He just isnt cut out to be a pocket passer, plain and simple. He cant run the ball too much because for some reason every time he gets tackled his body just seems to crumple in on itself. Without the zone read opening up the middle of the field for Garcon he's pretty much useless. The problem with RG3 is he either gets sacked, throws a ball to a guy wide open, or tosses a bomb down field. Kirk at least threw more TDs than interceptions and he had zero fumbles (10 scores vs 9 turnovers). He threw 4 TDs and scored one rushing TD (5 scores vs 10 turnovers). Speaking about turnovers, people dont seem to mention RG3's fumbles. Gruden benching Cousins for McCoy was just a flat out mistake. Colt McCoy should have never played a single down because he just has no potential at all. I mean from what Ive seen Kirk is the only dude that can throw with anticipation from the pocket. Remember that during the first eagles game, the eagles scored on a kick off return (compare that to the 2nd game with RG3 where the eagles missed like 3 field goals): During the Giants game the Giants offense scored on like every possession they had in the first half basically, so Kirk pretty much played two possessions behind most of the game. Kirk didnt get much help from his team either. Otherwise plan for a first round top 5 pick QB next year of Christian Hackenberg, Cardelle Jones, or Connor Cook. Just because of the perceived higher ceiling with Robert Ill give him this season to prove it. Can either one achieve their ceilings while here in DC? I have my doubts about Robert and think Kirk has zero chance. He simply isn't a good QB and you say it would take years to correct Robert the same argument could be said for Kirk while I'd consider Kirk to have a CONSIDERABLY lower ceiling than what Robs is. You can do this with most of his games and when he plays teams for a second time his first half numbers go down. In the second half adjustments came and he was 6/13 121 0tds 4 int. In the first half he was 14/19 151 1 TD and a fumble. They know they don't need to blitz to get a dumb throw. That's why his sacks are much less than other QBs. ![]() Teams started dropping LBs underneath routes sitting on his eyes with CBs playing off man coverage. If there is not a man directly covering his first read he is going there nearly 100% of the time. He has a unbelievably small field of vision. How much pressure was the QB them self responsible for?Īre you curious to know why Cousins struggles in the second halves of games? Teams adjusted more and more to him. The QB play was so bad and inconsistent last year its hard to judge Pass Blocking accurately IMO the jury's still out on Lauvao, while Chester is a short term but not a long term solution r/redskins has been very critical of our Guards so I'll let you duke it out. PFF measured Chester & Lauvao as above average pass blockers. It looks like our RT gave up the most pressure, then RB's and TE's. To compare our pass blockers by adjusting them to the same scale, here are their PBE percentiles among their position (>50% snaps to qualify): Anyone that pass blocks can give up QB pressure, so we'll look at RB's and TE's too. More QB pressures come around the edge, so Centers give up the least QB pressures, and Tackles give up the most QB pressures. ![]() Among qualifying Tackles, Andrew Whitworth had the highest PBE at 98.7, while Tom Compton had the lowest at 92.4.īut we can't compare PBE among different positions because they give up different amounts of pressure. Pass blocking can be measured by PBE (pass blocking efficiency). Who was more responsible? The pass blockers or the QB?ĭisclaimer for you PFF haters: this is quick (and perhaps inaccurate) but gives a general picture of who gave up the most QB pressure in 2014
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