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Week 4: Buffalo at Green Bay - Time to bounce back
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<blockquote data-quote="HardRightEdge" data-source="post: 789854"><p>I believe Mr. Kruse has ovestated the case.</p><p></p><p>The first clip does not look good...time, a clean pocket and Rodgers looking downfield. How about the rest?</p><p></p><p>In the second clip, Rodgers is looking Geronimo's way, sees the double team, takes a step back, and looks for another option. As he's looking away, the Redskin defenders get balled up with each other. The idea that a QB can maintain a panoramic view of all receivers at all times, if that's the premise here, is a falacy. It is contrary to the idea of a progression, if not the functioning of the eye and brain.</p><p></p><p>In the third clip, Rodgers is looking Cobb's way and saw somthing he didn't like. Instead of staying vertical, Cobb started angling toward the sideline into Norman's closing angle, one assumes to position outside the FS's closing range. Perhaps the mistake here is Cobb's in not staying vertical; that FS was a pretty good distance away and he's in backpedal mode not closing mode. Cobb may have shown Rodgers something he did not expect at the top of that route so he went into reboot.</p><p></p><p>As for the 4th. clip, Kruse overstates the case in saying, "a healthy Aaron Rodgers makes this throw 10/10 times." Really? Does anybody make that throw, healthy or otherwise, 100% of the time? Of course not. That's a very tough throw...move right, throw left, to a crosser where air cannot be put under the ball and the margin for error is minimal. We've seen a healthy Rodgers make much worse throws than that. Kruse concludes, "Still a pretty good toss, all things considered. Cobb couldn't finish". That's the right way to look at it. Not that Cobb is at fault; that would have been a very tough catch. Sometimes those very tough catches are made and sometimes they are not. This time, not.</p><p></p><p>Did Kruse break down every play in the game, I wonder? If so, and this is all he could come up with, the one unexplainable miss in the first clip makes for a pretty impressive performance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HardRightEdge, post: 789854"] I believe Mr. Kruse has ovestated the case. The first clip does not look good...time, a clean pocket and Rodgers looking downfield. How about the rest? In the second clip, Rodgers is looking Geronimo's way, sees the double team, takes a step back, and looks for another option. As he's looking away, the Redskin defenders get balled up with each other. The idea that a QB can maintain a panoramic view of all receivers at all times, if that's the premise here, is a falacy. It is contrary to the idea of a progression, if not the functioning of the eye and brain. In the third clip, Rodgers is looking Cobb's way and saw somthing he didn't like. Instead of staying vertical, Cobb started angling toward the sideline into Norman's closing angle, one assumes to position outside the FS's closing range. Perhaps the mistake here is Cobb's in not staying vertical; that FS was a pretty good distance away and he's in backpedal mode not closing mode. Cobb may have shown Rodgers something he did not expect at the top of that route so he went into reboot. As for the 4th. clip, Kruse overstates the case in saying, "a healthy Aaron Rodgers makes this throw 10/10 times." Really? Does anybody make that throw, healthy or otherwise, 100% of the time? Of course not. That's a very tough throw...move right, throw left, to a crosser where air cannot be put under the ball and the margin for error is minimal. We've seen a healthy Rodgers make much worse throws than that. Kruse concludes, "Still a pretty good toss, all things considered. Cobb couldn't finish". That's the right way to look at it. Not that Cobb is at fault; that would have been a very tough catch. Sometimes those very tough catches are made and sometimes they are not. This time, not. Did Kruse break down every play in the game, I wonder? If so, and this is all he could come up with, the one unexplainable miss in the first clip makes for a pretty impressive performance. [/QUOTE]
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Week 4: Buffalo at Green Bay - Time to bounce back
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