I wonder how much of our problem is scheme and not talent.
And coaching (or lack of) techniques.
And coaching (or lack of) techniques.
I wonder how much of our problem is scheme and not talent.
And coaching (or lack of) techniques.
I don't see many changes happening...
The idea is Levi Brown, Bobbie Massie, D'Anthony Batiste, and Nate Potter make up a good group of offensive tackles, effectively blending age and athleticism. I agree with his. They get terrible help for both their inside counterparts, their QB and their play calling. Improve our interior line play and our running game improves which allows us to run the ball more effectively.
Inside, here is the mess. As a fan, you have to hope Senio Kelemente can improve his strength enough to beat out one of our two OGs. He already has more athleticism and if he can improve his strength to match the two incumbents, we would have a guard athletic enough to pull and slide in pass pro. With that, I'm ok with Colledge and Snyder battling for the other OG spot provided we bring in a legitimate OC who can handle point of attack. Best one in the draft is Khaled Holmes out of USC, maybe he is available 2nd or 3rd round.
The only other plannable option would be if the Chiefs allow Brandon Albert to hit the open market, we sign him to either play OT or OG. Move pieces after that but I really don't see a fit.
Jonathan Cooper out of UNC would be an upgrade inside, but he might not be available in round 2 and I am still using my first pick on a QB.
I'm one who believes its mostly scheme and coaching techniques because we keep changing players and have the same results. And of course I also believe the fact that we keep changing players has a lot to do with the struggles.
Until Grimm leaves that will never happen. They are way to confident, with no results to back it up I might add, in Grimms ability to coach up talent. Which means they will continue to throw late round picks and other teams cast offs at the problem thinking Grimm can just coach them up. To not draft a linemen in the 3rd round or sooner going on 5 straight years now is proof positive of this. The confidence in Grimm is hurting this team big time.
It's certainly some scheme in that we ask guys to block 1 on 1 who can't, but that's also talent.
A better OL coach would have this OL playing better, or he'd tell his coach my line can't block the way you want to run your offense.
Agreed there's 3 clear ways to improve your OL. Draft and sign better players, coach them up, create a scheme that makes them better. SF did all 3 they drafted better talent, they coached them up, and they brought in a scheme with Harbaugh that makes them better. 2 TE's, power run sets, lots of play action , overloaded lines etc.
I would have done backflips if we'd hired Tom Cable after he got fired, Pete Carroll was smart enough to do so and they'll eventually see a better OL as a result of that once/if their OL ever gets healthy. I watched the guy do miracles in Oakland it's why they hired him a head coach.
Grimm just isn't the guy. We haven't given him great talent to coach, but the talent he does have seems to be so poorly coached.
Jurecki just tweeted that Batiste is the lowest ratest NFL tackle and Snyder is the lowest ratest NFL guard by Pro Football Focus. No wonder the Cardinals offensive line is such a disaster area. They pretty much suck across the board.![]()
After watching the NFL for almost a season and a half now, it is clear to see that having even an average OT on your team is a huge asset. and something most teams would kill for at this point in the NFL's history. The OT's of the league as a whole SUCK. For all the crap Levi gets and it is deserved some times he is at minimum an average LT IMO. You don't move that to RG, a position that a player has never played his whole career.
I also think we all need to come to the realization that unless something huge happens to change the coaches and scouts minds our starting OL next year is already set in stone - Levi, Colledge, Sendlein, Snyder, and Massie. Of the 5 the best odds for placing your money on a possible upgrade is Snyder, but even those odds are slim.
I also think Heap and LSH doesn't get enough credit. They go down to injury and the OL looks far worse the last two weeks. We may not chip enough on the edges, but we were doing it way more often then we ever have before and Heap and LSH(on 3rd down) were EXCELLENT at it. The OL has missed there presence big time IMO.
This. The offensive tackles coming out of college now are just of inferior quality to what we saw a generation ago. Ogden, Pace, Bosselli, Walter Jones, heck, even Flozell Adams. This isn't a roster of guys who we're cherry-picking over two decades; they were all playing at the same time.
There are two elite offensive tackles in the NFL (Long and Thomas), and a handful of average ones. The rest are just guys waiting to lose their jobs.
For next season, do we just have to bring back Levi as the RT or RG, depending on whether Snyder or Massie plays better. Hopefully, that fixes the right side of the OL, and then we draft a LT with our first or second round pick. And my assumption is that Sendlein and Colledge are keepers. I know that there are posters who disagree about both Sendlein and Colledge. And I'm hoping that Kelemete challenges for a starting spot. Is this too simplified?
I really appreciate all the work you guys put into trying to figure out how to fix the Oline. However, Grimm and Co. never do any of it. Sad.
It occurs to me that, offensively (in contrast to Horton's defense), we've never decided on a single system, inside of which, we'd bring in players who'd fit a specific profile.
Instead, we've tended to be opportunistic, acquiring Kolb because he was the best overall QB who was available or Beanie (because he was a big guy) or R Williams (because he was shifty). But none of these guys were necessarily great fits within a predetermined system.
Are we a west coast offense? A vertical team? A grind it out power running team? Who are we?
My point is that we've stocked our OL in a similar fashion - kind of a willy-nilly - "let's grab this guy because he looks good" approach instead of first figuring out: What kind of LG or LT do we ideally need to make our running and passing attack go? (How big? How nimble? How smart? How tough?)
Result - a patchwork of linemen and skilled offensive players - some talented, some MEH - but not necessarily a winning combination.
Thoughts?
It occurs to me that, offensively (in contrast to Horton's defense), we've never decided on a single system, inside of which, we'd bring in players who'd fit a specific profile.
Instead, we've tended to be opportunistic, acquiring Kolb because he was the best overall QB who was available or Beanie (because he was a big guy) or R Williams (because he was shifty). But none of these guys were necessarily great fits within a predetermined system.
Are we a west coast offense? A vertical team? A grind it out power running team? Who are we?
My point is that we've stocked our OL in a similar fashion - kind of a willy-nilly - "let's grab this guy because he looks good" approach instead of first figuring out: What kind of LG or LT do we ideally need to make our running and passing attack go? (How big? How nimble? How smart? How tough?)
Result - a patchwork of linemen and skilled offensive players - some talented, some MEH - but not necessarily a winning combination.
Thoughts?
Hogwash. We've always favored big, lumbering OT and more lithe OGs who can pull into the gap left or right of tackle. That's why Lutui was such an unfortunate fit here.
We run a lot more power-O concepts than we do zone reads in the running game. In the passing game, we run a variation of the run-n-shoot with deep and intermediate routes.