kalibane wrote:Something tells me that if Lockette was ever going to be that guy who could be a consistent threat he'd already be that guy. I like him for his effort on Special Teams, his willingness to block and the occasional reception but it's been years and he's still not an every down quality receiver.
monkey wrote:
That's where I am at as well.
He's just not a very good receiver.
If ever there was a game where the lack of talent in the receiving corps really showed itself, this was it.
Baldwin was all we had. Kearse, until that last play, got no separation, and neither did any of the other receivers*.
Lockette is a good special teams player, one who is passionate about his job (which I respect a lot) but he is often as big a detriment as he is an asset since he gets far too many boneheaded penalties.
I think it became obvious to anyone watching last game just how badly we need at least one, if not a couple of big play/big body receivers.
Aside: I wonder why we never saw Norwood. When no one is getting open, I would have liked to see him on the field at least on a couple occasions. He's big enough, has the hops and speed to have made some kind of difference I would think....when no one else is getting open, and guys are dropping passes that are hitting them on their hands, and worse, popping those passes into the air for easy picks, how much worse can it be with Norwood? I don't recall ever seeing him, he may have been on the field but I don't recall seeing him, and I would have noticed, because it was something I was hoping to see.
monkey wrote:That's where I am at as well.
He's just not a very good receiver.
If ever there was a game where the lack of talent in the receiving corps really showed itself, this was it.
Baldwin was all we had. Kearse, until that last play, got no separation, and neither did any of the other receivers*.
Lockette is a good special teams player, one who is passionate about his job (which I respect a lot) but he is often as big a detriment as he is an asset since he gets far too many boneheaded penalties.
I think it became obvious to anyone watching last game just how badly we need at least onCo. e, if not a couple of big play/big body receivers.
Aside: I wonder why we never saw Norwood. When no one is getting open, I would have liked to see him on the field at least on a couple occasions. He's big enough, has the hops and speed to have made some kind of difference I would think....when no one else is getting open, and guys are dropping passes that are hitting them on their hands, and worse, popping those passes into the air for easy picks, how much worse can it be with Norwood? I don't recall ever seeing him, he may have been on the field but I don't recall seeing him, and I would have noticed, because it was something I was hoping to see.
Anthony wrote:Both Ints that were not drops by Kearse not only do not happen but might even be catches with Dez, or AJ, or Johnson or OBJ, or anyone of a number of WR to include Tate.
RiverDog wrote:
Not the interception in the red zone. That ball was severely underthrown with the DB between Kearse and the QB, and those get picked off no matter who the receiver is. The only thing Kearse could have possibly done was turn into a defensive back and knocked it down, something that is difficult to do when his momentum was taking him away from the play. There's no way you could have expected Dez, Megatron, AJ Green, or any other receiver to catch an underthrown ball when the DB is between him and the QB. That pass has to be thrown with some air under it and in such a manner that the only player that has a chance to catch it is the receiver.
That pick was all on Russell.
Anthony wrote:I never said the INT was not on Russell only thata better Wr would have been able to at least knock it down, and I still think they could have, for no other reason then they would have better body control and not be falling back instead of jumping up. It was obvious the ball was going to be short long before the point of no return for him , he never adjusted at all. I have seen all those Wr I mentioned do it.
Hawktawk wrote:Wilson played as bad as he ever has for half the game.2 of the picks were terrible decisions and horrible throws to boot. I credit Green Bay and Dom Capers for taking everything away but Wilson was shockingly ineffective. But in the end, man almost any QB in the league would have mentally checked out and he threw some of the prettiest balls of the weekend.
RiverDog wrote:
That pick was all on Russell.
monkey wrote:Kearse had a one vs. one out there, which as a QB is EXACTLY what you want from your #1 WR. If that was Dez Bryant, it's an easy TD. Guaranteed.
RiverDog wrote:By saying a better receiver could have at least knocked it down implies that Russell was not at fault. I got the sense that as usual, you were trying to absolve Russell of any responsibility for his poor play.
It wasn't an All Pro receiver out there, it was Jermaine Kearse, and he does have his limitations when compared to elite receivers, limitations that are very well known by the quarterback. The ball shouldn't have been thrown unless that was his only choice and if it was his only choice, he should have put more air under it and more towards the corner of the end zone so as to let Kearse make a play on it or simply throw it away. We lost 3 points on that pick.
Receivers can adjust to underthrown balls if the DB is not playing the ball, but in this case, the DB had already turned and saw the ball in flight, so he would have been able to take away any possibility for the receiver to adjust. If Kearse had a 6" height advantage, he might have been able to go over the top of the DB, but even that would have more than likely resulted in OPI, not a catch. It was a bad decision and a bad pass.
Thankfully Russell persevered and didn't let his poor play get him down, but make no mistake: He did play poorly... very poorly, until the last few minutes of the game. But oh, what a last few minutes!
RiverDog wrote:
Not the way that ball was thrown. If Russell had put some air underneath it, then yes, you turn it into a jump ball and Dez wins those 90% of the time. But there's not a receiver in the league that you can expect to go through a defender that is positioned between them and the QB on a pass that's under thrown and on a flat line trajectory.
monkey wrote:
agree...I said the pass was lousy. It was supposed to be a back shoulder pass that got too much air. Having said that, Kearse got boxed out by his man, and it was HIS JOB to work his way back to the ball to try to make that catch, and when he couldn't to knock it down.
Sorry Anthony is right on this one. Yes Wilson's pass was crap.
Like I already said, it looked to me like he got caught in between deciding to throw the back shoulder, and the fade, and sort of threw a neither one. It wasn't good, but Kearse did NOT help there.
You can say that Wilson had a horrible game all you like, and I will not say a word otherwise, so long as you admit that MUCH of that is due to Kearse having a horrendously bad day.
In his first five pass attepts, Kearse managed to have two passes hit him right on the hands, and he bounced both of them into defenders arms. He also managed to not fight back to the ball on another one, and just drop the last.
If Wilson hadn't thrown one last pass to him, we'd all have our pitchforks out right now, demanding he be cut tomorrow. That was a historically horrible game from Kearse. I can honestly say I've never seen a worse performance from a WR, up until that last catch. He never did get open either even on that last pass, he was blanket covered...dude is just too slow. Thankfully Wilson threw an absolutely PERFECT pass on that last one, or we'd be feeling much different about both of those guys right now.
monkey wrote:I agree...I said the pass was lousy. It was supposed to be a back shoulder pass that got too much air. Having said that, Kearse got boxed out by his man, and it was HIS JOB to work his way back to the ball to try to make that catch, and when he couldn't to knock it down.
Sorry Anthony is right on this one. Yes Wilson's pass was crap.
Like I already said, it looked to me like he got caught in between deciding to throw the back shoulder, and the fade, and sort of threw a neither one. It wasn't good, but Kearse did NOT help there.
You can say that Wilson had a horrible game all you like, and I will not say a word otherwise, so long as you admit that MUCH of that is due to Kearse having a horrendously bad day.
In his first five pass attepts, Kearse managed to have two passes hit him right on the hands, and he bounced both of them into defenders arms. He also managed to not fight back to the ball on another one, and just drop the last.
If Wilson hadn't thrown one last pass to him, we'd all have our pitchforks out right now, demanding he be cut tomorrow. That was a historically horrible game from Kearse. I can honestly say I've never seen a worse performance from a WR, up until that last catch. He never did get open either even on that last pass, he was blanket covered...dude is just too slow. Thankfully Wilson threw an absolutely PERFECT pass on that last one, or we'd be feeling much different about both of those guys right now.
NorthHawk wrote:Russell sometimes "floats" the ball and you can't do that in the wind, you need to really drive it hard with a tight spiral.
It seems to me that a couple of his passes almost stopped in mid air - maybe that's what Pete was referring to with his comment that Wilson was fooled a little by the wind.
PasadenaHawk wrote:I would like to see them use Lockette more as well. Someone mentioned as a PR. I love the idea, but can't imagine they haven't at least explored that already. Who knows. Good mention of his jet sweep play. I will never forget the blocking he did for Lynch on that long run for a touchdown. That was incredible. I knew he was fast, but never imagined he was that fast. Also goes to show he is a team player, not selfish which is big.
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