False Start
On # 69
Gary Walker really had no reason to get on Carr IMO . He hasnt exactly been a warrior out there the past two seasons . Besides these last two games , I cant remember him doing anything spectacular .
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How long would you give him then? On 3rd down and long you'd expect some pressure, just like we've gotten all game. I counted 2 seconds on the read to Andre. How many complain about Carr holding onto the ball and "locking on" to his recievers? Geez, you can't have it both ways. He on has fractions of a second to make decisions. Look at how awful the pass protection was breaking down with Wand in there. This is just so hindsight and it wasn't even Carrs fault.Honoring Earl 34 said:If a LB is with AJ its only for a blink . They have not invented a LB who can cover AJ .
I still consider AJ the best player we have on offense ... and on that note I agree with Vinny that I'd prefer losing with my best pitch . I will not complain though about the pass because it should have been caught .
WWJD said:d) To me Jacksonville is the team most likely to be moved. The stadium was nowhere near full...my understanding is that is not unusual. I can't imagine the NFL likes that. The guys on the radio said they block off sections that are empty for TV appearance sake.
WWJD said:To me Jacksonville is the team most likely to be moved. The stadium was nowhere near full...my understanding is that is not unusual. I can't imagine the NFL likes that. The guys on the radio said they block off sections that are empty for TV appearance sake.
Vinny said:What's so disgusting? It was 4th down. I thought it was great choice/pass/play on any other down as I have stated. This is a place us Texans fans can share our opinions. This is just something that we can discuss without someone labeling the topic as disgusting. We can discuss this decision here....why not?
Agreed, and this thread is about the argument (Argument on sideline??? is the thread title)...and the argument came right after that play. I think it's something that can be discussed amongst fans and without talking down to each other based on a difference of opinion. I'm not applying that to you, but this board is a board of fans talking about the game....and this thread was about that play. Discuss it if you want....don't touch it if you want to talk down to the posters for sharing their opinions.infantrycak said:I can't see how this one play demonstrates below average QB play.
infantrycak said:After having looked back at again, IMO it is a function of the emphasis on getting the ball out quickly. Carr does look 1st at AJ--at that moment, one Jag has his hands on AJ still and is running right with him. AJ is running right to left and approaching the area of a LB. At that point, AJ is not wide open. Carr goes to his 2nd option finds Bradford open (and folks that want to talk about double coverage need to go buy some pie and stuff it in the appropriate spot--Deion Grant is so far out of the play it doesn't even count as double coverage--I would bench any QB who wasn't willing to throw into that coverage) and immediately takes his shot. If Carr had held his read on AJ another half second he would have seen AJ come open (which by the way it looks like the two Jags tangle on each other a little contributing to the opening), but how much has he been yelled at to get the ball out. His two seconds were already up when he went from reading AJ to Bradford. I can't see how this one play demonstrates below average QB play.
infantrycak said:After having looked back at again, IMO it is a function of the emphasis on getting the ball out quickly. Carr does look 1st at AJ--at that moment, one Jag has his hands on AJ still and is running right with him. AJ is running right to left and approaching the area of a LB. At that point, AJ is not wide open. Carr goes to his 2nd option finds Bradford open (and folks that want to talk about double coverage need to go buy some pie and stuff it in the appropriate spot--Deion Grant is so far out of the play it doesn't even count as double coverage--I would bench any QB who wasn't willing to throw into that coverage) and immediately takes his shot. If Carr had held his read on AJ another half second he would have seen AJ come open (which by the way it looks like the two Jags tangle on each other a little contributing to the opening), but how much has he been yelled at to get the ball out. His two seconds were already up when he went from reading AJ to Bradford. I can't see how this one play demonstrates below average QB play.
Vinny said:Agreed, this thread is about the argument (Argument on sideline??? is the thread title)...and the argument came right after that play.
Runner said:Good point. Here is my take on the argument to get back on track. I'm going to accept what previous posters have said it looked like the players were saying.
Previously the lip readers stated that Carr was saying something like "he wasn't open" in response to Pendry's coaching*. Anyway Carr and Pendry apparently bark at each other a while and Carr walks away from Pendry, at which point Walker steps in tells Carr something like "take the coaching". So that's why Carr and Walker got into it; we can each have our own opinion to the appropriateness of Walker's intervention between an offensive player and his coach.
However, I don't think Pendry was yelling at Carr about the final play. I think he was telling Carr he should have passed the ball on his last sack; to which Carr was saying "he wasn't open".
*Some people would call it Pendry's yelling; who would of thought that approach would wear thin so fast?
Runner said:Good point. Here is my take on the argument to get back on track. I'm going to accept what previous posters have said it looked like the players were saying.
Previously the lip readers stated that Carr was saying something like "he wasn't open" in response to Pendry's coaching*. Anyway Carr and Pendry apparently bark at each other a while and Carr walks away from Pendry, at which point Walker steps in tells Carr something like "take the coaching". So that's why Carr and Walker got into it; we can each have our own opinion to the appropriateness of Walker's intervention between an offensive player and his coach.
However, I don't think Pendry was yelling at Carr about the final play. I think he was telling Carr he should have passed the ball on his last sack; to which Carr was saying "he wasn't open".
*Some people would call it Pendry's yelling; who would of thought that approach would wear thin so fast?
If Corey was a 100 meter sprinter he would dive at the tape and miss it.mean mark8 said:How many 100 meter sprinters do you see dive for the tape?
And somehow it would still be David Carr's fault.Vinny said:If Corey was a 100 meter sprinter he would dive at the tape and miss it.
oso said:Carr should not be arguing with his Offensive Coordinator. Irregardless of whether or not you agree with the coaching (and btw - I don't; I think Pendry was more of a problem than Palmer), you are not getting paid millions of dollars to fight with management, especially not on the sidelines. It's very unprofessional.
infantrycak said:I agree with you up until the professional level and even then most of the time, but at some point I want the QB to step up and be a leader. That includes telling a coach he is wrong, underutilizing players, whatever. I don't want a bunch of open or media fighting, but I certainly don't mind a QB disagreeing with a coach who hasn't even had the benefit of game tape yet to say whether a WR was open. Pendry should have saved that for a less emotional moment like say in the game tape review session--exactly what it is for.
He did not make a bad throw, AJ went one way whille Carr thought he was gonna go the other way. Seeing as AJ has been hurt and out of practice, that is very understandable... just so happned with the game on the line...Vinny said:I had this in the gamethread but I'll put it down here for the heck of it. That was a great decision and great pass on a first, second, or third down...but not on fourth with the game over if you miss out on a low % sideline lob pass. That just killed the game in one go-for-it-all gamble. Carr also missed a wide open AJ for a TD or at least a huge catch and run a couple of plays earlier that would have either tied the game then or we would have been within a short pass to get in the end zone....Carr just didn't get it done...Nobody was near aj. Great players make great plays....Carr made a great throw to Bradford....but it was Corey Freaking Bradford on 4th down on an all or nothing gamble. It's worth debating. I just wish people on the extremes would debate it properly.
run-david-run said:He did not make a bad throw, AJ went one way whille Carr thought he was gonna go the other way. Seeing as AJ has been hurt and out of practice, that is very understandable... just so happned with the game on the line...
everyone complains when this place fills up with nonsense posts. We do the best we can. We can't please everyone.aj. said:Ah yes, 'proper debate.' What's next, the tea and scones forum?
HoustonFan said:Carr just needs to be ready for battle when they come to town in the upcoming weeks - nothing like stealing their chance at a playoff run again.
gpshafer_1976 said:OK, everybody...
Let's roll up our sleeves and find out what the big deal was at the end of the game.
The cameras caught Bradford pulling Carr away from Gary Walker...and Walker was all up in Carr's grill about something. The look on Carr's face was a look of total fright. And Bradford seemed to be yanking him away because Bradford knew G-Funk was on a collision course with Carr?
Was Walker confronting Carr? Or was Carr defending himself or defending Bradford? Something BIG happened and we gotta found out what went down.
Please try and found out the scoop if you can.
gtexan02 said:Views: The Texans hardly need problems in the locker room as it's obvious they have plenty problems on the field..
aj. said:A different view: The Texans already have problems in the locker room and we're seeing them spill onto the field.
aj. said:A different view: The Texans already have problems in the locker room and we're seeing them spill onto the field.
gpshafer_1976 said:Any updates?
As I sift through the posts, this is what I am gathering (tell me differently if I'm wrong):
-------------------
If anybody has any updates, or any correction to "how" it took place and "what exactly took place," let us know.
U4ikrob said:This piece was in this mornings Chronicle and should end most of the debate about what the arguement was on.
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/sports/3448216
"Bradford, who dropped Carr's long fourth-down pass that turned out to be the Texans' last play, told 790 AM that offensive coordinator Joe Pendry had chastised the quarterback for not throwing over the middle to Andre Johnson, who was open.
Advice from veteran
Carr responded to Pendry by explaining that he threw to Bradford because Bradford had one-on-one coverage with cornerback Kenny Wright and added something like, "Did you see that pass?"
Walker heard Carr fire back at Pendry and questioned the quarterback's ability to accept coaching. Then Carr got into it with Walker, and they had to be separated."
Let's wait until the end of the season.Kaiser Toro said:We should fire Pendry right away...
Kaiser Toro said:We should fire Pendry right away for not agreeing with most of the posters on this message board that David should have thrown to Bradford.
TheOgre said:I actually agree with Pendry, and I said such earlier in this thread. Despite throwing a perfect pass to Bradford, it was a mistake. On 4th down with sufficient time left to score, Carr needs to be going for the high percentage play to keep the drive alive and live to fight another play.
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/sports/3448216
infantrycak said:May be a case of cranial flatulence, but can you remind me of when the Texans have successfully moved 30+ yds in 45 seconds to finish the game with a TD when they had to have a TD?
In the 2003 Jags game they scored on the last play of the game, but they took 2:40 to move 40 yds and didn't need the TD.
infantrycak said:May be a case of cranial flatulence, but can you remind me of when the Texans have successfully moved 30+ yds in 45 seconds to finish the game with a TD when they had to have a TD?
In the 2003 Jags game they scored on the last play of the game, but they took 2:40 to move 40 yds and didn't need the TD.
We got the ball on the Jets 27 with 1:04 in 2003 and couldn't get the ball in.
TheOgre said:I don't have a problem if that play is 1st, 2nd, or even 3rd down. The problem is that play is a low percentage one on 4th down. That is probably a 30% chance of making that play AT BEST. You don't convert and it is game over. That means there is a 70%+ chance that the game is over on that play.
Whereas Carr throws a 10 yard pass for a first it has approximately a 55 percent chance of completion. It might even be higher for a defense playing the prevent. So the game is only over about 45% of the time after that play. If you complete it across the middle (I think we were out of timeouts, but I cannot remember), you can run up and kill the clock. That gives you at least 3 pass plays from around the 20-25 with about 30 seconds left. Personally, I prefer those odds to the route Carr took.
Hey Carr has to begin to show some 4th quarter mojo soon or he won't be playing in the NFL for long. Just because he has failed in the past, doesn't mean we shouldn't try to win the smart way. If he continues to be inept in the clutch, then we find someone who can win the close ones. The difference in 4-5 wins a season can be these nail biters.
metalmike said:His confidence is shot.
infantrycak said:Here is my problem with that analysis. Yeah, the Bradford option was the lower % pass when the play was called. Everyone knew that, which it is why it was the 2nd read. IMO people are analyzing this completely wrong though--the option Carr had was not AJ or Bradford. IMO AJ was covered during the time period Carr was looking at him. The critical decision by Carr was not throw to Bradford or AJ but continue looking at AJ (read 1) to see if he comes open OR look to Bradford (read 2) to see if he is open--once Carr looks to Bradford is open, is anyone really going to argue Carr should have ignored the open receiver and looked back to see if AJ was open?--thereby losing the Bradford option (running out of space and safety on his way). Read 2 is there for a reason and Carr has been hammered here and by the coaching staff to make his reads quickly and get the ball in the air. The option wasn't between two open receivers, it was whether to continuing to look at his primary (sometimes called staring down the WR) or quickly go to his next read.