River Dog wrote:Just an FYI with no particular statement to make, as of Week 15, PFF has the top 10 offensive lines ranked, in order, the Eagles (12-2), Lions (12-2), Broncos (9-5), Bucs (8-6), Bills (11-3), Packers (10-4), Commanders (9-5), Chiefs (15-1), Vikings (12-2), and Panthers (3-11).
Where are the Seahawks? We're ranked 29th, and that's up one spot from the previous week.
Thanks for the info. I have not noticed that O-line quality is what separates the winners from the losers. It's never a bad thing to have a good O-line even in the modern day, but it isn't the era of the Hogs or the Dallas O-line in the 90s. And given the tight salary caps, something had to give and that was the O-line. You can't pay all these skill positions huge money and expect to have a top flight O-line as well like you could in the pre-salary cap era.
Which is why if I were designing an O-line strategy, I would build one side really strong, the left. I would also have focused less on a right tackle and more on a high level left guard. If you get one side of your O-line solid in the modern day, you can have a little leeway with the other side. But this strategy of trying to draft two quality tackles while treating the middle of your line like its a joke with low draft picks and converted D-lineman is a dumb strategy even in the modern era.
O-line more than any other unit needs to play together and build communication. If you can do that with at least one side of your O-line, then you can play the draft new guy game or sign someone cheaper on the other side. But leaving the middle of the line a joke of low draft picks and constant rotation is one of the worst management errors I've seen from Schneider and Pete Carroll. I'm hoping Schneider shows he is not following that strategy as it's a bad one. Who cares how good your tackles are if a DT is ripping through the middle of your line creating holes for the backers or your guards can't handle inside stunts.