Boston Writer Nails It in Article About Steelers' Coaching/D

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  • BradshawsHairdresser
    Legend
    • Dec 2008
    • 7056

    Boston Writer Nails It in Article About Steelers' Coaching/D

    By Ben Volin, Globe Staff January 23, 2017


    You disappointed me, Mike Tomlin and the Pittsburgh Steelers. You let me down.


    Here I thought you had a real defense and a real coaching staff, ready to match wits with Bill Belichick and the Patriots with a unique game plan. You did it back in Week 7, when you switched to a Cover 2 scheme and held Tom Brady to 222 passing yards and slowed down Rob Gronkowski for much of the day.


    Instead, you gave us the same old sorry Steelers defense that Brady has ripped apart his entire career. You made some baffling personnel decisions, and didn’t have your team prepared in a 36-17 loss on the biggest stage of the season.


    Let’s start with the most head-scratching decision — the usage of Bud Dupree and James Harrison. They are your two best pass rushers, and the Texans showed you in the divisional round with Jadeveon Clowney and Whitney Mercilus that the Patriots are susceptible to inside pressure.


    Yet the Steelers didn’t bring either player up the middle on a twist or inside blitz. In fact, you didn’t use either player nearly enough as a pass rusher. On Brady’s 44 real drop-backs (excluding a clock spike), Harrison and Dupree each dropped into coverage 15 times. Not only were you not attacking Brady with your best rushers, but neither player is exactly proficient in pass coverage or playing in space.



    A couple of times you had Dupree lined up over center, but you dropped him into coverage.
    Brady took advantage of this schematic flaw in the first quarter, audibling out of a run play . . .



    . . . and into a spread formation . . .



    . . . then sending Chris Hogan down the left seam for an easy 26-yard catch while flying past Harrison.



    Brady also had all day to find his receivers, like on Hogan’s 16-yard touchdown, when Brady scanned the field for 4.5 seconds before unleashing his throw.



    Dupree and Harrison were both in pass coverage on the play.


    Next, let’s talk about preparation. The Patriots exploited massive holes in the Steelers’ zones, and Pittsburgh never adjusted. The Steelers also had no answer for the Patriots’ up-tempo attack.

    Never have we seen so many wide-open receivers running down the field in a playoff game.



    All three touchdown throws by Brady were uncontested to wide-open receivers, and the Steelers had breakdowns on several other throws — Hogan wide open at the sticks for a 22-yard gain while two zone defenders covered Julian Edelman; a 12-yarder to Edelman on third and 10 in which Brady had his choice of three receivers; Hogan running wide open over the middle of the field, but Brady throwing too far behind him.




    And the Steelers acted like they’ve never seen a flea-flicker before. In fact, veteran safety Mike Mitchell said the Steelers hadn’t seen it on film from the Patriots — which is incredible, because the Patriots ran a flea-flicker against the Ravens on Dec. 12, two weeks before the Ravens faced the Steelers.


    Let’s call this what it was — arguably the worst defensive performance against the Patriots all season.


    Other observations after rewatching the tape:

    ■ Watching the game, it felt like Brady ripped apart the Steelers across the middle. And he did. But he did his most damage throwing to his left, and, frankly, couldn’t be stopped no matter which direction he threw.

    His stats: 13 of 17 for 173 yards and a touchdown to the left, 8 of 12 for 98 yards over the middle, and 11 of 13 for 113 yards and two touchdowns to his right. The first touchdown to Hogan was a mistake by the free safety, who stood in the middle of the field and never bothered to cover Hogan standing 5 yards away. Edelman’s touchdown was a result of him shaking free of William Gay with a hard cut-back on the goal line. And on the flea-flicker TD, Brady easily could have thrown the ball to Mitchell instead of Hogan.


    ■ The Steelers sent only four true blitzes at Brady, plus four zone blitzes. They sent only three pass rushers 19 times, with Brady completing 11 of 19 for 130 yards and a sack. Brady converted 2 of 3 first downs against a three-man rush, and had some big gains with the Steelers in eight-man coverage – a 41-yarder to Edelman and a 26-yarder to Hogan.
    But Brady was even better against the blitz. When the Steelers sent a four-man zone blitz, Brady was 4 of 4 for 47 yards and his first TD to Hogan. Against a five-man blitz, Brady was 4 of 4 for 79 yards, including a 39-yarder to Hogan and a 17-yarder to Edelman on third and 7.


    ■ The Patriots used up-tempo on their first drive and scored a field goal. They slowed it down and brought in the fullback for the second drive, and went three-and-out. They went back to the up-tempo on the third and fourth drives, and went 80 and 82 yards for touchdowns. That’s called a “trend.”


    ■ Brady really picked on Gay, the veteran cornerback. Gay had no chance of staying with Edelman in the red zone for his touchdown, and got burned badly by Hogan for a 39-yarder. Gay was giving upwards of 10 yards of cushion at the line of scrimmage, and just couldn’t keep up. And as they did in Week 7, the Patriots were able to get Edelman matched up against linebacker Lawrence Timmons 1-on-1 over the middle. Guess who won that matchup? Edelman for 17 yards.


    ■ It’s shocking that the Steelers didn’t find more creative ways to use Harrison to get after the passer, because he actually had a nice game. We had him down for three pressures — two against Marcus Cannon, one against Nate Solder — and two run stuffs. Harrison has an incredible knack for getting off his block and getting to the football.


    ■ The Patriots’ offensive line excelled in pass protection, and the interior unit of David Andrews, Joe Thuney, and Shaq Mason deserve credit for handling the inside stunts better and having a much-improved performance from the Texans game. Thuney was hit early in the game for a sack by Javon Hargrave, but otherwise held his own.


    ■ The running backs chipped in well in pass protection.


    James White absolutely crushed Timmons on Hogan’s first touchdown . . .



    . . . and LeGarrette Blount had a great blitz pickup to give Brady time to find Hogan over the middle for 24 yards.



    ■ But the offensive line definitely struggled in the run game, allowing 10 stuffs on just 23 runs. Some of it was a result of the unblocked defender making a play, but Hargrave (a nice young player) gave Andrews and Thuney some problems, Stephon Tuitt tossed Cam Fleming and Martellus Bennett aside for one stuff, and Harrison chucked Bennett aside for another stuff. Timmons had two run stuffs, but also whiffed on two big plays — Edelman’s catches for 41 and 17 yards.


    https://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/patriots/2017/01/23/steelers-defensive-game-plan-was-atrocious/GulDTMutIGoxfnZ6gMsUcJ/story.html
    Last edited by BradshawsHairdresser; 01-26-2017, 09:34 PM.
  • feltdizz
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 27532

    #2
    Throws on tin foil hat...

    we never intended to win that game. That's the only theory I can think of that makes sense.
    Steelers 27
    Rats 16

    Comment

    • BradshawsHairdresser
      Legend
      • Dec 2008
      • 7056

      #3
      Another good article from a Pittsburgh writer:


      Patriots Outplayed and Out-coached the Steelers Yet Again ........... January 23, 2017 12:44 PM












      By Paul Zeise / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


      The definition of insanity is doing the same things over and over and expecting different results.


      If that is truly the definition, then my diagnosis for the Steelers today is that they are officially certifiably insane.


      At least that is the case when they play against the Patriots, who crushed them yet again Sunday night in the AFC championship and mostly because the Steelers did the same things they always do in these games against Tom Brady and Bill Belichick.


      I understand Mike Tomlin’s rallying call of “we’ve got to be who we are” and it works out for the most part when the Steelers are the superior team.


      But against a machine like the Patriots, he better get creative and do some things differently, and he better become much more prepared for some things he may not have seen on film from them. Like, say, a flea flicker…


      The Patriots don’t beat the Steelers every time because they have better players or more talent; they beat the Steelers because they are much smarter, much more disciplined, tougher and far better coached.


      That is especially true at the quarterback position, by the way, as I don’t believe Tom Brady is more physically talented than Ben Roethlisberger (I’m talking pure tools, arm strength, size, athleticism, scrambling ability), but he is smarter, more disciplined, mentally tougher and yeah, coached better.


      Brady doesn’t try to be a hero, he just tries to win games. He is willing to “settle” for making winning plays and he isn’t worried about anything other than winning football games. I don’t know that I can say the same thing about Roethlisberger, who sometimes seems enamored with padding his statistics and that leads him into making bad decisions.


      I have heard “well there is no shame in losing to the Patriots, everyone does, they are superior to everyone” from many different people since the game ended Sunday and that is a cop-out and a crock of, well, you know what.


      Here is the thing — John Harbaugh and Joe Flacco figured out how to beat the Patriots twice in the playoffs and almost got them a third time. Tony Dungy and Peyton Manning figured it out too, as did Manning and John Fox and Manning and Gary Kubiak.


      I bring that up because I keep hearing some people trying to put Roethlisberger in that category among all-time greats, but until he beats Brady in the playoffs — like Manning did three times and Flacco did twice — his resume has a huge hole in it. And when people ask me why I rate Harbaugh over Tomlin, I point to his ability to beat the Patriots with an inferior quarterback to Roethlisberger.


      And then there is Tomlin and defensive coordinator Keith Butler, whose defensive game plans against Brady always ensure one thing — that Brady is going to have his way with the Steelers defense.


      How else do you explain the fact Brady has thrown 22 touchdown passes and 0 interceptions against Tomlin-coached teams?


      That doesn’t even seem possible, but it is reality. And the Steelers are never really in position to intercept Brady because they play these passive defenses against him and never force the action.


      Brady drops back against the Steelers, stands around in a clean pocket for as long as he needs and figures out which receiver is running into a hole in the zone and plays pitch and catch all night.


      I know you can’t survive blitzing Brady every down, as his numbers against the blitz are ridiculous, but how much worse could it be if the Steelers mixed it up some and took a few more chances?


      “We do what we do” is silly — it worked against the Dolphins and Chiefs because the Steelers are better than those teams, but against the Patriots, you better have more than just empty cliches and chest-pounding nonsense.


      I think there were a couple of plays early in the game that showed me the difference between these two teams and why one team owns the other and wins a heckuva lot more in the playoffs.


      The Patriots marched right down the field on their first drive, but stalled on third-and-1 and, without hesitation, Belichick sent out the field-goal unit to take the three points and get an early lead.


      There was no “let’s set the tone and not live in our fears” and all that macho “we want to be aggressive” stuff that the Steelers get caught up in all the time. It was “we play smart football in the playoffs and that means take every point you can get.”


      On the next series, the Steelers had a third-and-1 and instead of quarterback sneaking or handing the ball to Le’Veon Bell, they took a deep shot to Sammie Coates that went through his hands. They then had to punt.


      The cost of “being aggressive” there was killing momentum and giving the ball right back to Brady.


      And even if the thinking was good in your book, please justify throwing the ball in that spot to Sammie “Edward Scissorhands” Coates, as his specialty has become either running the wrong routes or dropping the ball when he gets his hands on it.


      That was third down. The Patriots don’t throw the ball to guys who can’t catch on third down, and neither should the Steelers.


      It seems like a little thing; it isn’t, not in a playoff game, not when every possession matters and not when you are trying to slay the beast at the beast’s home field.


      I could go through the entire game and point to a number of little things like this and they always seem to add up to the same big thing: That is the Patriots beating the Steelers.


      The Steelers had an excellent season, they improved in a number of ways that should give fans hope for the future and they still have a relatively young core to continue to build around.


      Next year should really be their year, but it won’t be if Tomlin, Butler and Todd Haley don’t spend the offseason taking a look at what they’ve done against the Patriots and then scrapping it and devising something different.


      Brady isn’t going anywhere — at least it doesn’t look like it — so the road to the Super Bowl will probably go through the Patriots again.


      That means the Steelers path is blocked unless they learn from their past mistakes against the Patriots and make some changes in the way they choose to attack them on both sides of the ball.

      http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/zeise-is-right/2017/01/23/New-England-Patriots-Pittsburgh-Steelers-AFC-championship-game-Mike-Tomlin-outplayed-outcoached/stories/201701230134

      Comment

      • NorthCoast
        Legend
        • Sep 2008
        • 26636

        #4
        Maybe it wasn't only the young guys Roethlisberger was claiming the game was too big for. Maybe he was expressing disappointment in the coaching staff for having the team so unprepared in the biggest game of the season. For all the Tomlinisms leading up to the game, I was really expecting something special in a game plan. Instead, I saw pre-season football.

        Comment

        • BradshawsHairdresser
          Legend
          • Dec 2008
          • 7056

          #5
          Originally posted by feltdizz
          Throws on tin foil hat...

          we never intended to win that game. That's the only theory I can think of that makes sense.
          I don't like to be a conspiracy theorist, but if you go to that Boston Globe link in my first post above, and look at the pictures of the action from the game, it's hard to believe the Patriots could have that many receivers that wide open throughout the game ... even if the Steelers were the worst defense in the league ... even if nobody on the Steelers' D knew, at all, what their assignment was. It looks like it has to have been a fix. I don't believe that, I don't want to believe that ... but dang.

          Comment

          • BradshawsHairdresser
            Legend
            • Dec 2008
            • 7056

            #6
            Originally posted by NorthCoast
            Maybe it wasn't only the young guys Roethlisberger was claiming the game was too big for. Maybe he was expressing disappointment in the coaching staff for having the team so unprepared in the biggest game of the season. For all the Tomlinisms leading up to the game, I was really expecting something special in a game plan. Instead, I saw pre-season football.
            It 's like Tomlin and his staff took the week off when it came to preparation. It was easier to just recycle the same old failed game plan vs. the Patriots.

            Think about it ... he still gets his millions in salary, and has the job for as long as he wants it. He says all the right things, but is it possible he doesn't care about getting to the Super Bowl as much as we've thought?

            Comment

            • NorthCoast
              Legend
              • Sep 2008
              • 26636

              #7
              Originally posted by BradshawsHairdresser
              I don't like to be a conspiracy theorist, but if you go to that Boston Globe link in my first post above, and look at the pictures of the action from the game, it's hard to believe the Patriots could have that many receivers that wide open throughout the game ... even if the Steelers were the worst defense in the league ... even if nobody on the Steelers' D knew, at all, what their assignment was. It looks like it has to have been a fix. I don't believe that, I don't want to believe that ... but dang.
              I don't believe in them either but those clips are very disturbing for an NFL defense. In the first one Hogan blows right past Dupree without Dupree even bothering to reach out and slow him.
              The mysterious injury to Bell is another thing that could cause one to pause as well. No one can seem to point to exactly which play he was injured on.
              I really don't want to believe the NFL is just another WWE.

              Comment

              • SidSmythe
                Hall of Famer
                • Sep 2008
                • 4708

                #8
                I was very confident going into this game after how well we played the PATS earlier in the year w/ JONES at QB and GRONK as their TE.
                They ran the ball well that day but we are a better run stopping team now.

                Guess I never thought a group of professional coaches could screw things up this bad.
                Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...
                Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...
                Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...!!!

                Comment

                • Djfan
                  Legend
                  • May 2008
                  • 5184

                  #9
                  It just pisses me off. Tomlin's scheme was put together by a girl scout troop from Cleveland. This is why the comments about him hang around.

                  I like him. He's just a good coach though. Championships are won by very good to great coaches.

                  He is what he is. A one-trick pony.
                  Steel City Mafia
                  So Cal Boss (Ret)
                  [URL]http://www.anewsong.com[/URL]

                  Comment

                  • Real Deal Steel
                    Banned
                    • Jan 2017
                    • 1229

                    #10
                    Tomlin is a good coach on his best day; and most of the time it isn't his best day.

                    Comment

                    • SteelCrazy
                      Legend
                      • Aug 2008
                      • 5049

                      #11
                      Perhaps Tomlin was promised a SB next year in exchange for this one....If you want to throw a game you wouldn't do it as obviously as it looked Sunday. As thrilling as it is to realize the game wasn't thrown, its equally saddening to know it wasn't thrown (our coaching staff is horrible in game planning for the cheats). How could they have been so bad?
                      2019 Mock

                      1. ILB
                      2. CB
                      3. ILB
                      4. S
                      5. CB
                      6. ILB
                      7. S

                      Comment

                      • The Man of Steel
                        Pro Bowler
                        • Dec 2009
                        • 2236

                        #12
                        With that sorry game plan I'm gonna say that the Steelers could play the Patriots every Sunday for 16 straight weeks and get blown out every single time. It's truly headscratching.
                        Obviously the standard is the standard.

                        Comment

                        • SS Laser
                          Pro Bowler
                          • Apr 2009
                          • 1929

                          #13
                          I don't know why I keep engaging these topics but the Boston writer put some of my points out there. They ran a different scheme in the 1st game to hold Brady to 27 points. So they tried the old zone schemes again. Should have went with the first one again. But with a few player changes since that game they though it could work. And maybe plans changed after they were behind. Terrible game with lack luster play from a few players I seen "standing" around the field, being out of position, no execution and just getting beat by the better player that day.

                          Again this is the same defensive scheme and mostly the same players that got lit up by no were near as good of QB and offense as the pats in a few games. That was on film for Belicheat and Brady. This defense was playing better then it should have been for the 9 game winning streak and some of them were clunkers at times.

                          Last point was the offense never bailed them out. There was no pressure on the pats offense from the get go. As in being behind in points. Keeping the defense off the field as much as possible. Would it have changed anything I think so. It was close enough till after half time when the offense really fell apart then the defense did also. But yea all the coaches suck.
                          Last edited by SS Laser; 01-27-2017, 02:50 AM.

                          Comment

                          • feltdizz
                            Legend
                            • May 2008
                            • 27532

                            #14
                            Originally posted by NorthCoast
                            I don't believe in them either but those clips are very disturbing for an NFL defense. In the first one Hogan blows right past Dupree without Dupree even bothering to reach out and slow him.
                            The mysterious injury to Bell is another thing that could cause one to pause as well. No one can seem to point to exactly which play he was injured on.
                            I really don't want to believe the NFL is just another WWE.
                            seriously, while I joke about it I really have a hard time believing we are that bad and NE is that good.

                            That first pass to Coates, it looked like he intentionally short armed it.

                            The Bell injury is still a mystery. With all the camera angles, reporters, blogs how does no one say a word about Bell being gimpy after the KC game?

                            Bell said he hid his injury for a couple weeks. How the hell do you hide an injury by breaking the rushing record 2 weeks in a row but on the second play IN THE BIGGEST GAME OF YOUR CAREER you can't go any longer?

                            nah...this smells funky to me.
                            Last edited by feltdizz; 01-27-2017, 10:44 AM.
                            Steelers 27
                            Rats 16

                            Comment

                            • phillyesq
                              Legend
                              • May 2008
                              • 7568

                              #15
                              Originally posted by feltdizz
                              seriously, while I joke about it I really have a hard time believing we are that bad and NE is that good.

                              That first pass to Coates, it looked like he intentionally short armed it.

                              The Bell injury is still a mystery. With all the camera angles, reporters, blogs how does no one say a word about Bell being gimpy after the KC game?

                              Bell said he hid his injury for a couple weeks. How the hell do you hide an injury by breaking the rushing record 2 weeks in a row but on the second play IN THE BIGGEST GAME OF YOUR CAREER you can't go any longer?


                              nah...this smells funky to me.
                              Watch the end of the KC game. Bell at one point goes out into a pattern and barely jogs. He was cooked - not surprising given the workload - and very well could have been a bit gimpy as well.

                              Comment

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