More no-huddle, please

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  • fordfixer
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 10853

    More no-huddle, please

    More no-huddle, please

    By Joe Starkey
    TRIBUNE-REVIEW
    Wednesday, October 1, 2008
    [url="http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/steelers/s_590939.html"]http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsbu ... 90939.html[/url]

    Ben Roethlisberger laughed when the question arose Monday night, a half-hour after the Steelers' 23-20 overtime victory over the Baltimore Ravens.

    Did he lobby coach Mike Tomlin and offensive coordinator Bruce Arians to go to the no-huddle offense late in the third quarter?

    "That's the reason we went to it," Roethlisberger said. "I went to Coach Tomlin first and said, 'Go ask B.A.' And then B.A. asked me, 'Do you want to do it?'

    "I said, 'Yeah, I was the one who came up with the idea.' "

    Hmmm. Shouldn't that have been the other way around, and shouldn't it have happened much earlier?

    You'd have thought the 37th sack of Roethlisberger in the Philadelphia game, or perhaps the rapid-fire succession of three-and-outs Monday night would have prompted Arians to try to change the pace.

    All the no-huddle did, when the Steelers finally went to it, was turn the momentum of the game (combined with the idiotic personal foul on Baltimore's Jarret Johnson) and perhaps the momentum of the Steelers' season.

    Be glad Roethlisberger spoke up. If he hadn't, the Steelers could well be two games behind the Ravens in the loss column instead of leading the AFC North at 3-1.

    Roethlisberger's been pining for more no-huddle since before the 2006 season, when Bill Cowher was his coach and Ken Whisenhunt his offensive coordinator. It's surprising Arians hasn't gone there more often, seeing as his promise coming in was to turn the offense over to his maturing quarterback.

    Given the Steelers' desperate plight at running back - I believe they're giving Dick Hoak a tryout today - this seems like the perfect time to do just that.

    And that means more no-huddle.

    It might not need to be the base offense. It definitely needs more air time.

    The no-huddle allows Roethlisberger to call plays based on his feel for the game. It can keep a defense off-balance. Where others might see chaos in the no-huddle attack, Big Ben sees order.

    He thrives in it.

    "We kind of get a rhythm," he said. "It's going off what I see, not necessarily what the coaches see."

    That sounds like a good thing.

    Before going no-huddle Monday, the Steelers' offense was every bit as dreadful as it was a week earlier against the Eagles. Maybe worse.

    When they took possession at their 33 with 5:49 left in the third quarter, the Steelers were trailing, 13-3, with an embarrassing total of 64 yards. Their previous six possessions had gone like this: interception; three-and-out; three-and-out; three-and-out; three-and-out; five-and-out.

    This time, they moved 67 yards in four plays.

    Now, it's hard to say the no-huddle was an immediate elixir. Johnson's late hit on Hines Ward and what Roethlisberger described as a "broken-play" 38-yard touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes accounted for most of the yards on that drive.

    But look what happened afterward. The Ravens' defense suddenly could not dictate the tempo, as it had for the better part of three quarters. The Steelers, who went no-huddle for only one more series - a nondescript one, at that -- suddenly were able to move the ball (102 yards on their final three possessions).

    In the end, going no-huddle meant a lot more than Big Ben's blistering halftime speech, though that also spoke to his progression as a leader.

    "He led, and we followed," running back Mewelde Moore said. "It was motivational, man. He did everything that a leader's supposed to do."

    Tomlin spoke Tuesday of needing to trust Roethlisberger more when the play clock is running down. It's time the coaching staff trusted the quarterback to play his preferred offense, as well.

    Next time, Roethlisberger shouldn't have to ask.

    Joe Starkey is a sports writer for the Tribune-Review. He can be reached at [email="jstarkey@tribweb.com"]jstarkey@tribweb.com[/email].

    Molon labe

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  • BigBen2112

    #2
    Re: More no-huddle, please



    He should not have had to ask this time.

    Comment

    • Ozey74
      Pro Bowler
      • May 2008
      • 2091

      #3
      Re: More no-huddle, please

      BA is a terrible leader. Big Ben did BA's job at half time. I'm glad he's on our side!!
      http://i177.photobucket.com/albums/w...NATURES/0z.jpg

      AS-5/2008

      Comment

      • Oviedo
        Legend
        • May 2008
        • 23752

        #4
        Re: More no-huddle, please

        Remember what worked in the play off game against J-ville last year---Quick, short passing game. They need to do that gain and get the ball to Miller and Spaeth.

        My biggest frustration with the playcalling remains the lack of making the TEs the primary target on plays. We have one great and one good TE. We need to use them.
        "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

        Comment

        • frankthetank1
          Hall of Famer
          • May 2008
          • 2755

          #5
          Re: More no-huddle, please

          Originally posted by Oviedo
          Remember what worked in the play off game against J-ville last year---Quick, short passing game. They need to do that gain and get the ball to Miller and Spaeth.

          My biggest frustration with the playcalling remains the lack of making the TEs the primary target on plays. We have one great and one good TE. We need to use them.
          my thoughts exactly. the texan game i loved the 3 step drops and quick passes, it works especially with this line. i still cant understand in any game why miller gets any less than 5-8 balls thrown to him. and of course they need to mix it up and go no huddle more

          Comment

          • proudpittsburgher
            Pro Bowler
            • May 2008
            • 2377

            #6
            Re: More no-huddle, please

            Can't go no huddle if it isn't against a defense you want to face, and unless you have a big play to spark it, neither of which was the case in the Phily game, nor the first half of the Baltimore game.
            http://i34.tinypic.com/nxj0iu.gif
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            http://i42.tinypic.com/9awen7.gif

            Comment

            • papillon
              Legend
              • Mar 2008
              • 11337

              #7
              Re: More no-huddle, please

              I'd like to see the Steelers run it more as 2 minute as well, where after every play you hustle up to the line and get ready to go. You have a chance of catching the defense trying to move personnel in and out of the game, get them with too many men on the field, have people out of position or it keeps the personnel on the field that you believe you can exploit.

              Can't do it all the time, it would weear out the linemen, but, a couple times a half or as necesasry to jump start the offense.

              Pappy
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