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Mitch

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The Myth of Sisyphus

Why is it that teams that get close to winning a Super Bowl tend to come out of the gates sluggishly the next year?

Teams that get oh so close understand the tremendous grind they have to endure to push the rock all the way back up the mountain.

They also worry about stamina, so they try to conserve themselves in order to build strength as they go....like NBA teams try to do during the first half of regular season games.

But, conserving themselves is not the way to win September and October football games. In the NFL, especially playing on the road, it takes a full-bore effort from the team and every individual on it.

if some players aren't up for pushing that rock, that rock will fall back to the bottom early and often.

Complacency

One would think that last year's disappointment in Carolina would be ample fuel for the Cardinals to motivate themselves---but for some reason the Cardinals, be it their brief stardom on "All or Nothing" or a series of questionable off-season decisions by Steve Keim and Bruce Arians, have become stale and complacent.

One of the main reasons is the lack of competition at key spots. Take QB Carson Palmer, for example. After watching Drew Stanton lay down another pre-season of rotten eggs and after watching the one productive QB in the pre-season, Matt Barkley, get cut, Carson Palmer knows he can play as lousy as he did yesterday and not have the least bit of worry that he could be taken out.

One of the absolute worst decisions made by an ill-prepared Bruce Arians yesterday was keeping Carson Palmer in the game when it was crystal clear that Palmer was having one of his more robotic, zombie-like games and that the Cardinals had zero chance to win.

Thank goodness that Palmer---who was taking a good beating which resulted in numerous head whiplashes and butt bruises---was not injured in those meaningless late in the gamer snaps.

But here again---with the choice being to turn to Drew Stanton, BA would just as soon risk keeping Palmer in there, than resort to watching Stanton flounder the way he did in pre-season.

Discipline

One sure sign that defensive players are not responding to the coaching is when they do their own thing on the field and abandon their position disciplines.

For example, on what was a game and momentum turning play for the Bills in a 0-0 game, Tyron Taylor ran the read option to his left.

Now---any coach or team that plays the Bills should be prepared for Taylor's read option.

OLB Chandler Jones should know this just from playing the Bills twice last year.

But, what does Jones do when the option is run to his side?

He crashes down on the RB and abandons his job which is to keep contain on the QB, thus leaving a hole as wide as an interstate highway for Taylor to accelerate through.

Later in the game, on a deep out pass, WR Michael Floyd elects to abandon his route and does not cross the face of his defender in order the shield the defender fro being able to jump the route---instead Floyd inexplicably rounds his shabby route outward instead of inward and thus makes Carson Palmer's good throw to the pylon look foolish.

Thirdly, how about the play where perennially unproductive DT/DE Ed Stinson is for some reason in there in a passing situation and not only does Stinson get zero push on the RG---he stops his feet, is completely stood up, and makes absolutely zero effort to disengage from his block as Tyron Taylor scrambles right by him untouched and unthreatened.

Finally, even BA himself---how in the world can a coach not throw a challenge flag on a crystal clear drop by a WR when the Bills are up 3-0 and threatening to make it 10-0?

Oh and by the way, did anyone see the block that LG Richie Incognito put on DE/DT Rodney Gunter on Shady McCoy's second easy TD run? Talk about abandoning position discipline. Incognito took Gunter and rode him past the guard on the other side of the line.

Talk Talk Talk

BA said after the game, "We talked about getting off to a fast start."

Well, Bill Belichick had something to say about the Cardinals' talk, didn't he---when in his post game presser he basically said about the Cardinals as Super Bowl contenders, "at least that's what THEY are TALKING about."

BA spent the week talking about how he is "brutally honest" with the players. Now BA has resorted more frequently to issuing scathing critiques of some of his players publicly to the media---well---that's a practice that can backfire very easily, especially when the coach himself has been making glaring errors.

New Rule: no more mention of Super Bowl until it is relevant (when the team wins an NFC Championship and qualifies).

New Rule #2: Whatever the talk has been at half-time, it needs to change. Team not responding at all.

Off-Season Decisions

It still remains a mind-boggling reality that Steve Keim did so little to address some of the key personnel and coaching issues and vulnerabilities. Cases in point:

1. Improving the QB situation and depth.
2. Adding a veteran to challenge D.J. Humphries at RT.
3. Improving the pass rush---I think we all knew that adding Chandler Jones wasn't going to be a cure-all. How many of us were begging Keim to re-sign Dwight Freeney?
4. Doing something about Calais Campbell's prohibitive $15.4M cap figure.
5. Signing a one of the better FA CBs in case Justin Bethel doesn't improve.
6. Signing an ILB who can replace Kevin Minter on passing downs.
7. Signing an experienced long snapper.
8. Upgrading the punting situation.
9. Adding a bona fide, aggressive punt and kick returner.
10. Improving the STs cover teams.

Strangely, it almost feels like Keim expects this to be a down year and is thinking more about next year and the moves he can make then.

Players Who Showed Up in Buffalo:

RB David Johnson---has been highly productive, but needs a greater every now and then.
WR Larry Fitzgerald---a consummate pro in every which way.
WR John Brown---good to see him making strides in passing game and on punt returns.
WR Jaron Brown---better and more reliable than Floyd and deserves to start.
TE Darren Fells---good catches and tough RACs.
LG Mike Iupati---got tremendous push on run plays.
LB Gabe Martin---best tackle on cover teams.
SS Tony Jefferson---best tackler in the box.
CB Patrick Peterson---tremendous one handed interception.
CB Marcus Cooper---played with good leverage and timing.
FS D.J. Swearinger---made some solid tackles and assists in the open field.
FS Tyran Mathieu---leave it to Badger to show the team the textbook way to defend the option and good clean back shoulders hit on WR.
K Chandler Catanzaro---60 yard FG was perfecto. Not sure why coaches had hi pooch kicking to the 20 yard line, however.

Players Who Struggled Mightily:

QB Carson Palmer---robotic, mechanical, overly programmed and unemotional.
RB Andre Ellington---not a factor as kickoff returner.
WR Michael Floyd---his drop of the easy first pass (which was scripted no less_, further confirms that not only is he not a #1 WR, he is reluctant to make plays over the middle.
LT Jared Veldheer---wow has this guy regressed.
C A.Q. Shipley---got manhandled by Kyle Williams
RB Earl Watford---Cole Toner so outplayed him in the pre-season---something is not right about Watford.
RT D.J. Humphries---Jerry Hughes dominated him, but Humphries has no player with Hughes' burst and speed to block in practice. He should improve with more experience, but his first game on the road was a major challenge.
TE Troy Niklas---way over-rated, uninspired. WTF was that one yard pass play to him on 2nd and 10? Got pushed back into David Johnson on a key running play that could have been a TD.
NT Corey Peters---no show through 3 games.
DE Rodney Gunter---same.
DE Calais Campbell---is making a few plays in the running game, but in a no show in the pass rush, even with teams keying on Chandler Jones.
DE Ed Stinson---par for the course, zero production.
ILB Deone Bucannon---not the same player, something is wrong with him.
ILB Kevin Minter---had the big sack and made a couple of plays, but left a lot of stops out there.
OLB Chandler Jones---does not look suited to play OLB---he not a fluid enough athlete. Doesn't wow you on his initial rush, but gets hustle sacks. Needs to be rested a little---can't expect his to play every snap---but agin here is where having an injured or far less effective player behind him hurts him and the team.
OLB Markus Golden---lost his contain technique---he HAS to keep his outside shoulder free and channel the plays inside to where the help is. He got pinned inside way too often. Worked hard on his pass rushes.
LS Kam Canaday---just too inexperienced and as BA said last week, "erratic."
P Drew Butler---has struggled health and punting-wise for far too long.

Players We Desperately Need Back:

RG Evan Mathis---not the same offense without him, plus we need him badly versus Aaron Donald.
DE Frostee Rucker---he's the only real penetrator and decent pass rusher in the middle to date---hope at some point to get penetration and inside pressure too from Robert Nkemdiche. Best inside pass rusher in pre-season otherwise was Olsen Pierre, who is athletic enough to disengage his man and prevent QBs from bolting untouched up the middle.

Moves That Should/Could Be Made But Most Likely Won't:

* Stop scripting the plays---it's just making Carson Palmer all the more programmed and robotic.
* Whoever is assigned to tell BA when to challenge a play should be replaced.
* Start Jaron Brown at WR in place of Michael Floyd.
* If Mathis can't play, start Cole Toner at RG.
* Try C Evan Boehm for a series or two if possible.
* Stop throwing those ill-advised WR screens---other teams know when they are coming---plus if you are going to run them the tackle HAS to cut the DE.
* Have Carson Palmer play with emotion like he did in the second half of the Cincy game last year.
* When behind the offense has to play with much more urgency---Palmer's deal of game penalty was totally inexcusable and a key error in the game---and then he nearly got another one when somehow they were bailed out by the Bills calling TO.
* Run more 2 RB sets with Chris Johnson at RB and David Johnson in the slot.
* Have Gabe Martin sub for Kevin Minter on passing downs.
* Re-assign STs coordinator Amos Jones and switch James Bettcher over the STs coordinator. Bettcher was a STs coordinator twice in college and did a very good job---that's where he can thrive.
* Promote Bob Sanders, Nick Rapone or Larry Foote to DC. Sanders has NFL DC experience, Rapone was an outstanding DC at Delaware and no one knows the 34 defense and how to call it better than Larry Foote. The players might relate to Foote especially well and might respond with a bang. But a change needs to happen. BA said last week that "Bettch took the bullet", but BA you made him the target of bullets when you assigned him as DC without him having paid his NFL dues or him ever having any experience coordinating a defense. Bettch could discover his niche for now in building up the STs.

Personnel Additions:

* OLB---Alex Okafor isn't cutting it and we need to give Golden and Jones some breathers so their legs can be fresh in the 4th quarter.
* P---not just as a fill in until Butler's ankle is healed, but for the season.
* LS---try to coax Mike Leach out of retirement---let him fly back to his family for a couple of days early in each week. What an MVP he could be on STs---which he was all those year in a highly using way.
 
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RugbyMuffin

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Nice write up.

My only disagreements:

1. Dwight Freeney's 2016 stats so far: Tackles = 0, Sacks = 0. Not sure he is or was the solution.

2. Cory Peters = Your whipping post produced a safety at a time the rest of this team had packed it in. For a team looking for some leadership, he at least showed his resolve.


Outside of that, the best point to be made is this team has to stop talking Super Bowl, and start talking about playing consistently.

Right now, The Cardinals are the underdogs for next weeks game regardless of what the press says.
 

b8rtm8nn

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Mostly agree, especially about the discipline. Something you didn't mention is the personnel choices on defense they made for this game - they sat 4 DL, came into the game with 5 active plus we only really play the 2 OLB and our two ILB. We planned to protect against the run and option plays with our secondary, who has a lot of new players and isn't fully in sync. A few times I saw Branch, Swearinger or Jefferson running into OLinemen (more accurately, getting crushed by OLinemen) and a huge lane for the RB/QB. We already see the deficiency of Bucannon when he can't disengage because of his lack of size, expecting the even smaller players to navigate at the line line seems foolhardy.

I foolishly thought at the beginning of the season that we would actually use MORE DLinemen in our game plans because that is a strength of our defensive roster - and the opposite seems to be happening. Tyrod Tayler mentioned after the game that they knew we were a team to run the option on, I'm assuming that is because we put our OLB at the line and our ILBs are slow to the edge - so one good block on a DB and the option kills us.
 

b8rtm8nn

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Agree with Rugby - Peters was solid, he made two plays himself, but we only played 4 in the rotation and Gunter only got a handful (may have gotten injured)

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MrYeahBut

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The entire team and coaches appear to be asleep at the wheel.
 
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Mitch

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Nice write up.

My only disagreements:

1. Dwight Freeney's 2016 stats so far: Tackles = 0, Sacks = 0. Not sure he is or was the solution.

2. Cory Peters = Your whipping post produced a safety at a time the rest of this team had packed it in. For a team looking for some leadership, he at least showed his resolve.


Outside of that, the best point to be made is this team has to stop talking Super Bowl, and start talking about playing consistently.

Right now, The Cardinals are the underdogs for next weeks game regardless of what the press says.

Thanks, Rugby---I may have been too critical of Peters. Your point is well taken.

Let's take a look at Freeney tonight and see what he's got. You know, Freeney didn't want to wait until the middle of training camp to sign with a team---he wanted to sign before training camp---which I thought was a huge plus. Because of his late signing, he may be just getting back into football shape. The fact is---he was fit here and had the Cardinals not signed him, they may not have gone on that 9-0 run that paved the way for the NFC West title and the #2 seed in the playoffs.
 
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Mitch

Mitch

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Mostly agree, especially about the discipline. Something you didn't mention is the personnel choices on defense they made for this game - they sat 4 DL, came into the game with 5 active plus we only really play the 2 OLB and our two ILB. We planned to protect against the run and option plays with our secondary, who has a lot of new players and isn't fully in sync. A few times I saw Branch, Swearinger or Jefferson running into OLinemen (more accurately, getting crushed by OLinemen) and a huge lane for the RB/QB. We already see the deficiency of Bucannon when he can't disengage because of his lack of size, expecting the even smaller players to navigate at the line line seems foolhardy.

I foolishly thought at the beginning of the season that we would actually use MORE DLinemen in our game plans because that is a strength of our defensive roster - and the opposite seems to be happening. Tyrod Tayler mentioned after the game that they knew we were a team to run the option on, I'm assuming that is because we put our OLB at the line and our ILBs are slow to the edge - so one good block on a DB and the option kills us.

It's mind-boggling, b8rt, that they deactivate Xavier Williams for this game. He was a bright light last week and they had to know going in that the Bills were planing to run the ball a lot.
 

DeAnna

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By all accounts they practiced well against Buffalo's run game and QB containtment - just didn't translate at game time.

Posted this in another thread, but applies here as well

DB20 got ripped pretty hard on the radio this morning. Quotes from BA and TM32 about 'checking your ego at the door' and 'some guys thinking they are better than they really are'

he was being over-aggressive and out of his gap on most of those big runs. Oh, and CJ55 also got called out for losing containment a lot.

Oh ... the Steve Keim interview in 15 mintues should be interesting, lol
 

Darkside

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People continuously say we came close to winning a SB last year. I read it over and over again on this forum. That's nonsense. We came close to GETTING to the SB. We weren't even in the freaking game to have a chance at winning it.
 

PJ1

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I agree on Peters...He may have had a safety but hasn't looked good to me this year. Mauro is better than both Stinson and Gunter and that tells you a lot. Also was shocked to see Xavier Williams inactive. The guy brings some fire and we need it. Freeney made plays for us in crunch time last year which makes me wonder if we may have won the Pats game with him out there in the 4th quarter.
 

iLLmatiC

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Oh ... the Steve Keim interview in 15 mintues should be interesting, lol

I'm gonna be listening to it, I'm sure he will be pissed. I appreciate what Doug has been saying about the team, especially regarding his rant about Michael Floyd.
 

Russ Smith

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This will sound like Notre Dame hating but Floyd and Niklas are really driving me nuts. Mitch is 100% right it was Niklas that missed the block on that 3rd and 1 that made it 4th and 2 which then was 4th and 7 botched snap TD Buffalo. And I complained during the game about him catching that short pass from Palmer and getting absolutely tossed down by a guy he has 70 pounds on. I know he probably didn't see the defender coming but so far definition of looks like Tarzan plays like Jane. Sometimes you need guys to make plays, break a tackle make someone miss, right now DJ and Fitz are the only guys doing it.

Floyd's bad routes are a huge problem, he looks like a guy who is mad he doesn't have a new contract but that doesn't make sense because if he waits someone else will give him more money. maybe he thinks the Cards aren't respecting him I don't know but he needs to get out of his funk, or not play.
 

CFLredzoned

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I'm glad you put the emphasis on energy and complacency, because I really think that's what this boiled down to. We've seen that the team has the pieces to win, with maybe a few exceptions. But with the talent being so close on every team, if you don't play your A game every week, you're going to lose. The Bills were playing for their coaches job and the Cardinals are playing with a Super Bowl hangover - without ever having gone to a Super Bowl.

Behind closed doors, BA has to be telling Mike B 'I told you so' when it comes to All or Nothing. Knowing what he knows about the NFL, he couldn't have been in favor of it. But Mike B wanted to build the fan base and maybe it worked - but the cost might have been the 2016 season - and it may go down as nothing more than a punchline for future episodes of '10 Most fill in the blank' on NFL Network.
 

JeffGollin

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Mitch - You're a better man than me (I lack the fortitude needed to look a really horrible effort right in the mouth).

Because of my reluctance to dwell on the awful, I'll just point out that the Cards followed a poor effort vs. NE with a total dismantling of TB followed by a dismal effort in Buffalo. This tells me the Cards are capable of winning big but equally capable of losing bad. (perfect description of a .500 team).

The good news is that, if we won once we can win again and our problem seems to be due to motivational mental and coaching factors and therefore can be fixed.

All you need for an 8 & 8 team is a little luck to go 9 & 7 (or even 10 & 6).

Not that I think this will happen - but it could. But it's all on BA and his staff/players to change effort and attitude. That plus a rabbit foot or two.
 

EndZone

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So Mr Legendary PP21 gets a showed up because of one play? What about his terrible penalty and falling down by himself in the middle of the field. Id rather have a guy that would shut his trap and play solid football. Then a guy who makes a splash and stinks it up the rest of the game.
 

unseenaz

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* Promote Bob Sanders, Nick Rapone or Larry Foote to DC. Sanders has NFL DC experience, Rapone was an outstanding DC at Delaware and no one knows the 34 defense and how to call it better than Larry Foote. The players might relate to Foote especially well and might respond with a bang. But a change needs to happen. BA said last week that "Bettch took the bullet", but BA you made him the target of bullets when you assigned him as DC without him having paid his NFL dues or him ever having any experience coordinating a defense. Bettch could discover his niche for now in building up the STs.
here's my main thing.

can BA overcome his loyalty and ditch an obvious failure of a hire? you guys thought Woodley was crazy when he called out Bettcher. He doesn't/refuses/can't make adjustments when his game plan fails.
 

b8rtm8nn

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here's my main thing.

can BA overcome his loyalty and ditch an obvious failure of a hire? you guys thought Woodley was crazy when he called out Bettcher. He doesn't/refuses/can't make adjustments when his game plan fails.


I agree. A big issue for me is putting his players in situations that they really cannot execute. His use of C Jones has been beyond ridiculous so far - Jones is not an OLB that fits how we play that position - so asking him to set the edge and release doesn't fit his style of play.

Bucannon is not big enough to be a consistent run stopper - but so far, we have been playing him like a typical ILB and not the $LB, having one of the safeties (typically Jefferson) come up to stop the runner past the line many times.

Woodley said:

“In Oakland, we had a dumb defensive coordinator and in Arizona, we had a dumb defensive coordinator. It was just two dumb guys. They thought we were like Madden players. They’d draw something up and on paper it looked good, but the players still have to go out there and run it. Those guys didn’t really listen to their players. They wanted to do it their way and their way only.”


And I agree with the Madden comment (I can't speak about the latter), he draws up a game plan and expects our players to magically execute it, regardless of abilities. That is certainly a typical approach to coaching, but not one that works long term.

"The system works"
-Former two time head coach
 

Big D

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The non-challenge on Woods' non catch is very much a head scratcher. I mean, I get it that they called D-holding and it would have been a 1st anyway, but we are still talking about a difference of about 20 yards of real estate.

I was about to type that I doubt Shady McCoy would have ran 44 yards untouched on the very next play but now that I think about it and considering the way the D played he probably would have.

Still, there is no excuse for the HC and/or his staff not having the situational awareness to save the team 20 yards as the opponent is driving into your territory.

This was a large gaffe that not many folks are talking about.
 

Shaggy

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Did any of you watch the almost fumble recovery from TM? Did you see when it went out of bounds, how pissed everyone was that he didn't pick it up or just fall on it. Golden seem to be the most pissed about it, and it even looks like he yelled at TM for not jumping on it. To me, that shows me that the D weren't ready to give up and knew they would have made a difference in the game if he recovered that fumble. They weren't "checked out" yet. The question is, did they have that same intensity in the beginning of the game?

The first 2 defensive drives were text book perfect. Then when the offense when a 3rd 3 and out, I think it tweaked there intensity and they got a little softer. This team runs alot off of mental stats. If the O isn't working, the D start to falter and I think this is what happened. If the O didn't go 3 and out the first 3 drives, I think the D would have done better.
 

AZCrazy

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The season may be progressing like the games themselves have progressed. Get down early, still feel confident, call poor plays and get busted up at the end while flailing at the wind. Early game ineffectiveness has ruined two games out of three. Early season ineffectiveness may doom the season. We'll see. Anyone can coach highly talented players to an average finish. Let's see what this coaching staff is really made of.
 

eastcoastSUN

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So Mr Legendary PP21 gets a showed up because of one play? What about his terrible penalty and falling down by himself in the middle of the field. Id rather have a guy that would shut his trap and play solid football. Then a guy who makes a splash and stinks it up the rest of the game.

This. As amazing as PP's skills are (I'm a big fan, see avatar), he needs to stop high stepping and focus on his tackling fundamentals. We know it's not the grass at UoP since it happened again yesterday, amazingly, at a critical juncture of the game where a stop could have changed the momentum. This only happens (and at a alarmingly high rate) when it's an open field tackle.
 
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Mitch

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So Mr Legendary PP21 gets a showed up because of one play? What about his terrible penalty and falling down by himself in the middle of the field. Id rather have a guy that would shut his trap and play solid football. Then a guy who makes a splash and stinks it up the rest of the game.

Pat P. has always played in a tuxedo---he doesn't think tackling is part of his job description and it is one of the reasons why teams want to run in his direction and why the perception of the Cardinals is that they are soft because the coaches put up with it.

Richard Sherman once said that Pat P. wouldn't start in their secondary because first and foremost Pete Carroll expects all the DBs to tackle and tackle hard. Other teams are well aware of Pat P.'s reluctance to hit. And I have to admit, when he did that slip yesterday, I actually wondered if it was on purpose so he wouldn't get exposed or so he would at least have an excuse. I know---why am I thinking that? But I was. Were any of you?
 

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