kerouac9
Klowned by Keim
It's the preseason; I understand the strum and drang about the lack of firepower from the Cards offense. But I want you all to think back to January and what we thought would happen to the Cards' offense once Matt Leinart took over. It was the consensus opinion at the time:
When we watch the tape from the first two preseason games, what do we see? A pass-first offense. That deep-in route that Larry Fitzgerald tweaked his knee on? That's a staple of the Mike Martz offensive system the Kurt Warner preferred once he'd taken the reins of the Cards' offense. Matt Leinart has been seen playing out of shotgun formations with multiple receivers or taking three- and five-step drops.
There are two possibilities here: one is that Whisenhunt abandoned his core offensive values while Kurt Warner was here and has not returned to them. He now believes that a quarterback can only be successful when dropping straight back and moving as may receivers as possible into patterns. He believes that every quarterback must fit into this role or else he will cast them aside and move on. Whisenhunt doesn't like what he has in Matt Leinart but knows that the front office has an investment in him, and so he is determined to make him fail so that Whis can start over with his own hand-picked QB. The Whis believes that the 2010 season is a wash from jump street.
Or Whisenhunt knows what he has in Matt Leinart after coaching him for three seasons, but he doesn't know what he has in Andre Roberts, Steven Spach, and Stephen Williams. Whis knows what he has physically in Leinart, but doesn't know necessarily what he has in him mentally. If Leinart is put in a position where he can't succeed, will he maintain his composure, keep executing the offense, and not complain or pout? Can Leinart take multiple hits during and after his release and keep getting up?
How do you protect an inexperienced quarterback and an offensive line that is still developing chemistry?
Have we seen these plays at all in the preseason? Do you think that they're just not in the playbook? Do you believe that Whis is philosophically opposed to moving the pocket to give the offensive line some breathing room and protect his quarterback? Do you think that Whis burned the pages of the playbook that Kurt Warner just didn't like to run?
I submit that the Cardinals offense that we're seeing right now is the Kurt Warner offense that there's three years of tape on. The offense that Matt Leinart posted a 64.6 QB rating running last season. The offense that shows nothing of what the Cards are running in practices, or will run once the games start counting.
I submit that the offense that we'll see September 12 (if we need it) or September 19 (more likely) is not the offense that you have seen the last two games or will see in the next two. That offense will feature 2 TEs (as much of the offense that Derek Anderson has been running has), but much less passing. The offense will move the pocket and work to force defenses into zone coverage (which Leinart has shown he can pick apart) or freeze safeties and/or outside linebackers.
When you watch the Chicago Bears game this weekend, don't only interrogate what you see; ask yourself what you're not seeing. What are we hiding? What are we allowing Derek Anderson to run that Matt Leinart isn't running with the ones? I think you'll be surprised.
- The Kurt Warner Era was over.
- Ken Whisenhunt would be unshackled from a pass-first offense.
- Matt Leinart would not be forced to make big plays, but instead use his athleticism to protect an offensive line in transition.
- The power running game would take precedence.
When we watch the tape from the first two preseason games, what do we see? A pass-first offense. That deep-in route that Larry Fitzgerald tweaked his knee on? That's a staple of the Mike Martz offensive system the Kurt Warner preferred once he'd taken the reins of the Cards' offense. Matt Leinart has been seen playing out of shotgun formations with multiple receivers or taking three- and five-step drops.
There are two possibilities here: one is that Whisenhunt abandoned his core offensive values while Kurt Warner was here and has not returned to them. He now believes that a quarterback can only be successful when dropping straight back and moving as may receivers as possible into patterns. He believes that every quarterback must fit into this role or else he will cast them aside and move on. Whisenhunt doesn't like what he has in Matt Leinart but knows that the front office has an investment in him, and so he is determined to make him fail so that Whis can start over with his own hand-picked QB. The Whis believes that the 2010 season is a wash from jump street.
Or Whisenhunt knows what he has in Matt Leinart after coaching him for three seasons, but he doesn't know what he has in Andre Roberts, Steven Spach, and Stephen Williams. Whis knows what he has physically in Leinart, but doesn't know necessarily what he has in him mentally. If Leinart is put in a position where he can't succeed, will he maintain his composure, keep executing the offense, and not complain or pout? Can Leinart take multiple hits during and after his release and keep getting up?
How do you protect an inexperienced quarterback and an offensive line that is still developing chemistry?
- Bootlegs
- Play Action
- Roll outs
- Waggles
- Screens
Have we seen these plays at all in the preseason? Do you think that they're just not in the playbook? Do you believe that Whis is philosophically opposed to moving the pocket to give the offensive line some breathing room and protect his quarterback? Do you think that Whis burned the pages of the playbook that Kurt Warner just didn't like to run?
I submit that the Cardinals offense that we're seeing right now is the Kurt Warner offense that there's three years of tape on. The offense that Matt Leinart posted a 64.6 QB rating running last season. The offense that shows nothing of what the Cards are running in practices, or will run once the games start counting.
I submit that the offense that we'll see September 12 (if we need it) or September 19 (more likely) is not the offense that you have seen the last two games or will see in the next two. That offense will feature 2 TEs (as much of the offense that Derek Anderson has been running has), but much less passing. The offense will move the pocket and work to force defenses into zone coverage (which Leinart has shown he can pick apart) or freeze safeties and/or outside linebackers.
When you watch the Chicago Bears game this weekend, don't only interrogate what you see; ask yourself what you're not seeing. What are we hiding? What are we allowing Derek Anderson to run that Matt Leinart isn't running with the ones? I think you'll be surprised.