A tipped ball is very different than a simple incompletion...and you know it. Double covered or single covered makes no difference, the pass was defended.
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Thanks for telling me what I know. Here are some other things I also know. Boller looked better than McNair, he threw a better ball and did a better job getting the ball downfield. And this wasn't just looking at McNair's one horrible day, he hasn't looked good for weeks and only looked good sporadically outside of that.
Boller's completion numbers were low for a few reasons. One, a couple of drops, two, no snaps with the first team thus no timing (he JUST missed Heap and Clayton for huge plays) and three, he was actually pushing the ball downfield and trying to make big plays.
I could have a 65% completion rate if I dinked and dunked like McNair.
I hear all of that Greg...but Boller did not produced any better than Mac. Your subjective assesment not withstanding. This teams philosophy is about moving the chains and controlling the clock. That philosophy is realized by using the dink and dunk passing game and a strong dose of run, run, run. I can see that you don't agree and that's cool, we can agree to disagree.
Well then you can't say Boller did not produce any better than Mac, because McNair and this offense has NOT been good at moving the chains. Boller moved the chains better than McNair has been able to do. It was very evident on Sunday.Quote:
This teams philosophy is about moving the chains and controlling the clock.
And if you want to take away Boller's tipped passes, then take away Mason's circus catches in Cleveland. I mean, if we're going to punish one QB for the receiver making a lucky or good catch, let's be fair.
In just over 3 quarters of play Boller got 16 first downs (none by penalty, btw), McNair had none. Extrapolated out, Boller probably gets 20 for the game. We had 78 first downs in the previous 5 games, about 15.5 per game. Again, Boller was on pace for 20 with no first team snaps.Quote:
This teams philosophy is about moving the chains and controlling the clock.
I can't help but wonder if you guys are arguing just for the hell of it.
Circus catches are not the same as tipped balls. With a circus catch the route and the direction of the pass are INTENTIONAL.
Boller's two tipped passes were nothing but flukes. You can try to argue the point all day long if you like, but you will never convince me that Boller meant (and therefore deserves credit for) those TDs.
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In just over 3 quarters of play Boller got 16 first downs (none by penalty, btw), McNair had none. Extrapolated out, Boller probably gets 20 for the game. We had 78 first downs in the previous 5 games, about 15.5 per game. Again, Boller was on pace for 20 with no first team snaps.
Yup, that's pretty good...not great, but good. for the 20th time, I am not arguing the fact that Boller had a decent day, but if it was better than what Mac has done, then it's by a small margin.
First downs are kind of a tough stat to compare QBs with though since there are so many other factors involved, especially how well the opposing defense is playing. I only brought up the first down thing to remind you that we are not a deep threat team and that the dink and dunk is our bread and butter.
And so are tipped balls. Just because a lineman gets a hand on it doesn't mean the throw wasn't intentional. That makes no sense.Quote:
Circus catches are not the same as tipped balls. With a circus catch the route and the direction of the pass are INTENTIONAL.
Once again, Boller's first pass HIT IT'S INTENDED TARGET. IT WAS NOT BATTED AT THE LINE, IT POPPED UP OFF OF THE TARGET HE THREW IT AT. Exactly the same thing you just described as the circus catch. So yes, Boller 100% absolutely can get credit for the first TD. He made the throw. Mason couldn't make the catch. Clayton did. If Mason made a circus catch to hold onto the ball would you still be saying Boller didn't deserve it?Quote:
Boller's two tipped passes were nothing but flukes. You can try to argue the point all day long if you like, but you will never convince me that Boller meant (and therefore deserves credit for) those TDs.
16 first downs in three quarters isn't great? What other teams are you putting that up against then??Quote:
Yup, that's pretty good...not great, but good.
That is the second time that has been contended and I will now say BULL. Up until McNair this team under Billick has "gone vertical" 4-8 times per game, most games 5-6. Under McNair, 1-2 times per game, tops.Quote:
First downs are kind of a tough stat to compare QBs with though since there are so many other factors involved, especially how well the opposing defense is playing. I only brought up the first down thing to remind you that we are not a deep threat team and that the dink and dunk is our bread and butter.
Billick's offensive philosophy is built on the idea of explosives. With Boller at the helm we went for explosive plays much more, even though the score was close (hell, we were leading at one time).
Are you seriously arguing that a tipped ball is INTENTIONAL and is not a broken play? :grbac:
Which of our receivers catches the ball is irrelevant. Once a ball is tipped, it is considered a broken play. That is why there can be no pass interefence called. Scream and yell all you want, it doesn't change the fact that it was a broken play.Quote:
Once again, Boller's first pass HIT IT'S INTENDED TARGET. IT WAS NOT BATTED AT THE LINE, IT POPPED UP OFF OF THE TARGET HE THREW IT AT. Exactly the same thing you just described as the circus catch. So yes, Boller 100% absolutely can get credit for the first TD. He made the throw. Mason couldn't make the catch. Clayton did. If Mason made a circus catch to hold onto the ball would you still be saying Boller didn't deserve it?
Even if I did agree, you are talking about a 14yrd pass. Boller's rating is still only 75.1 with a 51% completion...which is OK, but definately not what I would consider great.
It is the only stat that you can find that in any way supports your argument. I would counter that there are many other factors that contribute to that number and that it is not a good measure of the quality of the play at the QB position. That is why it is listed as a team stat and not as an individual one.Quote:
16 first downs in three quarters isn't great? What other teams are you putting that up against then??
You're trying to take two seperate passes and make them the same. That doesn't work.Quote:
Are you seriously arguing that a tipped ball is INTENTIONAL and is not a broken play?
Again, you're trying to marginalize the fact that the pass was on target. That was a catchable ball that Mason couldn't come up with for whatever reason he couldn't. It's not the same as having the ball tipped at the LOS and landing in the arms of a receiver. Two different situations. That's the difference.Quote:
Which of our receivers catches the ball is irrelevant. Once a ball is tipped, it is considered a broken play. That is why there can be no pass interefence called. Scream and yell all you want, it doesn't change the fact that it was a broken play.
I've used that same counter about factors and stat skewing based on what happens around the QB. The problem is whenever it's Kyle Boller, that doesn't seem to matter. I once argued, as people like Ron Jawarski have, that the QB position is one that requires the most help from the entire rest of the offense to make it's stats. But only if your name doesn't start with the letters KB. Then stats mean everything. So I gave up on that and use the same philosophy on McNair.Quote:
I would counter that there are many other factors that contribute to that number and that it is not a good measure of the quality of the play at the QB position.
But the bottom line is that like it or not, Boller averaged the same 1st down percentage as McNair (I'm not quibbling over .5). So the arguement that McNair was better at moving the chains is incorrect. That's all we were saying.
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Scream and yell all you want, it was a touchdown. ;)Quote:
Scream and yell all you want, it doesn't change the fact that it was a broken play.
If McNair threw that first TD pass, Im willing to bet that alot of people on this thread would be calling it bullshit and lucky.
And that pass was well thrown but Mason was being blanketed by the DB.
I saw the play live and a replay or two and IIRC, the DB's hand got in there to disrupt the play.
2 of the TDs were fluky.
Boller looked OK. Nothing more, nothing less. He looked OK.
His INT was a terrible decision. His throw to Heap was placed perfectly where only Heap could've caught it. And there you have it in a nutshell. Real good and real bad. All I've wanted out of him is something in the middle.
PP
Here's the problem as I see it PP. Boller doesn't have the market cornered on bad decisions in this offense. 7 interceptions by McNair, and 2 of them hit opponents right in the chest. The one against Carolina Heap was wide open in the flat and McNair didn't even LOOK there.
This is why I keep arguing about this system and how it's continuing to kill QB's.
As far as the 1st TD, I'm watching it right now. It's too fast to get a definitive picture for you, and slowing it down seems to only blur the play. But that ball from the first angle looks like it hits Mason, not Gamble. Fluky? could be. Good decision and good throw? Absolutely. Maybe that's the point and Mobtown and I are looking at two different arguements.
And for the record, I never called McNair's throws to Mason in Cleveland lucky throws because Mason made yoga-like circus catches. That's what a receiver does for you sometimes. Just like against Carolina.