!

Source: The Wrong Football Podcast – The Wrong Football Podcast – Episode 28

Thursday Night Pick

20 Thursday Oct 2016

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NFL, Week 7 Picks

For reasons I shan’t bore you with I’m missing this week’s blog, and just popping up a pick for tonight’s game. I’ll try to get things back on track at the weekend/next week.

Bears @ Packers (-9.5)

The Bears don’t exactly have a great record, except that Brian Hoyer has been moving the ball on offence, and even when the Packers do play well they don’t seem to really go for the throat so whilst I see them winning this game, particularly at home on a short week, ten points is too big a margin for me to predict happening. Dan would like it known that whilst he is picking the Packers, he’s not confident about it at all.

Gee’s Picks:        Bears
Dan’s Picks:        Packers

AAF: Bengals Offence and Line

16 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by gee4213 in Amateur Adventures in Film

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Andy Dalton, Brandon LaFell, Cedric Ogbuehi, Clint Bolling, Giovani Bernard, Hue Jackson, Kevin Zeitler, Marvin Jones, Mohamed Sanu, New England Patriots, NFL, Ryan Davis, Tyler Boyd, Tyler Eifert

Dallas Cowboys 28
Cincinnati Bengals 14

This game was pretty upsetting to watch last week, but going through the coaching tape and trying to understand what happened on offence I am more frustrated than sad. My intention was to look at the offensive line play as that was one of the big talking points, but I have taken in aspect of the rest of the offence as I went through my latest amateur adventure in film.

The Bengals actually gained three hundred and forty-give yards of total offence in this game, with nearly one hundred yards on the ground from only nineteen carries, but they gave up four sacks and nine QB hits whilst only getting into the end zone in the fourth quarter when the game had already escaped them.

There are a lot of new or changed parts to the Bengals offence this year with a new offensive coordinator, new number two and three receivers, tight end Tyler Eifert still not being fit, and a new right tackle in Cedric Ogbuehi. This has led to a lot of nearly but not quite plays rather than flat out bad play, but it is really causing the Bengals’ offence problems in maintaining drives and in particular, being efficient in the red zone.

The timing is not quite there yet with the new receivers, and so whilst Brandon LaFell caught two touchdowns whilst looking pretty good, Tyler Boyd only made a couple of and had a particularly bad drop in the third quarter.

Moving to the offensive line, there is only one new player in effective rookie Cedric Ogbuehi, but this does seem to be causing them some problems at times. I am not an offensive line play expert, but it’s not that they look particularly bad in pass protection, but Andy Dalton has been hit too often and you can see why. The chemistry still appears to be developing between right guard Kevin Zeitler and Ogbuehi so whilst they are doing fine when facing a straight rush, any time that defensive linemen stunt, or someone loops round to the right side of the line  it seems to be causing the Bengals issues. Towards the end of the game Ryan Davis was getting round Ogbuehi repeatedly, but generally up field and so Dalton was stepping up and able to make the underneath passes the Cowboys were leaving them.

The run game of the Bengals features pulling guards fairly regularly, particularly Clint Bolling, and this is included in their play action passing which can lead to some interesting protection assignments. On one play Tyler Croft had to come across the back of the formation to seal the defensive end and was not able to hold up in what is a pretty challenging blocking assignment. You would also see this kind of movement in the running game where in mirrored action on plays early and late in the game, the tackle and guard of the same side would pull whilst a receiver motioned towards the line would have to cut the defensive end seal that side of the line. When the left side of the line performed this play, Brandon LaFell was able to make that cut block and the run worked, but later in the game when the right side performed the action, Tyler Boyd could not stop Ryan Davis from getting into the backfield and disrupting the play.

This is the problem with the Bengals offence at the moment; it’s just not quite clicking. A lot of the time they were in 11 personnel, and were only blocking with six players. Sometimes you would see Giovani Bernard lined up just behind the line between centre and guard, and he would be effective as part of the blocking unit, but they were not using big formations or lots of blockers to help sure up the pass protection. This might seem like a bad plan given what has been going on this season, except for large parts of the game it was fine but the timing was off with the receivers and the pass was incomplete. Then they would give up a pressure or sack.

Overall I still think the Bengals offence could come together, and so could the line, but my worry is that with them going to New England this weekend, making four road games out of their first six and with one of their home games in London in week eight, the Bengals could be too far behind to make it into the playoffs. The loss of coordinator Hue Jackson, on top of Marvin Jones and Mohamed Sanu at receiver, coupled with Tyler Eifert getting injured in the Pro Bowl and not making it back to the field yet has given the Bengals offence a huge amount to deal with at the start of the season, but whilst not a complete disaster, it has been enough to derail them so far. On to New England then…

Broncos @ Chargers

16 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by gee4213 in Uncategorized

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Tags

CJ Anderson, Denver Broncos, Dexter McCluster, Gary Kubiak, Hunter Henry, Joey Bosa, Melvin Gordon, NFL, Philip Rivers, Russell Okung, San Diego Chargers, Trevor Siemian, Von Miller

Denver Broncos 13
San Diego Chargers 21

This week’s Thursday night game at least finished tensely, but in truth the Chargers were consistently better than the Broncos over three quarters, although they still had a couple of worrying moments that could have cost them.

The Chargers offence had a tale of the opening drive and then the rest of the game. The opening drive was not without incident, with a big gain for Dexter McCluster wiped out by a pass interference penalty on rookie tight end Hunter Henry but he made several other plays in the same drive that ended with the only touchdown for the Chargers’ offence when Philip Rivers stood in and delivered the ball to the rookie tight end. In fact Henry led the team in receiving yards in this game as Philip Rivers threw for a modest one hundred and seventy-eight yards although he didn’t turn the ball over. The Chargers did manage to gain just under a hundred yards on twenty-nine carries with Melvin Gordon running for ninety-four yards, but in truth they struggled to maintain drives for most of the game and kicked a series of field goals to keep eking out their lead, but they managed to win the time of possession battle and put up enough points to win.

After the opening drive, the Broncos were able to clamp down on defence, and whilst their pass rush was not particularly effect at getting to Rivers, although Von Miller got his customary sack, they were able to limit the Chargers for most of the game. However, the Broncos were behind the game flow for all of the game and the real problems were not on this side of the ball.

The Broncos offence wasn’t terrible, but they struggled to maintain drives all game against a Chargers team who seemed to have an effective game plan. They weren’t helped by a series of offensive line penalties of various holding calls and false starts which killed several drives. In fact they had a touchdown by CJ Anderson in the fourth quarter wiped out by a holding call against tackle Russell Okung after the running back had taken a dump off pass and turned it into a twenty yard touchdown play. Not only did a holding penalty cost the Broncos a touchdown, but another one in the end zone gave the Chargers a safety. When you give up eighty-three more yards in penalties than the opposition, and you have them at critical points in the game, then you are going to struggle and with the passing game not really taking off the Broncos fell well short of what they needed to win. It appears that Trevor Siemian is a good quarterback if you can keep the game flow on your side, but the big chunks of yards needed if you fall back to a first and twenty after a holding a penalty is going to really cause him to struggle. In fairness, without head coach Gary Kubiak who usually calls the plays it is perhaps not surprising that the offence struggled this week. When you run for eighty-four yards but only call sixteen run plays to fifty passing plays, you can see that the balance was off for what is usually a balanced attack and it was only late in the game that the Broncos were far enough behind that they had to throw.

That said, the Chargers defence did well enough against the Broncos, and held up in the fourth quarter to win the game with Rivers looking on nervously from the side-lines, whilst the defence withstood a late surge by the Broncos. They actually matched the Broncos defence for sacks and got two more quarterback hits whilst swatting away more passes. Rookie defensive end Joey Bosa got a couple of quarterback hits as he begins to settle in having missed all of training camp, but I am really not sure how much the Chargers limited the Broncos and how much the Broncos caused the problems to themselves. In fairness, the solitary field goal the Chargers gave up in the first half was only due to a special teams mess up on a punt return, which gave the Broncos the ball deep in the Charger’s half of the field, but we will have to see how they develop in coming games.

This game was not the best spectacle, although it was tense late, but a very lopsided set of penalties probably sealed the game for the Chargers. The Chargers cut down on the mistakes, and you could see the relief when they got the win, but I don’t know how far they will go this season.

The Broncos have now lost two in a row, but they are at home for the next two games where they will hope to get their offence back on track and I suspect they will have the return match against the Chargers in week eight very much set in their sights.

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