RiverDog wrote:I'm not sure if I buy into the 3rd year QB thing. Rookies and even 2nd year QB's, yes, but by the time they get through their third season like Russell had, they've pretty well adapted to the league and their offense. Most 3rd year QB's have a considerable amount of autonomy. Justin Hebert, for example, will be entering his 3rd year, and I expect him to have quite a bit of authority when it comes to changing plays and adjusting a game plan. I also don't think that Russell hit the optimum ball placement with his pass. It should have been a little lower and closer to Lockette's body, forcing him to go down for the ball instead of leaving it up where a defender could intervene. But that's just the opinion of a beer drinking Monday morning armchair quarterback.
I don't buy the story about Beast wanting to change the play. He might have thought it, perhaps even said it out loud, but no one would have paid any attention to him, nor should they have.
ACES 13 wrote:So many good points in this thread, but I am surprised no one points out the primary receiver on this play was basically our Ace Return Man and our fifth receiver! Also Browner being in their defensive backfield he probably recognize the play from the formation and told his teammates what they were running. I'm over it! Butler made a great play lock it should not have been the primary receiver! That's my take. If it would have worked it would have been the best play a call of all time!
NorthHawk wrote:Didn’t the OC have contact with Russ until the 15 second mark like today?
If so, the OC could have told him to switch to their 2nd play in the headset when he saw the Defense was stacking
the middle where the pass play was supposed to go.
I maintain that it’s all on the coaches for that disaster.
ACES 13 wrote:So many good points in this thread, but I am surprised no one points out the primary receiver on this play was basically our Ace Return Man and our fifth receiver! Also Browner being in their defensive backfield he probably recognize the play from the formation and told his teammates what they were running. I'm over it! Butler made a great play lock it should not have been the primary receiver! That's my take. If it would have worked it would have been the best play a call of all time!
Aseahawkfan wrote:We all acknowledge that. Unlike Riverdog I do have a problem with Lockette being the receiver in that situation. Lockette is a guy that was drafted due to his elite speed and size. He was a 6'2" receiver who could run a 4.2 40. He was much like D.K. Metcalf without the hands and route running. He couldn't run precise routes and he had a lot of drops. So we decide to have him run a very precise route and make a bang bang catch with no time. Seems like a really bad use of personnel IMO. I don't blame Lockette for an OC asking him to do more than he's been capable of in a high pressure big game situation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Browner likely did alert the defense. Probably saw the Kearse pick coming and knew Kearse couldn't move him. If Browner and Kearse got in a fight in the street, Browner would murder Kearse without breaking a sweat. All you gotta do is watch the video of Browner completely obliterating three defenders on special teams on the same play or ramming through a blocker to strip the ball off the RB against Carolina or beat up that GB receiver to know no one is going to out-physical Browner. Browner was a physical freak at CB. If he could flip his hips, he probably be a pro bowler.
RiverDog wrote:So many good points in this thread, but I am surprised no one points out the primary receiver on this play was basically our Ace Return Man and our fifth receiver! Also Browner being in their defensive backfield he probably recognize the play from the formation and told his teammates what they were running. I'm over it! Butler made a great play lock it should not have been the primary receiver! That's my take. If it would have worked it would have been the best play a call of all time!
The two starting WR's were Baldwin and Kearse. The #3 man was Paul Richardson, who got hurt in the divisional round of the playoffs and wasn't available for the SB. Lockette was the #4 WR, unless you're counting Percy Harvin, who was traded in Week 7. I don't have a huge problem with him being the primary target as he was experienced and was a relatively reliable receiver. My biggest beef was the play call. I don't like the idea of a 5'10" QB throwing over the middle on a congested field.
I'll never get over it. We had an opportunity to win two SB's in a row, which is rarified air. I doubt that we'll have that opportunity again in my lifetime.
tarlhawk wrote:Its a shame to end a great game in such dramatic fashion...I still feel uneasy about what the Patriot rookie Cornerback Malcom Butler said immediately after the game. Normally a rookie doesn't jump routes since their lack of experience gives them little play recognition but Malcom stated he "recognized" the play called as something the Patriots had covered in practice so New England was ready when we tried it on them. Bevell said it was a rarely used play that had been used earlier in the 2014 season and was surprised they "recognized" it.
govandals wrote:Here we go again, huh? The most over analyzed play since the Immaculate Reception. Here is my random thoughts. I've watched this game countless times.
Seems most people want to blame somebody for the loss. Blame Malcolm Butler. It's a savy, fantastic, perfect play by him.
Passing the ball was absolutely the correct call. However that pass to that player was not. Replace Lockette with Chris Matthews on that play and we probably win. Russ rolling out or a fade to Matthews would have been better choices as well.
I cannot understand those who say just give the ball to Lynch. I've seen folks spew forth all sorts of numbers on our short yardage run game that season. We simply were not good at that. This was a Tom Cable ZBS line, not built for cramming the ball down the other guys throat.
Not the best throw by Russ. Should have been more into Lockette's body, he led him too much. Short/intermediate accuracy has never been a Russ strength, yet in the biggest moment on the biggest stage, Bevel puts Russ in that situation.
Poor job by Russ not identifing Butler.
Kearse did his job on Browner. He pushes him back 2-3 yards. Those blaming Kearse for not "picking" Browner need to watch the play again. What else could he have done? Browner had no effect on that play at all.
Obviously, the injuries on defense took a toll. Avril's concussion was big but Lane's injuries were huge. Tharold Simon was abused in the 4th quarter. No one mentions the fact Marcus Burley was inactive for this game, be was a decent backup nickel CB. IIRC, Simon was more an outside CB and not a nickel.
I've lost a little respect for KJ Wright for his comments.
Whether you like Pete Carroll or not, big kudos to him for always taking ownership for that fiasco. To my knowledge, he has never publicly blamed anyone but himself.
govandals wrote:Here we go again, huh? The most over analyzed play since the Immaculate Reception. Here is my random thoughts. I've watched this game countless times.
Seems most people want to blame somebody for the loss. Blame Malcolm Butler. It's a savy, fantastic, perfect play by him.
Passing the ball was absolutely the correct call. However that pass to that player was not. Replace Lockette with Chris Matthews on that play and we probably win. Russ rolling out or a fade to Matthews would have been better choices as well.
I cannot understand those who say just give the ball to Lynch. I've seen folks spew forth all sorts of numbers on our short yardage run game that season. We simply were not good at that. This was a Tom Cable ZBS line, not built for cramming the ball down the other guys throat.
Not the best throw by Russ. Should have been more into Lockette's body, he led him too much. Short/intermediate accuracy has never been a Russ strength, yet in the biggest moment on the biggest stage, Bevel puts Russ in that situation.
Poor job by Russ not identifing Butler.
Kearse did his job on Browner. He pushes him back 2-3 yards. Those blaming Kearse for not "picking" Browner need to watch the play again. What else could he have done? Browner had no effect on that play at all.
Obviously, the injuries on defense took a toll. Avril's concussion was big but Lane's injuries were huge. Tharold Simon was abused in the 4th quarter. No one mentions the fact Marcus Burley was inactive for this game, be was a decent backup nickel CB. IIRC, Simon was more an outside CB and not a nickel.
I've lost a little respect for KJ Wright for his comments.
Whether you like Pete Carroll or not, big kudos to him for always taking ownership for that fiasco. To my knowledge, he has never publicly blamed anyone but himself.
govandals wrote:I always thought Kearse was supposed to jam Browner on the play, Lockette comes in behind and catches the ball. This all happens so quickly that Butler cannot process the play in time and it's an easy score but Butler just jumped the route. You are saying Kearse is supposed to run a route basically directly in front of Lockette? If this is true, then yes, Kearse failed real bad and I digress. I don't see Kearse attempting to run a route at all. Even after Browner's initial stiff arm, Kearse has the early positioning to turn inside and run said route, but doesn't. Why? He just drives Browner backward. i thought Kearse's PI hand signaling to the ref after the play is because he thought Butler interfered with Lockette, not because he was held.
There is a thread over on FG about KJ's comments. There is 240+ posts in the comments section, many discuss this play and Kearse blocking/jamming Browner. Not one person states Kearse is supposed to run any kind of route on the play. Is there a link out in internet land with discussion as to what Kearse's responsibility on the play really was?
Hawktawk wrote:It is certainly one of the worst super bowl calls in history . If it were in the second quarter not even close . But 20 seconds . Did Bevell understand the defensive personell at the time the play was sent in ? If he didn’t then once again Russ needs to be very wary with Browner guarding Kearse over there knowing the play he was supposed to run. I shared the you tube video of Lynch being interviewed about 48-49 SB. If anyone watched that and was offended by the language I apologize . But lynch described confusion , Russ asking about changing the call . It’s not a blame game . Just what happened. Sometimes I wonder if we would have been better off getting beat in that turd of a game by Wilson vs GB, coming back humble the next year .
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Green Bay win is part of the legendary nature of that team. Same as the legendary mistake. To beat that insane Seattle team, it took major injuries to key players in the secondary and pass rush and an egregious play call. The final call was part of why we loss, but losing Cliff Avril and Jeremy Lane who were both having a hell of a game were major reasons for losing too. If even one of those things changes, we win IMO. I think if Cliff Avril doesn't get hurt, the pressure on Brady does not let up and he crumbles to the worst loss of his postseason history. That was the biggest factor. Once that pressure let up and we had Tharold Simon playing CB, Brady went to town where he was stifled before that occurred.
Soon as Tharold came in and Cliff was out, it was like Seattle was wounded and the best QB in NFL history sees something like that like a shark: time to tear it open. They went after Tharold Simon as quickly as I've seen anyone go after us since Ken Whisenhunt went after Etric Pruitt in the 2005 Super Bowl. They were looking for any weakness in the Seattle defense. They finally had one after two of our key players went down. They would have lost badly if Avril and Lane did not go down.
It was amazing that Russell kept us in the game with Chris Matthews, Kearse, and Doug Baldwin being guarded by Darrelle Revis, the 2nd best CB in the NFL to our guy Sherm who Brady didn't even want to throw near. Lane was having a hell of a game before he got hurt. So was Avril. Completely changed everything when they went down.
Those injuries are just part of Brady's legendary career. To be as good as Brady and Bill B were, you have to be lucky as well as great. Brady and Bill B got lucky that game attacking a weak spot in the Seattle defense as soon as it showed up in a merciless fashion. They destroyed Tharold Simon, embarrassed him.
RiverDog wrote:Tharold Simon embarrassed himself that game. I remember Julian Edleman turning him inside out and after each catch, Simon would turn around with his palms up begging for a penalty, as if he needed some excuse for letting Edleman take him to the cleaners, like going into a limp after getting beat in a foot race. It was ridiculous, and it's what got the Pats back in the game.
Funny thing about Mathews. He was a one hit wonder. We picked him up late when Richardson got hurt in the divisional round of the playoffs. He had a great 1st half, looked like an All Pro until the Pats put Browner on him and took him out of the game. He could have been an argument for SB MVP had he caught another TD pass. I'm not sure if he played in another NFL game after that.
RiverDog wrote:Tharold Simon embarrassed himself that game. I remember Julian Edleman turning him inside out and after each catch, Simon would turn around with his palms up begging for a penalty, as if he needed some excuse for letting Edleman take him to the cleaners, like going into a limp after getting beat in a foot race. It was ridiculous, and it's what got the Pats back in the game.
Funny thing about Mathews. He was a one hit wonder. We picked him up late when Richardson got hurt in the divisional round of the playoffs. He had a great 1st half, looked like an All Pro until the Pats put Browner on him and took him out of the game. He could have been an argument for SB MVP had he caught another TD pass. I'm not sure if he played in another NFL game after that.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Just another reason why Russell was so amazing. He went into that Super Bowl with perhaps the weakest receiver group in Super Bowl history or close to it. He made them look great including the one hit wonder that almost won Super Bowl MVP. New England had a great secondary that year with Darrelle Revis and Browner doing their best rendition of the Legion of Boom. Brady had way better receiving targets than Russ, but Russ still made it work. I'm going to miss Russ. It was sure nice having a QB that was great on and off the field. The kind of guy you could look at and says, "Kids, be like Russ" and know that he would always set a great example of how to be in the game and out of the game. Russ made me think we had Steve Largent playing QB. A guy no one expected to succeed to the level he did who just kept on proving his haters wrong while still carrying himself like a class act and a great member of the community.
NorthHawk wrote:I think you're grasping at straws here. It's football, and nothing more.
Uppercut wrote:If the play was a success two things would have happened with about 40 seconds left.
1. Brady would have gone the distance and threw the winning TD
2. Sea D would have stopped Brady and sports people would be talking about "What a gutsy call PC made on second down to win"
RiverDog wrote:I was honestly hoping that we wouldn't score on that play. I wanted to run the clock down and score with less than 10 seconds left on the clock.
RiverDog wrote:I was honestly hoping that we wouldn't score on that play. I wanted to run the clock down and score with less than 10 seconds left on the clock.
Hawktawk wrote:So it’s your fault then after all![]()
ACES 13 wrote:I'll never get over it. We had an opportunity to win two SB's in a row, which is rarified air. I doubt that we'll have that opportunity again in my lifetime.
Really,
Is your everlasting perception that our HAWKS are less than the dominant "D" that they were...statistically better than the '85 Bears, who pounded the Donkeys 43-8, who boasted the number 1 "O" statistically of all time...with HOF'er Peyton Manning leading the ...charge, get over it!!!
It's only a game!RD! Relax, live for today, you may be gone tomorrow!
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Peace, and Serenity to you my FRIEND!
Hawktawk wrote:Roid freak broke both lanes arm and leg on the same dirty play . As a bigger thicker guy he came in high and dove right at his knee .it wasn’t just deflating balls and filming opponents . 2 of our defenders were intentionally injured
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