Showing posts with label Luke Willson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luke Willson. Show all posts

Monday, December 14, 2015

Football terms

In this video, Richard Sherman shows how smart and sneaky he can be and cheerfully explains how he does it. I love when he smiles and says quietly, "I am showing them an illusion of sorts." The guy has a mouth on him to rival Muhammad Ali, but also has a meticulous, analytical brain and he isn't shy about saying that he values that over his athleticism even within the game. He seems to have an almost precognitive quickness sometimes... because his brain has broken his opponents down to their gears and cogs. 
The phrase "Hiding in the tall grass" delighted me when I first saw that game because of the mental image. There was something true about it, even though I didn't know quite what at the time. This is such an evocative way to quickly nail what Sherm is explaining in this video.
Obviously the turf is the same height all over the field and a player can't actually hide, but that is not what this means. It means that someone-- in this case the predatory cornerback-- has manufactured tall grass within the opposing quarterback's brain. It isn't quite a blind spot. As Sherm went to some effort to explain, he has created an illusion. He wants the opposing quarterback to think he is to the situation. They want so badly for the play to work that if he sketches in certain movements, they'll believe it is working... right until he jumps out of the tall grass to pick the ball.
There are many other phrases like this in football and many of them are so common that announcers don’t feel the need to explain them. Hence many fans don’t know what they mean or where they came from. Here are some of them. We'll start with some easy phrases and work up to the more technical ones.
"Pick" means interception of course. "Pick-six" means an interception followed by a run to the end zone for six points.
“Move the chains.” Get a first down so the officials will move the chains attached to the big orange markers on the sidelines that tell people where the next first down is. "Stay ahead of the chains" is essentially the same thing. It means your offense doesn't meander around in the same area until the fourth down. 
“Man coverage.” It does not refer to the uniforms. It refers to a player who is assigned to deal with one other specific player and so covers that one man. Then you have “zone coverage” which is of course when a player is assigned a general area to keep track of instead of one guy.
“Run a flat.” This sounds like the guy was running and was flattened by Kam Chancellor...


...or was dealing with a ball deflated by Tom Brady… 

...but no. It just means a man isn’t running toward the end zone. Instead he runs “flat” along the yard lines, not across them, usually to fool a corner or safety.
“Running game / pass game.” Exactly what it sounds like. Hand the ball to Marshawn Lynch or Thomas Rawls so they can run it. Or, pass it to Kearse, Baldwin or Willson. The “game” part of it refers to how well it works out in general for the team. E.g. “The Vikings are built around their running game.” Or “I wish the Niners would stop putting half their defense in the backfield so Wilson can try his pass game. Oh well, if they’re not going to respect Lynch, we’ll stay with the running game.”


“Throw over the top.” Um, doesn’t the ball always go over the top? This term doesn’t refer to the heads and grabby hands of the players. It refers to whether the quarterback throws in front of the main line of the defense or past it, away up the field to where the deep receivers are running around. So if Wilson completes one of those beautiful arcing passes for a 47 yard gain, that’s “over the top.” “Underneath” means that he threw to a man relatively nearby for a 5 or 10 yard gain.

“Sluggo.” Is it the comic book character?


 Nope. To explain this, we also have to explain another term, “slant and fade.” “Running a slant” means that the player runs diagonally, like a bishop in chess. However, if they’re in the red zone and don’t have much room, this becomes a “slant and fade.” That means they “fade away” into the corner of the end zone and the quarterback throws the ball high over the defensive back. The trick there is that the receiver really doesn’t have much room and so has to work to keep their feet in bounds when they come down with the ball. “Slant and fade” is also known as “slant and go.” Mumble that repeatedly and quickly when the clock is ticking and it becomes “sluggo.” FYI, Sherman’s famous “tip”off of Crabtree was an attempted sluggo by Kaepernick.

“Sell the slant.” A fake-out. The quarterback is counting on the defense watching him carefully and so raises his arm, giving an awkward twitch that looks to a defensive player like the QB going to go ahead and pass, so they jump onto where they think the ball is headed. This, in the hope that the receiver will use that momentary hesitation by the defense to accelerate, get some space, and be relatively isolated by the time the ball does get to him ‘way back in the corner. E.g. "The Superbowl-winning Manning - Burness pass was a sluggo in which Manning sold the slant." 

"Pump-fake.” Nothing to do with illusory high heels. 

It is a more generic term than “sell the slant” for acting like you’re going to pass to one guy and then going for another, sometimes a guy who has run a flat or sometimes a guy who has run further away down the field. E.g. "Wow, we sure know how to use Tyler Lockett's speed to capitalize on the pump-fake." Or, we hear this all the time, “Wilson pump-fakes left, draws the blitz…”

"Hunh? What’s drawing the blitz?” It means you bait the defensive guys and get them to rush up close to the line in an attempt to quickly sack you, so there are fewer guys in the back of the field. Then if you want you can throw “over the top” for a long pass. 

"Trips" does not refer to when the turf grabs someone’s shoe the wrong way. It is an offensive formation with three wide receivers on one side of the field all near each other. That means you either don't have a tight end or a fullback. Remember, you can only have eleven guys on the field so if you have a triplet of wide receivers, you have to take away from somewhere.
Meanwhile, "Jumbo" is when you have three tight ends (tight end can be an offensive lineman or maybe work as a wide receiver but they’re heftier than a typical receiver) stacked up instead of a lot of wide receivers. "Jumbo" formation started with the Giants’ coach, Parcells, and was named after one of his players. Coach was basically saying, "Our guys are bigger and stronger than yours. We will broadcast that we are going to run the ball. Even though you know it, you can't stop us.” See, the Giants were known for brawn and it was practically a given that their big ol' tight ends weren’t going to accelerate down the field for a pass. Instead they'd help the Giants trundle through the defenders. The Seahawks are different in that Willson and Helfet, our tight ends, are on the lighter, faster end of people able to play that position. Oh, they're not as fast as our wide receivers, Baldwin, Kearse and Lockett, but our “jumbo” would still look more like “trips,” which is why we typically don’t do this.
“Mesh” refers to the middle of the defensive line. You know, the place with all the huge guys that looks like pots and pans banging around if you don’t know any better. E.g. “Tukuafu plows into the mesh.”
“Pinching the D-line.” This sounds like a complaint a lady would make about a bra that doesn’t fit, but it just means to gather all the defensive guys together in the middle in order to jam things up there. E.g. “It’s first and goal. The Steelers are pinching the D-line so they can try to stop Marshawn Lynch.”
"Spread" (on offense) is when you have no tight end and no fullback (or possibly no halfback) and you have four wide receivers all spread out. Quadruple wide receivers. All this switching players in and out will hopefully help to clarify why the Seahawks get so many penalties for having too many players on the field.
“Shotgun formation” (e.g. “Wilson in the shotgun…”) No, he isn’t about to be launched out of a cannon. It refers to how long a "barrel" the quarterback is looking down. Shotgun means he is six feet back from the line of scrimmage and is looking down a long barrel. “Shotgun with an empty backfield” means the running back isn’t out there. “Shotgun single back” or “Shotgun with Lynch in the backfield” means just that. Lynch the running back is there with Wilson. “Shotgun double back” or “two running backs” means that Lynch and another RB, let’s say Rawls, are both there. They can help protect Wilson while he sets up a long pass “over the top.” Or they can run a few yards for a short pass “underneath.” This is the kind of versatile formation that the Seahawks love to do. It gives us many options.
“Pistol formation.” The quarterback is only three or four yards back from the line of scrimmage. So he’s looking down a short barrel. The pistol formation will never have an empty backfield. There would be no point in doing that. A pistol with an empty backfield would put the quarterback closer to the guys who want to clobber him, without offering the advantage of being able to hand the ball to the running back. So he’d have to pass from close up, which makes no sense. It'd do less than no good for anyone, but especially not for a short quarterback who has to work to see over the linemen.
“Read option.” A short way to say “Wilson runs the ball.” If none of the receivers are open and the quarterback reads that defensive end (guy defending the end of the opposing line) is distracted by something else, the quarterback will happily run around the line.

That concludes this article on football terms, but if you have questions about other terms that have become part of the scenery and you suddenly realize you don’t know what they mean, let OsQ know. 

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Seahawks vs Ravens

Today the Seahawks finished up 35 – 6 over the Baltimore Ravens.

Thomas Rawls was tackled badly and had his leg rolled under him for an ankle injury. They kept him out of the Ravens game and we're all waiting to see when he'll be back. Hopefully next week. He walked off the field and wasn't limping. They probably wanted to be absolutely certain about him precisely because we don't want to lose him. Better to be cautious and keep him out for one game-- and a game that isn't going to be the toughest of the year-- than have the season go wrong.

It's sad that Graham is out but that was not the worst thing that could have happened. Luke Willson is talented enough to play the position without problems and Helfet makes a good stand in. However, if Rawls was really hurt that would be a very bad thing for the Seahawks season. It is wise for them to be cautious with him especially since Marshawn Lynch had to have abdominal surgery and probably won't be back soon.

They are also cautious with Russell Wilson. If the Hawks are up by thirty near the end of the fourth, they'll take him out and put Tavarez Jackson in. Wilson remains watchful and serious on the sideline, of course, unless Richard Sherman comes over and makes him laugh. Which he does. You can see Sherm's eyes crinkle up as he's trying... and trying again... and then Wilson starts to laugh.

Baldwin and Kearse were amazing and Luke Willson was also competent.

Sherm got a pick. One of the Ravens grabbed his dreadlocks and used them to throw him down. Naturally that was a penalty. You can't do that. Afterward he was joking about it with his teammates and rubbed a young assistant's shaved head, and I agree with the local announcer that it looked like was saying "If I had hair like yours, that would have been a pick-six!"

Wilson was handing out touchdown passes like they were candy. After yet another to Baldwin (turning the Sherman pick into a touchdown), Baldwin and Wilson talked on the sidelines and appeared to have a moment: Baldwin was smiling but tearing up and scrubbing his face with the side of his hand. 


One of our OsQ correspondents raised questions about whether or not Wilson's athleticism would end up hurting him the way it did RG3 and and often does other mobile quarterbacks. I am encouraged by what I saw today. The Baltimore defense was very enthusiastic about shutting down the running game today... and so Wilson only ran the ball once, when he saw a big, safe gap because the defensive end had gotten distracted by something else. In other words he did not put himself in danger just because he's used to running the ball. That would have been so easy to do, to feel pressured because Rawls was gone, to take unrealistic responsibility and take risks. But he didn't. He was patient and made excellent use of his receivers instead.  

The Good News: 
The Seahawks made a decision to play for each other and have followed through to great effect. 

The Bad News:
Various injuries including Kam Chancellor's tailbone injury. OsQ is waiting to see who will return and when.

The Question:
Will the Seahawks continue to show this excellent combination of enthusiasm, versatility and in-game wisdom?

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Seahawks vs Cowboys - "Did anyone catch that play...?"

There were a lot of “WTF” moments in this Seahawks-Cowboys game, including a bizarre strolling touchdown call by Hill (correctly overturned), denying the Seahawks an interception (less correctly), Pete Carroll somehow getting away with having twelve men on the field, dubious first down calls, first down denials and more, causing puzzlement and irritation for both teams.
It makes a person wonder, it really does.


But at the end of the day, the score was 13 – 12, Seahawks.
Dez Bryant, the Cowboys wide receiver, had recovered from an injured foot and was back in the game. Not that it did the Cowboys all that much good. Richard Sherman played match up against Bryant instead of his usual zone defense and it certainly did pay off for the Seahawks. Sherman broke up play after play until Cassel quit throwing at him. After Sherman closed down a would-have-been touchdown from the Cowboys, the camera showed his trademark high-intensity glare into space until one of his teammates arrived to celebrate. Sherman can afford to talk a big game because he can back up every statement he makes.
While our outspoken cornerback did cost the Seahawks a significant return by Tyler Lockett with a holding penalty, it is OsQ’s opinion that Sherm’s performance against Dez Bryant more than made up for that. In fact, most corners would have had to hold several times and would have allowed myriad passes in a matchup against Bryant.
Our Ricardo Lockette was hit by Jeff Heath and fell like a rag doll. His eerily still, prone form was immediately circled by his teammates, who must have been relieved to find that it was not a spinal cord injury. 
Poor Jeff Heath looked sick as he watched the medics check out Lockette. The referees called it a blindside but honestly, I did not see a dirty hit. Heath was trying to put his shoulder down, the way he was supposed to do. Lockette was trying to put his head down, the way he was supposed to do. That is, he saw the hit coming and prepared for it, so it was not a blindside. The two guys were just the wrong height, angle and speed for Lockette to take a bad hit to the head.
In happier news, Russell Wilson took a few hits but he did not get sacked during this game, thanks to a much-improved offensive line. It is true that the offense was held to one touchdown and field goals. However, Russell Wilson mounted drives when it counted. Fans should be pleased to note that he spread the ball around, making use of Baldwin, Kearse, Luke Willson and Graham. This kind of versatility is one of the Seahawks’ best weapons as a team that relies on unpredictability and accumulated experience of working with one another. The more various things they are able to do, the longer they can keep the other team guessing and the more they can take advantage of other teams' weaknesses.

Wilson also took the read option several times for big first downs when the Cowboys took the bait and swarmed toward Marshawn Lynch.
In even happier news than that, the Hawks defense was ferocious. They were able to hang onto the lead given to them instead of crumbling in the fourth quarter, which has been their Achilles heel so far this season. In the last Cowboys drive with one minute on the clock and the Seahawks leading by just one point thanks to a late-game field goal, the combined efforts of the defense knocked Cassel back to fourth down and 21 yards… well out of field goal range.
The Good News:
The Seahawks have fought their way to 4 – 4, with two back-to-back road victories.
The Bad News:
Ricardo Lockette’s injury, obviously. The 12s are collectively hoping his concussion looked worse than it was. (update: according to Pete Carroll, doctors say Lockette did not suffer a concussion after all but they are still doing tests).
The Question:
Can the Seahawks keep their momentum to defeat the Arizona Cardinals, who currently lead their division?