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Thread: This D is awful

  1. #91
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    Quote Originally Posted by pfelix73 View Post
    Well, the guy is a retired defensive coach and probably knows these guys personally, so I respect his thoughts. You can not argue the fact that the guy is an excellent teacher.
    Exactly and he's not going to publically call out a personal friend .... of course he'll defend Lebeau no matter what. Thats why I take his comment with a grain of salt. He can't be & won't be unbiased.
    Tomlin: Let's unleash hell and "mop the floor" with the competition.

  2. #92
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steelhere10 View Post
    what people are missing, is that every time Worilds is giving the opportunity he performs well. In his limited time he gets a sack with less plays than even Woodley (I read that on a site years ago) But yet he was playing behind Pro Bowlers and along with Dick playing his favorites how could he see the field.
    Good point. Worilds has always been able to pressure the passer everytime he was given a chance. Some don't want to see what is right in front of them because they have spent so much effort holding him up as an example of a bad Tomlin draft pick. Worilds has been a good player and is turning into a very, very good player just like Tomlin and team probably had insights into when they drafted him.
    "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

  3. #93
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    Quote Originally Posted by Oviedo View Post
    Good point. Worilds has always been able to pressure the passer everytime he was given a chance. Some don't want to see what is right in front of them because they have spent so much effort holding him up as an example of a bad Tomlin draft pick. Worilds has been a good player and is turning into a very, very good player just like Tomlin and team probably had insights into when they drafted him.
    Most of the Tomlin apologists say that our lack of depth & young talent is due to "Colbert's poor drafts" but.......

    When a draft pick is succesful Tomlin gets the credit but when a draft pick fails its Colbert's (not Tomlin) fault?

    That's interesting.
    Tomlin: Let's unleash hell and "mop the floor" with the competition.

  4. #94
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    The biggest problem of all in 2013

    by Ray Fittipaldo

    I wrote about it in the paper today, but it’s worth revisiting because it illustrates how hard the Steelers defense has fallen in such little time.

    Allowing big plays continues to be this team’s Achilles Heel. Gerry Dulac did the research and wrote a story on this after the Patriots debacle last month, so I’ll just add up the past four games to bring you the up-to-date dirty details.

    The Steelers have allowed 11 plays of 50 yards or more this season, including one more Sunday, which ended up being the biggest play of the game. Daniel Thomas, a reserve who has 384 yards rushing this season, gained 105 against the Steelers, 55 on a dash that set up Miami’s winning touchdown with a little more than three minutes remaining.

    Not allowing big plays and making teams drive the length of the field to beat them is the basic principle of the Steelers defense.

    Here is how far the mighty have fallen: In 2011, the Steelers were No. 1 in the league in total defense and scoring defense and allowed only two passes of 40 yards or longer and one run 50 yards or longer. Thomas’ run was the fourth of 55 yards or longer this season. There have been seven passes of 50 or longer.

    Here is the kicker, in Tomlin’s first six seasons as head coach, the Steelers allowed 18 plays or 50 yards or longer.

    Injuries and age have caught up to the defense in 2013. And here are the ugly statistics to back it up:

    *After being No. 1 in the league in total defense last season they are No. 12 today and allowing 342 yards per game, 67 more than they allowed last season.

    *After finishing sixth in the league in scoring defense in 2012, allowing 19.6 points per game, the Steelers are allowing 24 per game this season and ranked 16th in the league, the definition of mediocrity in the NFL.

    Ugly stats indeed.

    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    I though the most interesting postgame quote came from Thomas, the running back from Miami, who said of Ryan Clark on his 55-yard run: “I was looking at the defender. I think it was Ryan Clark. He looked like he really didn’t want to tackle me, so I tried to make something happen. Mike Wallace made another block and that was it.”

    Clark had a different version of events. The reason he didn’t try to tackle Thomas, he said, was because he tried to prevent a touchdown run down the sideline. He was lined up deep on the play because the coaches believed the Dolphins would go for a big passing play because it was second-and-1. Once he saw Thomas break through the front seven his mission was to force Thomas back to the center of the field where pursuing teammates could make a play.

    Clark’s decision might have been correct. He could not have anticipated Ike Taylor slipping and falling down and Thomas gaining another 20 yards or so. Maybe Clark took a cue from his teammates. He saw how they tackled all day and figured he didn't have much of a shot to make a play either.

    I just thought Thomas’ assertion that Clark didn’t want a piece of him was telling. Once upon a time Clark could lay the lumber with the best of them in the NFL. Just ask Willis McGahee. Now someone named Daniel Thomas is questioning his desire to come up and make a tackle.

    MORE NO-NAME NONSENSE

    Thomas wasn’t the only Miami player made to look like a Hall of Famer Sunday. Another unknown player named Charles Clay, a third-year tight end from Tulsa, was made to look like John Mackey the way he rumbled through the Steelers defense.

    Sometimes, the Steelers ignored him like when a defender was not within 20 yards of him on his first touchdown. They did it again when he got wide open for a 20-yard gain a little later. On another, he streaked down the sideline and beat cornerback Cortez Allen for a 40-yard gain to set up another touchdown. On another he caught a pass in the flat, made Troy Polamalu miss and picked up an important first down on third-[/B]and-long. And on the winning touchdown, he broke tackles from Allen and Polamalu to score the decisive points with 3:02 left on the clock.

    The Dolphins have been using Clay much more in the passing game in the past month, but it’s worth noting he was a sixth-round pick that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers managed to hold to 21 yards receiving a month ago. The Carolina Panthers held him to 27 yards two weeks ago. Against the Steelers he had 97 yards and two touchdowns.

    It's not just the Calvin Johnsons who are having big days against the Steelers. It's the Charles Clays and Kenbrell Thompkins of the world, too. That should scare the Steelers more than anything.

    [URL]http://sportsblogs.post-gazette.com/sports/steelers-steelers-blog/2013/12/09/The-biggest-problem-of-all-in-2013/stories/201312090005[/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........

    Hahahahahahaha

  5. #95
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    Quote Originally Posted by steelz09 View Post
    Wait a minute.... when a draft pick is succesful Tomlin gets the credit but when a draft pick fails its Colbert's (not Tomlin) fault? That's interesting
    smh... can't stop, won't stop.

  6. #96
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    I just thought Thomas’ assertion that Clark didn’t want a piece of him was telling. Once upon a time Clark could lay the lumber with the best of them in the NFL. Just ask Willis McGahee. Now someone named Daniel Thomas is questioning his desire to come up and make a tackle.
    WTF type of sh#t journalism is this? Clark was laying wood all day... sometimes he takes bad angles. Why would he not want to tackle a RB on the biggest series of the day?

  7. #97
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    I was looking at the defender. I think it was Ryan Clark. He looked like he really didn’t want to tackle me, so I tried to make something happen. Mike Wallace made another block and that was it.”

    This is a total bull sh*t statement. We're talking about the same Clark who previously got called (incorrectly) for laying the wood to a supposedly defenseless WR. He may not have the same speed or coverage skills but Clark has never been afraid to tackle. To say otherwise is silly and ignorant.

  8. #98
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    Steelers Notebook: Defense blown open again

    December 8, 2013
    By Ray Fittipaldo / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



    Allowing big plays has been a weakness for the Steelers all season, and on Sunday, three more cost them dearly in their 34-28 loss at Heinz Field. The Steelers gave up 360 yards to the Dolphins, and 143 of those came on three plays.

    That's 40 percent of Miami's offense on a trio of plays that helped the Dolphins score 17 points.

    Quarterback Ryan Tannehill ran 48 yards in the first quarter to set up a Caleb Sturgis field goal, the first points of the game for Miami.

    Tannehill completed a 40-yard pass to Charles Clay on third-and-4 in the third quarter. The Dolphins scored a touchdown four plays later when Brian Hartline caught a 4-yard pass from Tannehill.

    And finally, the biggest play of all was a Daniel Thomas 55-yard run that set up a Clay touchdown catch with 3:02 left.

    "We gave up the big plays," outside linebacker LaMarr Woodley said. "As a defense, we can't do that. We gave them up at the wrong time and they capitalized on it."

    Thomas' long run was the 11th play of 50 yards or more against the Steelers this season.

    "When they needed stops, they got stops, and when they needed big plays, they got big plays," defensive end Cameron Heyward said. "I thought we had a chance to close the door, but we just didn't capitalize on it. We just didn't get the job done. You have to tip your hat them."

    [URL]http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/steelers/2013/12/09/Defense-blown-open-again/stories/201312090052#ixzz2n0eCCbf1[/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........

    Hahahahahahaha

  9. #99
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    Quote Originally Posted by oviedo View Post
    the problem is that he is using the same system. The league has him figured out. Use short quick passes to take advantage of the 10 years cushions or spread the defense out and force the olbs to drop into coverage so they can't pressure the qb. I've been saying it for three years...once the league started evolving into a pass first league lebeau doesn't know what to do. The trends were obvious to anyone not praying at his alter and making excuses.

    bingo
    hit the nail on the head
    right on
    etc......

  10. #100
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    Pittsburgh defense not good anymore

    December 9, 2013
    John Mehno
    The Altoona Mirror

    PITTSBURGH - For the second consecutive game, sideline navigation was an issue for the Pittsburgh Steelers.

    Last time, it was coach Mike Tomlin's inability to stay on the sideline. This time is was Antonio Brown's inability to stay on the field that was the problem.

    Brown inexplicably stepped out of bounds on his way to the end zone, thwarting a possible miracle finish for the Steelers at Heinz Field on Sunday afternoon.

    Instead, it was just another disappointment in a season that's had too many of them for the Steelers.

    The 34-28 loss to the Miami Dolphins dropped the Steelers to 5-8, and just about killed their faint hopes to reach the postseason.

    They can do no better than match last year's 8-8 record, although no logical Steelers fan should root for that.

    The team's long-term interest would be best served by a 5-11 final record, which would improve their drafting position and start the much-needed rebuilding.

    Is there any doubt that should be focused on the defense?

    The Steelers aren't what they used to be, and that's most glaring on the defensive side.

    Maybe it all started with that drive Joe Flacco led on Nov. 6, 2011 to give the Baltimore Ravens a last-second victory at Heinz Field. Whatever the case, the Steelers aren't as fearsome at the end of games as they once were. That's mostly because they don't stop people the way they used to.

    It looked as though the Steelers had taken control of Sunday's game when Troy Polamalu picked off a pass, and precisely lifted the ball over the pylon to score a touchdown.

    Instead, the Dolphins came right back with an 80-yard scoring drive.

    On what proved to be the winning touchdown, Miami's Charles Clay shook off two tackle attempts by Cortez Allen and one by Polamalu to score.

    For all the screaming that has been done this season about offensive coordinator Todd Haley, the Steelers are actually in sad shape on defense.

    It isn't a question of the game zooming past 75-year-old defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. It's a matter of having enough talented players to make schemes work.

    Long plays used to be a rarity against the Steelers. On Sunday, Daniel Thomas ran 55 yards to set up the winning touchdown. Miami center Mike Pouncey flattened Polamalu with a block to help open the path for Thomas.

    The Steelers' secondary has gotten torched this season. The defensive line, with the exception of the emerging Cameron Heyward, is ordinary on its best day. The linebackers aren't much better.

    There's simply too big a talent gap.

    For all the problems on offense, you can still make the case that Ben Roethlisberger, Heath Miller and Brown are among the best at their respective positions.

    Can you say that about anybody on defense?

    The Steelers weren't mathematically eliminated from postseason contention with Sunday's loss. The NFL sells hope, and that plays in some markets where success is uncommon.

    But Steelers fans know what championship-caliber teams look like, and they know the 2013 edition is far from that standard.

    If that circus play at the end would have worked, it would have been a spectacular finish that would have been replayed for years. Instead, it was just another tease.

    The Steelers sent the crowd into the cold night with more reason to be frustrated. This isn't a playoff team, no matter what the math might say at the moment.

    Let this season end on Dec. 29 with the home game against Cleveland, and get to work on next season starting early on Dec. 30.

    There's a lot to fix, and it starts on defense.

    [URL]http://altoonamirror.com/page/content.detail/id/577135/Pittsburgh-defense-not-good-anymore.html?nav=751[/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........

    Hahahahahahaha

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