KPass fucked up there by peeking inside, giving Brown the opportunity to gain leverage (even if it was a hold, it's rarely called). He has to know there is a guy already in B-gap, and stay in his spot. [Reply]
Nnadi and Kpassagnon showcasing their strength here. Jones splits the double of Jackson and Brown which given how strong of run blockers they are is rather impressive . #JacobsEyeInTheSky#Chiefspic.twitter.com/e3e6y2Gg9s
Nnadi gets doubled out. Hudson then goes second level to Hitchens who is reading the back. Jones gets sealed off by RG. Ragland was at the line so he can’t flow 2nd level on backside pursuit. #JacobsEyeInTheSky#Chiefspic.twitter.com/jABFnT3qMB
Originally Posted by Sully:
KPass fucked up there by peeking inside, giving Brown the opportunity to gain leverage (even if it was a hold, it's rarely called). He has to know there is a guy already in B-gap, and stay in his spot.
Bullshit. That hold gets called 8 times out of 10. It was blatant and clearly had an impact on the play. [Reply]
I’ve been watching the A22 throughout the day periodically and there were a LOT of holds against our defense that went uncalled. Especially against Nnadi. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
Yeah, once he goes to pull away and theres a tug, usually that's called no?
It should be.
I coach D-Line. I'm pretty sensitive to seeing holds, especially on the edge. So all I am saying is, in my observations, it's called far less than it actually happens. Mostly because I'm the raving lunatic in the stands or at home screaming at a guy who can't hear/ doesn't care about my opinion to throw the flag. [Reply]
I coach D-Line. I'm pretty sensitive to seeing holds, especially on the edge. So all I am saying is, in my observations, it's called far less than it actually happens. Mostly because I'm the raving lunatic in the stands or at home screaming at a guy who can't hear/ doesn't care about my opinion to throw the flag.
I feel ya.
It's a tough gig in there. He was inside for sure, but once Kpass goes to pull away and attempt to keep the edge he was restricted a bit, IMO> [Reply]
OAK's compressed splits meant KC ran more "cone" coverage to bracket receivers.
Cover 7, Slot CB is man on #2 in-breaking, hook is man on #3 out. Cone between boundary CB and S, CB takes short and outside, safety deep and inside. S stays flat, reads break, and jumps route. pic.twitter.com/6c9ywZmscJ
This is why when we see things on TV it's not as easy or as simple as we think. I can definitely see why it takes defenses so long to really come together. That's a lot of communicating. [Reply]