Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
wickedsolo
Thanks for posting this.
Dickson is not a 100% guarantee.
Tony - if it were Pitta or Boldin, he may have thrown it.
Sent from my DROID X2 using Forum Runner
This.
If Dickson drops it, and with him that seems to happen about 1 out of 4 or 5 times, then no 1st down and the clock gets stopped because of the incomplete pass.
3rd and 2 in that situation, trying to take time off the clock and everything, you have to run it.
Or call for a deliberate sack I guess.
Didn't even know that was in our playbook...jeez.
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PerpetuallyBored74
If Dickson drops it, and with him that seems to happen about 1 out of 4 or 5 times, then no 1st down and the clock gets stopped because of the incomplete pass.
Even if Dickson drops it 1 out of 4 or 5 times, who cares? People are talking about this as if a drop means we lose. A drop means Leftwich and Co. have an extra 35 seconds to tie (or longer shot win) the game. What exactly do those 35 seconds do to their odds of tying (or winning)? Obviously the odds go up, but it absolutely matters how much and from where to where.
And the other 3 of 4 or 4 of 5 times Dickson catches it the game is 100% over with us winning. This is another example where people are not really looking at the math and are overstating the risks and understating/ignoring the rewards.
That said, I would have run the ball. Because a) you can pick up the first running it as well, and b) throwing it while simulataneously giving your QB the "play it safe, don't throw an incompletion" almost assures a sack and no first down (as we saw).
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
So, you would've wanted Joe to throw it to Dickson?
Keep in mind, that running the ball is not an option since Cam/Harbs had decided that it wasn't.
So, it's either throw it or take the sack.
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PerpetuallyBored74
So, you would've wanted Joe to throw it to Dickson?
Keep in mind, that running the ball is not an option since Cam/Harbs had decided that it wasn't.
So, it's either throw it or take the sack.
I don't exactly recall how close the closest defender was, but if he was open at all, then yeah I think we should have thrown it, though with Leftwich's ineptitude the odds are probably close either way (like the difference of winning 94% of the time and 95% of the time). A catch wins the game; a drop doesn't lose the game, in fact it likely only marginally reduces our chances of losing the game (giving them 35 extra seconds to score).
Play with the numbers (percentages) and see whether it makes sense to actually throw it (assuming you are hell bent to drop back to pass, which is clearly debatable).
It isn't like either decision, to take sack or throw it is clearly better unless your odds of completing are lower than average (no one is open) or way higher than average or your odds of throwing an INT is significant (no one is open).
I would have preferred we just run it. But the decision to throw it after dropping back is debatable and which option is preferable entirely depends on the chances of a) us completing it, b) Leftwich driving for FG with 1:45 left, and c) Leftwich driving for FG with 1:05 left. The smaller odds of them scoring a TD, us fumbling on the sack, us throwing an INT, us getting a punt blocked or them returning a punt for a TD, etc, etc are so small as to be basically negligible (at least for discussion purposes).
If we assume that we win an OT game 50% of the time (for sake of argument, but obviously this can be changed easily).
And percentage Leftwich ties game with 1:45 left is X
And percentage Leftwich ties game with 1:05 left is Y
And percentage we complete the first down pass to Dickson is Z
then
Odds we win if we throw it are: Z + (1-Z)*(.5X + (1-X)) or Z + (1-Z)*(1-.5X)
Odds we win if we take sack are: (1-Y) + (.5Y) or 1-.5Y
One thing you can see is that if you assign us a 50% chance of completing the pass, then the odds of throwing vs. not throwing are equal only when Leftwich's odds of tying it with the extra 35-40 seconds is exactly double his odds of tying with the 1:05. If Z = 50% then first equation simplifies to 1-.25X, while the second equation is 1-.5Y. If Leftwich less than doubles his chances with the extra time then it is better to throw it; if he more than doubles his chances then better to eat sack (assuming the 50/50 chance of completion).
Of course they very well might be double if you start to look at how low they are in either case, i.e. 10% vs. 5% or even 4% vs 2%. And clearly our odds of completing the ball may be less than or greater than 50%. Obviously the lower it is the more favorable it is to take the sack, and vice versa.
So back to the question, lol....I would have to check out the replay to see how open he was to see how likely it would have been to be completed. And in either case I think we are comparing very close and very high percentage chances in either case.
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ravensghost
What if Cam is trying to cover up Flacco's faults... Its just too easy to Keep blaming cam alone.. look at your
Qb body language when things are going bad.. Flacco looks lost. He gets that deer in the head lights look and then
its over for the offence. Now dont get me wrong. Cam sucks big time, but what if we have a trifecta going on here.. Joe, Cam and Harbaugh...
Wow. One big pile of crap.
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Haloti92
I don't exactly recall how close the closest defender was, but if he was open at all, then yeah I think we should have thrown it, though with Leftwich's ineptitude the odds are probably close either way (like the difference of winning 94% of the time and 95% of the time). A catch wins the game; a drop doesn't lose the game, in fact it likely only marginally reduces our chances of losing the game (giving them 35 extra seconds to score).
Play with the numbers (percentages) and see whether it makes sense to actually throw it (assuming you are hell bent to drop back to pass, which is clearly debatable).
It isn't like either decision, to take sack or throw it is clearly better unless your odds of completing are lower than average (no one is open) or way higher than average or your odds of throwing an INT is significant (no one is open).
I would have preferred we just run it. But the decision to throw it after dropping back is debatable and which option is preferable entirely depends on the chances of a) us completing it, b) Leftwich driving for FG with 1:45 left, and c) Leftwich driving for FG with 1:05 left. The smaller odds of them scoring a TD, us fumbling on the sack, us throwing an INT, us getting a punt blocked or them returning a punt for a TD, etc, etc are so small as to be basically negligible (at least for discussion purposes).
If we assume that we win an OT game 50% of the time (for sake of argument, but obviously this can be changed easily).
And percentage Leftwich ties game with 1:45 left is X
And percentage Leftwich ties game with 1:05 left is Y
And percentage we complete the first down pass to Dickson is Z
then
Odds we win if we throw it are: Z + (1-Z)*(.5X + (1-X)) or Z + (1-Z)*(1-.5X)
Odds we win if we take sack are: (1-Y) + (.5Y) or 1-.5Y
One thing you can see is that if you assign us a 50% chance of completing the pass, then the odds of throwing vs. not throwing are equal only when Leftwich's odds of tying it with the extra 35-40 seconds is exactly double his odds of tying with the 1:05. If Z = 50% then first equation simplifies to 1-.25X, while the second equation is 1-.5Y. If Leftwich less than doubles his chances with the extra time then it is better to throw it; if he more than doubles his chances then better to eat sack (assuming the 50/50 chance of completion).
Of course they very well might be double if you start to look at how low they are in either case, i.e. 10% vs. 5% or even 4% vs 2%. And clearly our odds of completing the ball may be less than or greater than 50%. Obviously the lower it is the more favorable it is to take the sack, and vice versa.
So back to the question, lol....I would have to check out the replay to see how open he was to see how likely it would have been to be completed. And in either case I think we are comparing very close and very high percentage chances in either case.
I doubt anyone on the Ravens, including coaches knows of such formulas, let alone uses them.
Since the Steelers only needed a FG to tie, then those 35 seconds are actually very important, especially when you want to run a prevent D to keep Wallace from blowing right past your makeshift secondary.
You can't be certain that special teams keeps them pinned so deep by not allowing a better return on the punt.
And there's no way to know if Tomlin, realizing that Leftwich is hurt and can't make the throws like he normally does, wouldn't have gone with Batch who might have lit a spark under the Steelers O.
Or he might have stunk like a skunk coming into the game cold.
Too many unknowns to rely on any formula--that's probably what Cam and Harbs would tell you if you asked them.
Ultimately, I think Joe did what Joe always does: whatever he was told to do.
Re: Ravens road woes on offense should be blamed on Harbaugh
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PerpetuallyBored74
I doubt anyone on the Ravens, including coaches knows of such formulas, let alone uses them.
Since the Steelers only needed a FG to tie, then those 35 seconds are actually very important, especially when you want to run a prevent D to keep Wallace from blowing right past your makeshift secondary.
You can't be certain that special teams keeps them pinned so deep by not allowing a better return on the punt.
And there's no way to know if Tomlin, realizing that Leftwich is hurt and can't make the throws like he normally does, wouldn't have gone with Batch who might have lit a spark under the Steelers O.
Or he might have stunk like a skunk coming into the game cold.
Too many unknowns to rely on any formula--that's probably what Cam and Harbs would tell you if you asked them.
Ultimately, I think Joe did what Joe always does: whatever he was told to do.
One doesn't need to strictly "rely" on the formula, but one absolutely has to recognize that the choice was not whether it is better to give the Steelers only 1:05 to score vs. 1:45 to score. That is obvious.
The choice is about whether the possible benefit of giving them NO time to score (kneeling it out after a firstdown) is greater than the possible risk of giving them the extra 40 seconds to score (incomplete pass and punt).
One doesn't need any formula to realize that this is the choice. One does not need to assign specific probabilities and get an "exact" estimate (oxymoron, I know). One can make that decision in very general terms or gut feelings.
And too often NFL coaches over-weight the risks of any possible decision and under-weight the rewards. This has been discussed before, but it is undeniable. It is also undeniable that the average fan does this as well. Looking at the math helps demonstrate this tendency. But in terms of this specific example, both choices are very similar and both choices left us with a great chance to win (making reasonable assumptions).
And I agree Joe did whatever he thought he was told to do. The question is what exactly he was told. Or even, what exactly does it mean (to the listener) when someone says, "we are going to look to pass, but only throw it if you are guaranteed to get the first down." Since the odds of completing the pass are not ever 100% (even if every Steeler defender dropped dead at the snap our Receiver could drop the ball), that directive essentially means always take the sack to the conservative listener that takes it literally and plays it safe. But I am sure that other QBs more prone to gamble or seek the limelight would interpret that as "I will throw it if someone is open." So to some degree I understand Tony's point/distinction, even if I do not in any way fault Flacco for refusing to throw it.