Str8tupg42k1
Waterboy
Do you guys think that we'll see more of Hollings in this game vs. Denver. He had some good runs with Davis in the preseason, or will they go with Davis and Wells. Just wondering. (killing time till kickoff.
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I believe you are correct on Hollings injury history and current status.Number19 said:Can someone bring me up to date on Tony Hollings' status? ... My understanding is that Hollings had some nicks prior to the off-week, but since then is fully recovered...
I don't believe Hollings was active against the Tacks and was active but did not get a run from the line of scrimmage against the Furrballs.Number19 said:... Hollings has gotten zero playing time over the past three or four games, and I'm not sure if he was even included on the out-of-town roster ... why isn't he trying to improve on our performance by giving our "speedster running back" some playing time? I don't think we can do much worse...
I completely disagree. I don't think Capers is conservative at all. He is calculating, not reckless. Very different. Just last week, I would refer you to three plays:Number19 said:... Capers' is one of the most offensively conservative coaches...
See above, dealing with Capers being conservative.Number19 said:Capers seems to be unable to adjust to unexpected situations... Now that this is not working, he is unable to adjust ... This is anything but smart football.
My thinking is that Capers, on any individual play, is not necessarily conservative, as pointed out by Mistril48. However, his game plan is conservative. Any game plan which pounds the ball with a running attack - that is, running plays exceding passing plays - I consider conservative. Capers himself admits he uses the running game to set up the passing game. The other thing to remember is that a good percentage of Carr's passing completions are not true "downfield" pass plays, but rather those dump-off passes to the HB, or the 1 yd hitch pass & run to AJ.Mistril48 said:... I don't think Capers is conservative at all. He is calculating, not reckless. Very different. Just last week, I would refer you to three plays...Capers understands gameplanning and playcalling very well. He understands what the running game is doing...he knows how to use what he has to get the job done.
I guess I've just survived a season where you just assume that if someone is using the expression 'conservative' then they are making a negative statement. Also, many with a lot less thoughtful positions than you just throw out the line that Capers is too conservative if he doesn't pass every play.Number19 said:... Any game plan which pounds the ball with a running attack - that is, running plays exceding passing plays - I consider conservative. Capers himself admits he uses the running game to set up the passing game.
I don't disagree about rule changes favoring passing and the pass setting up the run, although with any generalization it isn't always true. I believe it's very much a game by game decision. Against Jacksonville, the talk is less about running and passing, IMO and more about "you can't run against those big DTs." I think Capers and his staff designed an approach to attack the DTs and be successful. I sure didn't expect it. I believe the Texans gameplan dominated the Jaguars, beyond the score.Number19 said:The thing is, rule changes favor the downfield passing game - and to keep up with these changes, a strategy of using the passing game to set up the running game makes more sense than it did a decade ago.
Common perhaps, but it's more than Pennington, Brady, Warner, Testaverde and Leftwich have.Number19 said:Today, it is common for the best ratings to excede 100. Culpepper has 124.0. A ROOKIE - ROETHLISBERGER - HAS A RATING OF 100.1. Carr's current rating is 97.8.
I doubt better. Big Ben has been lights out. Here is a stat that will blow your mind:TexansTrueFan said:Carr could of done the same our better if that had been him !!
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=pasquarelli_len&id=1916628In his last four starts, Pittsburgh Steelers rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger has thrown just 23 incomplete passes, hitting 72 of 95 attempts in that stretch. There have been four individual games through the first eight weeks of the 2004 schedule in which quarterbacks posted 23 or more incompletion passes. They were: Seattle's Matt Hasselbeck, 27 (14 for 41 at Arizona on Oct. 24); Carson Palmer of Cincinnati, 27 (25 for 52, Sept. 26 against Baltimore); Jake Plummer of Denver, 24 (31 for 55, Oct. 31 versus Atlanta); and Hasselbeck again, 23 (27 for 50, Oct. 17 at New England).
Vinny said:Good post.
I think Hollings is still very much a project and he will get some touches as he becomes a better blocker, studies more film, and gets more reps in practice. We have all seen what an offense looks like in the NFL when you have players learn on the job. I've wanted to see more of Hollings myself but have just had to realize that they are taking their time with him and developing him in the background while we try to win games.
I didnt say that.TexansTrueFan said:so your telling me that even though carr was a rookie QB in on an expasion team he should of still been able to do what big ben has done ??? A QB is only as good as his recievers !! Pittsburg still has more playmakers on Offense than we do ! IF WE HAD A RUN GMAE maybe it would help a little bit !
Mistril48 said:By the way, I think Big Ben's comparision is a little unfair in that Ben has a good O-line, good running game, good WRs and a good defense. Remember Carr's rookie year?
I don't see the NFL going arena ball. Good defense is always going to have its place in this game at this level. History shows teams that teams that focus on passing offense only and cannot run the ball to hold a lead lose in the playoffs for the most part.Number19 said:If it hasn't occurred yet, I believe you will see games where a team will score on every possession of the game, a field goal or TD. And, except for a truly powerful rushing attack, the game is probably moving in a direction where most of the better teams will feature a passing dominant offense.
Vinny said:I don't see the NFL going arena ball. Good defense is always going to have its place in this game at this level. History shows teams that teams that focus on passing offense only and cannot run the ball to hold a lead lose in the playoffs for the most part.
Vinny said:Good post.
I think Hollings is still very much a project and he will get some touches as he becomes a better blocker, studies more film, and gets more reps in practice. We have all seen what an offense looks like in the NFL when you have players learn on the job. I've wanted to see more of Hollings myself but have just had to realize that they are taking their time with him and developing him in the background while we try to win games.
Did you ever wonder why you check out message boards?Number19 said:I dearly loved watching Campbell pound the ball for 30 carries a game.
Hollings faced 2 major challenges, not 1:Bill's/TexanFan said:My take on RB's has always been this. They all come into the NFL needing to improve in the areas you've mentioned with blitz pick-up being right up there. We all know that at Georgia Tech Hollings spent most of his time as a DB and ... My point is....at some point in the not too distant future the light should go on for him...