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Nzoner's Game Room>*****The L'Jarius Sneed Thread*****
Dante84 11:45 AM 04-25-2020
More to come!

Spoiler!

[Reply]
KChiefs1 02:42 PM 12-21-2020

#Chiefs 2020 Week 15 Highest-Graded Defensive Player: CB L’Jarius Sneed - 90.3

• Career-Best grade

• 1 Comp, 6 Targets, 17 Yards, 1 TD, 1 INT, 2 PBU

• 2 Pressures & 1 Sack in 4 Pass Rushes

• 2 Stops & 0 Missed Tackles

��: Derick E. Hingle, USA Today#ChiefsKingdom pic.twitter.com/c00JDdGQI9

— PFF KC Chiefs (@PFF_Chiefs) December 21, 2020

[Reply]
staylor26 07:34 PM 12-24-2020
https://thedraftnetwork.com/articles...2020-nfl-draft
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BWillie 08:02 PM 12-24-2020
The guy needs to play all of the snaps. But all of our corners have been good to be honest. Most surprising group.
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PAChiefsGuy 10:12 PM 12-24-2020
Dudes going to be special.
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MAHOMO 4 LIFE! 10:14 PM 12-24-2020
He needs to replace Ward
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bobhill 11:54 PM 12-24-2020
Originally Posted by MAHOMO 4 LIFE!:
He needs to replace Ward
They need to keep ward , for when breeland leaves
[Reply]
Pitt Gorilla 01:06 AM 12-25-2020
Originally Posted by staylor26:
https://thedraftnetwork.com/articles...2020-nfl-draft
Another study in stupidity of suggesting that any position (outside of QB) has to be drafted "high." Excellent players can be found throughout, and even outside of, the draft.
[Reply]
KChiefs1 02:31 PM 12-26-2020
https://theathletic.com/2281130/2020...s-film-review/

Chiefs’ improved discipline on defense in full display vs. Saints: Film review

by

Seth Keysor

Originally Posted by :
To properly analyze the game, it’s important to look at how each drive transpired and the effect it had on the game overall. It’s easy to forget now after quarterback Patrick Mahomes’ heroics and the final output (32 points) by Kansas City, but the Saints’ defense did an excellent job slowing down the Chiefs early. Kansas City’s first two drives ended in punts after little progress was made, and the Saints could have altered the nature of the game had they scored on either of their ensuing possessions. Instead, it was the defense that gave the offense a spark, stopping the Saints cold for a punt on their first drive then handing Mahomes and Co. excellent field position with an interception on the second.

This interception came courtesy of rookie cornerback L’Jarius Sneed, who has continued to impress in recent weeks after returning from injury. While some interceptions are a function of a bad throw or miscommunication between the quarterback and wide receivers, in Sneed’s case it was the result of excellent coverage giving almost no shot at a completion. It was also a chance for Sneed to show off his skill set and versatility.

On this play, Sneed is lined up in tight coverage, set to jam the receiver. The Saints try to execute a pick for their underneath route, hoping that the receiver Sneed is directly over will drive into him and create space.

It’s a decent idea in theory, but Sneed does a nice job delivering contact while receiving it and isn’t driven into his fellow defenders, who are looking to bait Saints quarterback Drew Brees into an apparently open underneath throw that they can hope to break up or tackle short of the first-down marker.

Brees is smart enough to not take the bait, so he looks to his receiver in a one-on-one situation against a rookie. That’s the sort of matchup that should favor the Saints, but it doesn’t here and Brees doesn’t realize it before it’s too late.

Sneed does an excellent job maintaining contact with the receiver in order to feel and redirect the route, but not so much to draw a flag. When the receiver cuts outs, Sneed is able to run the route better because he can feel that it’s coming.

He undercuts it and is in such great position that by the time the ball arrives, the only question is whether or not he’ll be able to stay in bounds while making the catch, which he does with some phenomenal toe-tapping.

This interception gave Kansas City the ball back on the Saints’ 36-yard-line, and they responded by scoring a touchdown to take an early lead that would have been impossible without the contributions of the defense. And on the ensuing drive, the Chiefs forced New Orleans into a three-and-out punt that allowed the Chiefs to get the ball back and build a 14-0 lead that would prove instrumental in the win.

On the next down, a third-and-4, Sneed once again showed off his ability as Brees tried a deep shot to veteran receiver Emmanuel Sanders, who could not get any separation from Sneed deep. Look at Brees’ options even after he makes his pass.

With the deep route appropriately passed off and the out-breaking route bracketed, Brees has no choice but to hold the ball longer. Even a late leak by the tight end is well covered by the Chiefs, another example of their discipline, and Sneed is able to collect the sack thanks to exceptional coverage on the play.

In a “Groundhog Day”-like repetition, the coverage here has provided Brees with no reasonable outlet to go. Everyone is bracketed or well-covered with leverage. He tries to force a throw to Sneed’s receiver on a crossing route, but the rookie aggressively closes and knocks the ball away.

The pass rush still hasn’t returned to its form from 2019, but the coverage on the back end has started to look even better than last year’s group with the addition of Sneed and safety Juan Thornhill starting to look healthier. With the playoffs coming and pass defense being key to beating most opponents on the road to the Super Bowl, this couldn’t come at a better time.

[Reply]
Dante84 03:34 PM 12-27-2020
He’s a star.

If Thornhill has a bounce back year next season, and Baker gets coached up, our secondary will be in great shape for the next few seasons.
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Fansy the Famous Bard 03:57 PM 12-27-2020
And we have but one person to thank for his being awesome.

staylor26, thank you.
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BWillie 04:05 PM 12-27-2020
I'm convinced he's our best CB. He should play all the snaps and be CB1 from now on. Maybe that ruggles a vets feathers like Breeland but I dont care.
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ThaVirus 04:07 PM 12-27-2020
Originally Posted by Fansy the Famous Bard:
And we have but one person to thank for his being awesome.

staylor26, thank you.
:-)

In all seriousness, who's got greater potential- Sneed or Gay?

I'm inclined to say Sneed but Gay does have all of the physical tools to be an elite LB.
[Reply]
staylor26 04:08 PM 12-27-2020
Originally Posted by ThaVirus:
:-)

In all seriousness, who's got greater potential- Sneed or Gay?

I'm inclined to say Sneed but Gay does have all of the physical tools to be an elite LB.
Just a reminder that I didn’t just nail the Sneed pick, it was both of those guys.

:-)

Just luck though, right?
[Reply]
ThaVirus 04:30 PM 12-27-2020
Originally Posted by staylor26:
Just a reminder that I didn’t just nail the Sneed pick, it was both of those guys.

:-)

Just luck though, right?
Actually, yes. There is clearly an element of luck involved in talent evaluation.

Those were good calls, though, and I have no issue with the occasional "Damn, check this out. I nailed this prediction." type of posts, but you clearly have some insecurity you need to work through with your constant need to praise yourself for your successful calls.

Plus, like I said, you're wrong fairly frequently. Off the top of my head, you got indignant with DaFace recently when he suggested CEH might not play/get a heavy workload prior to the recent Broncos game. You assured us that he was good to go and would get a normal workload- he didn't even touch the ball that game, IIRC.

You and I also had a similar exchange before the season about CEH's production. You were upset that I said it wasn't likely for Clyde to score 11 TDs as RunKC predicted, citing the fact that "LeSean McCoy's corpse scored 5 TDs last season". Well, CEH's season is over and he finished with only 4 TDs despite a near-feature back role for a majority of the season.
[Reply]
staylor26 04:44 PM 12-27-2020
Originally Posted by ThaVirus:
Actually, yes. There is clearly an element of luck involved in talent evaluation.

Those were good calls, though, and I have no issue with the occasional "Damn, check this out. I nailed this prediction." type of posts, but you clearly have some insecurity you need to work through with your constant need to praise yourself for your successful calls.

Plus, like I said, you're wrong fairly frequently. Off the top of my head, you got indignant with DaFace recently when he suggested CEH might not play/get a heavy workload prior to the recent Broncos game. You assured us that he was good to go and would get a normal workload- he didn't even touch the ball that game, IIRC.

You and I also had a similar exchange before the season about CEH's production. You were upset that I said it wasn't likely for Clyde to score 11 TDs as RunKC predicted, citing the fact that "LeSean McCoy's corpse scored 5 TDs last season". Well, CEH's season is over and he finished with only 4 TDs despite a near-feature back role for a majority of the season.
Yea and Thornhill the year before too! Not to mention pounding the table for Kelce, Hunt, and Jones. All just luck! :-)

I never said I wasn’t wrong or haven’t been wrong about anything in the past. We were talking specifically about talent evaluation and the draft and you guys claimed that I’m always wrong about other prospects. Now you’re moving the goalposts entirely. The truth is my draft takes are usually spot on and it’s obvious to anybody that has been paying attention to the draft forum for the last several years.

And about CEH not having 11 TD’s, I didn’t see our OL being the absolute worst in the league. That obviously changed everything in regards to CEH’s production, and in particular in the red zone.
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