Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 16 of 16

Thread: Troy overrated?!?

  1. #11
    Legend

    User Info Menu

    During televised games, they should draw circles around defenders that show how much field they can cover pre snap. Troy's circle would be way bigger than anyone else's. And it would be clear he's underrated.

  2. #12
    Hall of Famer

    User Info Menu

    color me concerned.

  3. #13
    Legend

    User Info Menu

    Polamalu enters season ‘safety centered’

    By Alan Robinson
    Published: Sunday, September 2, 2012



    Steelers strong saftey Troy Polamalu during practice at St. Vincent College July 31, 2012

    Troy Polamalu remembers when he could rely upon his exquisite timing to vault the offensive line and propel himself into the backfield, disrupting a play even before it started. Nobody else in the NFL could do it.

    Or when he made plays so instinctively and athletic — such as his improbable, one-handed interception on a snowy field against Philip Rivers of the Chargers — that it required multiple replay reviews to determine how he possibly made them.

    Those were the days for the player of a generation. These days, Polamalu is out to prove it’s not a generation that’s passed.

    “I’ve been hiding a lot of my faults,” he says, laughing.

    Once a super athlete whose ability to play half the positions on defense made him a game plan nightmare for offensive coordinators, Polamalu — at age 31 — is as apt to rely on his nine-plus seasons of experience as he is his unnatural instincts. He’s also become more of a true safety than a defender who regularly makes can-you-believe-it’s-true plays.

    And when he films those Head & Shoulders ads that, according to Procter & Gamble, boosted sales 10 percent among the young adult target group, he must tint some of his gray hair. He’s also more fastidious about his offseason eating, dieting earlier in advance of training camp this year than before.

    It’s not as if Polamalu is being ravaged by time; it’s just that a player for the ages has to be conscious of his age. He also appears intent on improving upon a 2011 season in which the Steelers were No. 1 defensively and he made the All-Pro team, but his interceptions dropped to two from seven the season before.

    “I think he likes people saying he’s lost a step or that he’s injured too much,” fellow safety Ryan Clark said. “Troy isn’t Troy until the lights go on.”

    A Fox Sports analysis recently referred to Polamalu’s 2011 season as being “average” and called him one of the NFL’s top 10 overrated players, but NFL Network analyst Jamie Dukes disagrees. He ranks Polamalu as the second-best safety behind Eric Berry of Kansas City.

    However, Dukes said, “More teams are finding a way to put him in space, and that’s the only real chink in his armor ... you can negate him.”

    Defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau appears to be taking a less-is-more approach with Polamalu to utilize his strengths and prevent him from getting too overloaded with responsibilities, thus avoiding that negation factor.

    “My role in the defense has changed quite a bit,” Polamalu said. “I was playing five different positions. Am I playing nickel? Am I playing dime? Am I playing safety? It was like, ‘We want to attack Troy when he’s in that position, but he might not be in that position.’ ”

    Polamalu is becoming, in his words, more “safety-centered” and less likely to be an inside linebacker on one play, a nickel back the next and a blitzing cornerback the play after that.

    “It’s changed quite a bit in that way, and with time it’s changed even more,” Polamalu said. “There’s always a possibility of playing dime, nickel, and I played quite a bit of it last year. But it was more like, ‘All right, guys, we’ve got to put this in in the middle of the game.’ Which is nice for coach LeBeau to be able to go there because I have that experience. It’s lessened my role in the whole scheme of things.”

    When he shifts positions, Polamalu said, it’s not just to give the offense a different look but to — in his words — “calibrate our eyes” so everyone on the defense understands what is going on at every level.

    “Sometimes when you’re just down, down, down in the box and reading tight ends and in the slot playing man-to-man the entire game, you get into deep pass ... and you see the game differently,” he said. “What’s tough about the position is over half the game I’m playing man-to-man on a receiver, and the other third or quarter I’m playing in the box, and the other one I’m playing deep pass.”

    So it’s not as if Polamalu has gone from being an every-day position player to the football equivalent of a designated hitter.

    “I think Troy’s back to being Troy,” Clark said.

    Just an older, wiser Troy.

    [URL]http://triblive.com/sports/steelers/2514407-85/polamalu-playing-troy-safety-game-position-experience-player-season-bit#ixzz25L51zFD7[/URL]
    Steel Maniac's Time-Based Prediction: Lamar Jackson will be a bust and total flop in the NFL.

    What Actually Happened: Lamar Jackson became the youngest two-time NFL MVP winner ever.

    Gloat gloat gloat


    Boom........

    My IT guy...
    Hahahahahahaha

  4. #14
    Hall of Famer

    User Info Menu

    It's easy for some to call troy overrated because throughout any game he generally has one or two easy to spot misses. What most seem to overlook however is those misses comes from Troy's ability and desire to sell himself out completely on every play. He's all over the field and is simply the most involved player on the defense. I suppose he could take a page out of ed reed's playbook. he could lay back, rarely tackle and cherry pick 10 interceptions a year - and then there would be minimal mistakes to point out by those totally overlooking the fact that less mistakes would be due to him taking few chances.

    in today's world of ESPN and 5 second video clips - a selfish player can literally take 30 plays off, make 2 great ones, and end up in the HOF. good thing for us Troy treats every play like it's his last, and NEVER plays it 'safe'....no pun intended.
    2014 MNF EXEC CHAMPION!!!

  5. #15
    Pro Bowler

    User Info Menu

    When healthy he's not overrated. When he is injured, well, everyone sucks.
    So you can say he's been injury prone, but he plays safety. Alot of the top safeties are injury prone. Reed, Bob Sanders and the like.

  6. #16
    Pro Bowler

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by aggiebones View Post
    When healthy he's not overrated. When he is injured, well, everyone sucks.
    So you can say he's been injury prone, but he plays safety. Alot of the top safeties are injury prone. Reed, Bob Sanders and the like.
    Sanders is beyond injury prone. He simply could never stay healthy other than a handful of years. Reed, yea he has had some injuries, but he plays more than he sits, something I can't say about Sanders. Sanders was an injury machine. Season-ending injury after season-ending injury. He was small but played big, and I guess he ended up being to small to play that big after all.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •