DL Needs to Do the Kicking in this Game
For Comparison's Sake, I Went Ahead and Did Same Analysis for the OL's the Cardinals have faced.
The Panthers are the #2 PFF Ranked OL in the NFL. The Cardinals D has not faced a unit that is better than them, obviously, since there is only 1 (Dallas). How did our front 7 do in getting to the QB and stopping the run?
Well, to be honest, the Cardinals probably have to have a better-than-average game on D to win this game. On average, they only got 2.2 sacks per game (1.8 if you toss out the 9-sack GB game). They also surrender 93.8 yards per game (though if you throw out the Gurley dominant 4th qtr in the first Rams game, that average comes down to 88 rushing yards per game).
Here is how we looked in each game:
Saints (3): 2 sacks and 54 rushing yards allowed.
@Browns (5): 1 sack and 39 rushing yards allowed.
Packers (7): 10 sacks and 236 rushing yards allowed in 2 games
Bengals (8): 4 sacks and 99 rush yards allowed.
@Steelers (10): 1 sack, but allowed 141 rushing yards
@Eagles (12): 2 sacks and 74 rushing yards allowed
Ravens (13): 3 sacks and 55 rushing yards allowed
Vikings (14): 3 sacks and 72 rushing yards allowed
@Bears (16): 2 sacks and 109 rushing yards allowed (though Cutler's injury changed the tone of that game. He was 8-9 passing before he went down)
@Lions (24): 1 sack and 56 rushing yards. Cards had such a large early lead that it is not surprising about the rushing totals, but having only 1 sack on a team passing all game is worrisome.
49ers (27): In two games the Cardinals had 4 sacks and allowed 170 rushing yards.
Rams (28): In two games, the Cardinals only had 1 sack and allowed 230 rushing yards.
Seahawks (30): In to games, the Cardinals had 3 sacks and gave up 260 rushing yards.
So what to take from this? Well, our division opponents fielded some of the worst offensive lines in the League. We got to play them each twice this year. And we were unable to get fat on their ineptitude. 8 sacks in 6 games against bottom-dwelling OL's. And we gave up 100 yards in rushing in 4 of those 6 games! Chalk that up to divisional opponent weirdness, I guess?
If you look at the top OL's we faced, our D really dug in. Against Top 10 OL's, our front 7 generated 18 sacks in 6 games (though 9 of those came in 1 game). They also held opponents to under 95 rushing yards per game in those 6 games (compared to 110 against our lowly divisional competition).
In truth, this offense we are facing makes life easy for their OL. They don't commit holding penalties because Cam isn't running all over the field to improvise, a la Russell Wilson. His runs are straight ahead, or a read. They are designed.
They also don't have a ton of weapons on the outside, so he doesn't have a lot of progressions to go through. Olsen for the 1st down, Ginn over the top; that's about it. Easy to hold up.
Calais, Frostee, Gunter, Minter, and Freeney need to bring pressure and be disciplined in their gaps. Let the back end take care of itself. They need to keep the Panthers in long down situations. Easier said than done.