1 - Well, well, J. J. Nelson actually got involved in this game. Anyone ready to call McCoy a genius for setting it up?
2 - I understand that it takes time for new coaches to settle in and for the players to learn the systems and for them to find out what the coaches want, but this is the NFL and it shouldn’t take this long. It doesn’t work that way.
3 - A couple of days ago I wrote in another post that it was rubbish to call out David Johnson, and I mostly stand by it, but I have to admit that he doesn’t look like David Johnson. He also makes way too many mental mistakes.
4 - Kendall Wright was with the Vikings throughout training camp, and he was inactive on gameday though he trained with the team all week. Shortly after they had signed Wright, they still went through with a scheduled workout with receiver Rishard Matthews. Maybe they only signed Wright to pick his brain, yet want to go forward with Matthews.
5 - I liked the decision to go for it on 4th and 1 at the Vikings’ goal line down 10-3. After the start to this game and season the team needed to get this. They needed to show themselves that they could do it. Now, they couldn’t, but the Vikings got the ball on their own one yard line. It wasn’t the end of the world.
6 - I couldn’t listen to the interview with Bob McManaman regarding the unrest in the locker room, because I couldn’t get it to work on my computer. I consider McManaman a trustworthy reporter, and thus I tend to believe the report. If true, it is bad. It is really, really bad. Some will argue that it is the logic response that there is unrest in the locker room after starting 1-4, and now this game will increase the unhappiness. No. These players are professionals. They are paid to shut up and do what the coaches tell them no matter the record. Yes, they are humans and they react to circumstances like we do, but they are also trained to play the games and move on. If there is any kind of movement against the coaches building, and Steve Keim and Michael Bidwill knows about it (which they definitely should) they have to act on it, and they have to act on it right now (no, I am not saying they definitely have to fire everyone). Such things can affect the culture in the building negatively for years.
7 - I find it strange that five supposedly good run blocking offensive linemen suddenly can’t run block to save their life.
8 - Welcome to the season, Larry! Now, throw the ball to him. Always trust Fitzgerald.
9 - During the games I take notes to remember what I will say in these posts. All six weeks I have wrote on my pad how good Budda Baker is, so now I will just go ahead and say it. He is so much fun to watch, and if the Cards were winning, everyone would be talking about him. What a great move by Keim to trade up in the draft to get him.
10 - Since the game got so depressing, I instead began to think about different things concerning the Cardinals, and one of them was how they have a lot of players starting in the secondary who’s name starts with the letter B. Bene’ Benwikere, Antoine Bethea, Bubba Baker, Tre Boston. “Want to know a DB? Meet PP, AB, BB, TB and BB”.
11 - I like what Mike Jurecki said during the week about getting David Johnson the ball in favorable positions. Find a way. It might be hard and difficult, but just find a way.
12 - Going back five years, not including this year (so really, it’s four years) there have been 27 coaching changes in the NFL. 14 of those resulted in losing record in the new head coaches’ first season, and in only two of those occasions the head coach was fired after just one season (and both were the Niners). Six of the times the team only won four or fewer games in the first season, but only once the head coach got fired. The average number of wins in new head coaches’ first season are 4.5. I think you know where I am going with this. Get ready for another season with Wilks as the head coach.
13 – Corey Peters leads primarily be example. He is not a guy who declines his own responsibilities, and actually, he rarely says much of anything, so when he does, you listen carefully. That’s why I found two quotes from him after the game highly interesting. 1: “The run defense has been a problem all year. At some point it’s like, do guys care? At the end of the day, everybody’s got a responsibility and everybody’s got to take a look in the mirror and say “Did I do what I was supposed to do on this play?” That’s the reality of it. Run defense is fairly simple. Everybody has a gap”. 2: “It’s fairly simple to figure out who is making the mistakes each week when we watch tape.”
14 - I thought we saw the offense playing pretty well in the drive at the end of the third-, start of the fourth quarter when they went to a hurry up-, no huddle offense. Was that drive a sign of progress? I don’t know. Maybe.
15 - 9 - Can they recover in time for Thursday?
2 - I understand that it takes time for new coaches to settle in and for the players to learn the systems and for them to find out what the coaches want, but this is the NFL and it shouldn’t take this long. It doesn’t work that way.
3 - A couple of days ago I wrote in another post that it was rubbish to call out David Johnson, and I mostly stand by it, but I have to admit that he doesn’t look like David Johnson. He also makes way too many mental mistakes.
4 - Kendall Wright was with the Vikings throughout training camp, and he was inactive on gameday though he trained with the team all week. Shortly after they had signed Wright, they still went through with a scheduled workout with receiver Rishard Matthews. Maybe they only signed Wright to pick his brain, yet want to go forward with Matthews.
5 - I liked the decision to go for it on 4th and 1 at the Vikings’ goal line down 10-3. After the start to this game and season the team needed to get this. They needed to show themselves that they could do it. Now, they couldn’t, but the Vikings got the ball on their own one yard line. It wasn’t the end of the world.
6 - I couldn’t listen to the interview with Bob McManaman regarding the unrest in the locker room, because I couldn’t get it to work on my computer. I consider McManaman a trustworthy reporter, and thus I tend to believe the report. If true, it is bad. It is really, really bad. Some will argue that it is the logic response that there is unrest in the locker room after starting 1-4, and now this game will increase the unhappiness. No. These players are professionals. They are paid to shut up and do what the coaches tell them no matter the record. Yes, they are humans and they react to circumstances like we do, but they are also trained to play the games and move on. If there is any kind of movement against the coaches building, and Steve Keim and Michael Bidwill knows about it (which they definitely should) they have to act on it, and they have to act on it right now (no, I am not saying they definitely have to fire everyone). Such things can affect the culture in the building negatively for years.
7 - I find it strange that five supposedly good run blocking offensive linemen suddenly can’t run block to save their life.
8 - Welcome to the season, Larry! Now, throw the ball to him. Always trust Fitzgerald.
9 - During the games I take notes to remember what I will say in these posts. All six weeks I have wrote on my pad how good Budda Baker is, so now I will just go ahead and say it. He is so much fun to watch, and if the Cards were winning, everyone would be talking about him. What a great move by Keim to trade up in the draft to get him.
10 - Since the game got so depressing, I instead began to think about different things concerning the Cardinals, and one of them was how they have a lot of players starting in the secondary who’s name starts with the letter B. Bene’ Benwikere, Antoine Bethea, Bubba Baker, Tre Boston. “Want to know a DB? Meet PP, AB, BB, TB and BB”.
11 - I like what Mike Jurecki said during the week about getting David Johnson the ball in favorable positions. Find a way. It might be hard and difficult, but just find a way.
12 - Going back five years, not including this year (so really, it’s four years) there have been 27 coaching changes in the NFL. 14 of those resulted in losing record in the new head coaches’ first season, and in only two of those occasions the head coach was fired after just one season (and both were the Niners). Six of the times the team only won four or fewer games in the first season, but only once the head coach got fired. The average number of wins in new head coaches’ first season are 4.5. I think you know where I am going with this. Get ready for another season with Wilks as the head coach.
13 – Corey Peters leads primarily be example. He is not a guy who declines his own responsibilities, and actually, he rarely says much of anything, so when he does, you listen carefully. That’s why I found two quotes from him after the game highly interesting. 1: “The run defense has been a problem all year. At some point it’s like, do guys care? At the end of the day, everybody’s got a responsibility and everybody’s got to take a look in the mirror and say “Did I do what I was supposed to do on this play?” That’s the reality of it. Run defense is fairly simple. Everybody has a gap”. 2: “It’s fairly simple to figure out who is making the mistakes each week when we watch tape.”
14 - I thought we saw the offense playing pretty well in the drive at the end of the third-, start of the fourth quarter when they went to a hurry up-, no huddle offense. Was that drive a sign of progress? I don’t know. Maybe.
15 - 9 - Can they recover in time for Thursday?