ChrisHanburger wrote:I think I read somewhere that the second fade was an option audibled by Mcnabb. A run may have been the first call.....
Yeah the report is that it was his hot route, which he turned to when he saw a blitzer approaching.
markshark84 wrote:Those dropped balls in the endzone were an issue. With that, we would have had 20; if all else was equal. I was disappointed in Armstrong's performance. I thought he could be one of those diamond in the rough types; he still could, but I am not as confident in this after a poor performance against Dallas.
20 against the Cowboys isn't a bad number -- much better than the 6 and 0 points we put up on them last year.... It is just nice to see a QB that can lead and have confidence in.
ChrisHanburger wrote:1niksder wrote:Irn-Bru wrote:CanesSkins26 wrote:TincoSkin wrote:it also doesnt help that CP is 500 years old and is lacking some of that young guy quickness
I actually thought that he showed a pretty good burst and good quickness the few times that the line actually opened up some running lanes.
Yeah, and another way to tell that CP was doing well was to watch Larry Johnson try to run when he gave Portis a spell. Huge difference between the two.
If Kyle had given either of them a shot instead of going to Armstrong on back to back calls, that last play of the game might not have happened. Back to back runs and .....
I think I read somewhere that the second fade was an option audibled by Mcnabb. A run may have been the first call.....
Irn-Bru wrote:CanesSkins26 wrote:TincoSkin wrote:it also doesnt help that CP is 500 years old and is lacking some of that young guy quickness
I actually thought that he showed a pretty good burst and good quickness the few times that the line actually opened up some running lanes.
Yeah, and another way to tell that CP was doing well was to watch Larry Johnson try to run when he gave Portis a spell. Huge difference between the two.
KazooSkinsFan wrote:markshark84 wrote:Those dropped balls in the endzone were an issue
The first was just an ugly drop. I agree he should have caught the second, but he was interfered with
Andre Carter wrote:Damn man, you know your football.
Deadskins wrote:crazyhorse1 wrote:Face it. We were lucky to beat the Cowboys
Face it, the Cowpies were lucky to even be in the game at the end.
Double standard, anyone?
Countertrey wrote:CH:Double standard, anyone?
How so? McNabb has something that Campbell has not... a history as a winner. A history as a legitimate leader. A history as a decisive playmaker. A history as a conference champion. A history as quick thinker.
Apples and oranges.
crazyhorse1 wrote:
Reality check: if Campbell were still playing QB for us and had the same game McNabb had, we would be calling for his head, talking about how he can't score in the red zone, bitching about how he misses long passes, faulting his leadership, etc. Plus, we would add a new charge: failure to complete fifty percent of his passes. Double standard, anyone?
crazyhorse1 wrote:ChrisHanburger wrote:1niksder wrote:Irn-Bru wrote:CanesSkins26 wrote:TincoSkin wrote:it also doesnt help that CP is 500 years old and is lacking some of that young guy quickness
I actually thought that he showed a pretty good burst and good quickness the few times that the line actually opened up some running lanes.
Yeah, and another way to tell that CP was doing well was to watch Larry Johnson try to run when he gave Portis a spell. Huge difference between the two.
If Kyle had given either of them a shot instead of going to Armstrong on back to back calls, that last play of the game might not have happened. Back to back runs and .....
I think I read somewhere that the second fade was an option audibled by Mcnabb. A run may have been the first call.....
That said, I think people are missing obvious negatives. Our OL really is weak and won't get better. Neither Doc nor Rabach are adequate, and each of the others (including Williams) is suspect, with only Williams having an upside. That, and lack of 1st class RB's, means weak running game. which will be a problem all year. Defense is just as flawed. Our two outside linebackers don't tackle in space or close on ball carriers quickly enough, plus two of our three DL are terribly weak. We should not be committed to the 3-4 and will suffer for it. Landry was great, but a SS should not be the guy making all the tackles. We cannot expect to win if we cannot stop the run (which it appears we cannot), especially if we are weak offensively, which we are.
Reality check: if Campbell were still playing QB for us and had the same game McNabb had, we would be calling for his head, talking about how he can't score in the red zone, bitching about how he misses long passes, faulting his leadership, etc. Plus, we would add a new charge: failure to complete fifty percent of his passes. Double standard, anyone?
chiefhog44 wrote:I hate to combat your statement on Campbell, because I don't want this to turn into a 17 page Campbell argument, but here goes... First off, no way Campbell has this game. He would have been sacked at least twice and probably fumbled once. That is for sure. I haven't seen a Skins QB avoid some of that kind of pressure since.....hum...still thinking...over 20 years ago. Secondly, IF he had the game McNabb had in stats, I WOULD have been all over him, because he has had that kind of game his ENTIRE career, and I am sick of it. McNabb has had ONE full game in this system and has a history of being a GREAT QB. Campbell didn't have receivers drop passes on him. He just flat missed them. There were six passes I can think of that were flat dropped. Moss (1), Sellers (2), Armstrong (3). There may have been more, but 21-32 aint that bad for missing two weeks and playing your first game in a new system and coming out with a win against the Cowboys on the first go.
1niksder wrote:
Throwing a fade to a guy that's under 6'
This pass should have been caught and this pass...
Is not a pass JC can make
KazooSkinsFan wrote:Dallas has a good defense and our offense needs to improve. The O line is improved, but need to get more used to playing together and Trent's good but needs to get more experience. Better then last year though. McNabb was already as comfortable with the receivers in one game as JC was over several seasons, so they'll get better. Unfortunately our receivers are a problem still as we still only have two, Moss andey. Deadskins, note I said "receivers" not "wide receivers." RB is an area of concern too. We have depth but no one looked good running. Dallas has good run D and CP improved in the second half so there's some hope, but it wasn't heartening and LJ didn't do much at all.
Countertrey wrote:CH:Double standard, anyone?
How so? McNabb has something that Campbell has not... a history as a winner. A history as a legitimate leader. A history as a decisive playmaker. A history as a conference champion. A history as quick thinker.
Apples and oranges.
SkinsJock wrote:In that picture it looks like the defender's left hand is touching the receiver before the ball is caught
I seem to remember that I felt on 1 of those 2 plays they could have called pass interference - it was not a terrible call to not call it but it could have gone our way
THEN AGAIN - the pass could/should have been caught
we're a lot better on offense - and that's a good thing
VetSkinsFan wrote:As long as they don't interfere, it's not pass interference. They've got to be doing something to interfere with the receiver's attempt to catch the ball. This IS a contact sport after all...