Tag Archives: Matt Flynn

The Cove: Dolphins dead in the water

Either the Miami Dolphins have given up on the 2012 season already, or they know something we don’t know (which is likely the case).

That’s the only logical way to explain the moves, or lack there of, so far in free agency.

Now, we can postulate all we want without knowing the full story, but it’s not hard to see that new coach Joe Philbin has already lost a couple of wagers in his pursuit of this season’s top quarterback free agents.

Peyton Manning, who was all but guaranteed by the national media to the Dolphins when it became apparent the Colts were cleaning out the closet, obviously wanted to go to a team that didn’t suck and one where he wouldn’t have to play Tom Brady twice a year.

Matt Flynn, who has an established relationship with Philbin from their time in Green Bay, decided to sign a contract with Seattle where he’s all but guaranteed to start over Tavaris Jackson.

With those two off the market, Miami took the next logical course of action… and signed David Garrard. Yes, the guy who got cut before the start of last season. Yes, the guy who hasn’t hiked a ball in over a year. Yes, THAT DAVID GARRARD.

Hello, Miami. I'm here to seduce you. Uh, I mean save you.
Photo Credit: ESPN.com

Looking at the last few years of management moves from the Dolphins, they have been in a constant state of rebuild even before their dismal 1-15 season. When Bill Parcells came aboard in 2008, he came with a basic fundamental: that any good football team has to be able to protect the passer (JEEEZ, THANKS FOR THE ADVICE, BILL! HERE’S A FEW MILLION AND A NIFTY TITLE TO GO WITH IT).

In the years since, the Dolphins have made countless moves at offensive line and really only ended up with three decent players: Jake Long, Mike Pouncey, and Richie Incognito. They’ve focused on the offensive line for five years — is now the time to find the franchise quarterback?

To look at Garrard as anything but a back-up or a veteran presence for the youngblooded Dolphins is foolish, and neither he or Matt Moore will be Miami’s quarterback of the future. Plus, the loss of Brandon Marshall has left a void in the offense that couldn’t be filled with all the Legadu Nanee’s of the world.

The way I see it, this Thursday’s draft is a defining moment for the Dolphins, and could make-or-break the team before the season starts.

Does the team draft David DeCastro or Riley Reiff, adding a sure-starter to what is already a promising, but still lacking, offensive line?

Do they go with a talented wide receiver, such as Justin Blackmon or Michael Floyd, paired with Nanee to replace the void left by Marshall?

Maybe they draft a promising pass rusher, filling a hole recently left by the departed Kendall Langford?

Maybe they draft a kicker? I hear Finkle is available.

These are questions the Dolphins management should ask before going with the forgone conclusion of Ryan Tannehill. As BVI put it last week, why blow your load on a QB that isn’t ready, that obviously needs to be developed, when other aspects of the team need just as much work?

But all signs point to Miami drafting Tannehill. Come Thursday, the Dolphins will either be giving up on the 2012 season, or they know something we don’t know. Can you guess which mindset the fans will have?

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A QB Controversy in Seattle?

Other than the starter, I'd put him first on the depth chart

I have read my share of speculation this offseason already about how Matt Flynn is going to help rejuvenate the Seahawks and make them relevant in the NFC.

None of these articles were written by Pete Carroll.

Recently the Seattle head coach announced that Tarvaris Jackson is the starter going into camp, which somehow was not followed by a laugh track.  I have already stated on this site that I don’t think that Flynn is the savior that a lot of people think he is, but this is a confusing statement by Pete.  It is well documented that Jackson is well liked in the locker room, but if this QB competition is at all close and they don’t go with Flynn it will most likely be a mistake.

Flynn is a mostly unknown commodity (two career starts) but Tarvaris isn’t.  We know he is inconsistent, which kind of seems like a nice way of saying “bad” in this instance, and we know that he hasn’t stayed healthy.  Even if Jackson plays at his very best this season, I don’t think a lot of people are going to be blown away by his ceiling.  Flynn on the other hand has the potential to be a franchise quarterback.  Despite his limited experience, he has sat behind and learned from Aaron Rodgers for a few seasons and has gotten rave reviews from scouts and management alike.  Skeptics would point out that Kevin Kolb had a very similar situation, but every quarterback is different.  Would the Seahawks rather win 8 games this year with Jackson (that was a generous estimate, by the way) and miss the playoffs or have Flynn go through some growing pains, and come back next year ready to make a serious run?

There is a very good chance that this statement from Pete is just lip service and he intends to go with Flynn barring a catastrophic offseason and pre-season performance, but he has put himself into a corner here.  If Jacksonplays slightly better than Flynn in a few pre-season games and doesn’t get the starting job, he is going to look bad in the locker room.  A lot of fans have a traditionalist idea that every position should be up for grabs, but this just seems like a situation where you say “we signed Flynn to be our guy, and now he’s our guy.”

In the end Seahawks fans probably don’t have anything to worry about, as my previous scenario involves Tarvaris Jackson actually playing well.

Note: Stay tuned this week for plenty of draft coverage!

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Guest Post: Play Your Starters

If you read our website with regularity you are familiar with Thomas Holzerman whose own work includes the highly entertaining The Wrestling Blog and his new project Holzerman Hungers, a food blog.

As many of you know, I have shut myself in my apartment with ice cream, liquor, and Super Bowl 45 clips the last few days after the Packers devestating loss to the New York Giants.  Today Thomas talks about one possible theory as to why the defending champs looked as bad as they did.

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"Just a quick reminder: please don't drop the ball like a jackass today. Thanks!"

There have been eight playoff games so far this postseason. Seven of them were won by the home team. Anyone chance to guess who the loser was? Well, if we were predicting before the playoffs, that answer almost unanimously would have been the Denver Broncos losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers in their first round game. Yeah, that didn’t happen. One game that would have had more people surprised at the result would’ve been the Giants taking out the Packers at Lambeau Field. Yet, the Giants, they of the 9-7 record in the consensus worst division in the NFC, went into Lambeau Field and trampled on any thought the Pack had of repeating as Super Bowl Champions.

For anyone who watched the game, it’s hard to say that the Packers could’ve done anything remotely close to beating the Giants. As much as it pains me to admit, Eli Manning has become an elite passer, and he has a set of playmakers at wide receiver, led by Hakeem Nicks, who pretty much made the Packers’ secondary his personal bitch. Then again, if all these guys were in jail, the way that unit played for Green Baywould have totally driven down the number of cigarettes they would’ve fetched. Then again, that’s been the Pack’s MO all year. They give up gobs of yards and then answer back with gobs of their own. They end up snagging some turnovers to make the margin of victory seem like they were blowing the other team out of the water, and bam. That’s how they went 15-1 despite being outgained in yardage over the course of the regular season.

So, where was the yardage from the high-octane offense led by Aaron Rodgers? It was conspicuously absent, thanks to a few things. Fumbles were the biggest cause of this power outage. Luck plays a huge factor in how fumbles are recovered or even caused. In some cases, the forced fumble is something that can only be prevented by better blocking. Case in point, the fumble caused by Osi Umeniyora on the Pack’s first drive in the third quarter could only have been prevented if he was blocked at the line of scrimmage, and let’s face is, blocking him or Justin Tuck or Jason Pierre-Paul is easier said than done.

However, the OTHER big reason why the offense stalled was in the passing game, via both dropped passes and uncharacteristically mistimed throws by Rodgers. Both are symptomatic of being out of rhythm, and given that Rodgers hadn’t played for two weeks before Sunday’s game, it’s easy to see how the offense might fall out of sync. Rhythm and timing are real things to a NFL team; they’re just not really measurable by any statistic we have. It’s all about the eye-test, and judging from watching the game, Rodgers’ rhythm was off on more than a couple of passes that would have kept drives alive.

The dropped passes have been a problem that plagued the Packers all year long, not just in this game. One only needs to go back to the other game they lost, against the Chiefs, to see how badly drops can impact that offense’s ability to go up and down the field like the NFC All-Pro team in 7-on-7 drills against a local high school. That being said, the way to minimize drops is to keep having reps at game speed. The fact that Greg Jennings was the only significant Pack receiver to miss Week 17 is irrelevant to me, as Rodgers is the key here. Matt Flynn is NOT the same QB as Rodgers, even if he put up more impressive stats in that one game than Rodgers did in any single performance he had in 2011. Two weeks without seeing and catching passes from the director of the offense at game speed is crucial.

That begs the question why the Packers would even think about resting Rodgers, knowing they had a bye locked up. Was there really that much of an injury risk? No, unlike Ben Roethlisberger, Rodgers has been healthy all year and was at no point a risk to miss any time due to injury. Why prepare for something that has as much a chance of happening as it did in any other game during the season? The answer is that the Packers already clinched as much as they could have and wanted to go into the playoffs well-rested. The thing with that reasoning is that the Packers had already clinched one week of rest. There is absolutely no correlation that states anything more than one week does an otherwise healthy team any better.

There are examples of teams that let their starters rest over the course of garbage time games and who advanced far into the playoffs. The 2004 Eagles are the best recent example I can think of (mainly because I’m an Eagles fan, duh), but the thing to realize about the NFC in 2004 was that it was a terrible conference. The only competition the Eagles had came in the form of the Atlanta Falcons, whom they were guaranteed to face only if they made the NFC Championship Game (which they did). That was not the case in 2011, as the only team that the Pack could’ve faced in the Divisional Round where a lack of rhythm wouldn’t have hurt them as much would have been the Falcons. The Lions and especially Giants were (and in the case of New York, still are) dangerous teams.

Meanwhile, teams that choked their asses off are more memorable. Look at all those Colts teams that took their foot off the pedal, especially the one that seemingly gave up its chance for a historic undefeated season to give its players rest. They were one and done. History is pock-marked with examples of teams who rested failing. I don’t have the advanced stats in front of me, but I don’t think there’s a strong correlation either way.

Meanwhile, the most famous pedal-to-the-metal team, the 2007 Patriots, made it all the way to the Super Bowl, which we can all agree is better than going one-and-done. Plus, if Asante Samuel doesn’t drop an easy interception or if David Tyree doesn’t miraculously bail out Manning on the game-winning drive, we’re talking about an undefeated season. There was no systemic reason the Pats lost other than it’s really hard to go undefeated and the Giants defense that game played better than any team the Pats had beaten that season, including those same Giants in the last week of the regular season. Meanwhile, while the Giants defense played as inspired Sunday as their 2007 ancestors did in that Super Bowl, the Packers still left enough points on the board to make it closer than the 17 point margin would have indicated.

So, if there is no correlation between resting and winning in the playoffs, then why rest players at all? There is a STRONG, non-football reason against rest – the fans. Yes, fans like you and I and Ben and Nate all plunk down obscene amounts of money to watch football. We pay for tickets, merchandise, parking, cable packages, catering for parties, gas money and whatever other expenses anyone can think of to enjoy football. It’s entertainment. Yes, the NFL exists only to entertain the fans. So, why should we spend our time and money on something that is promised to us as regular season-level of football when we’re getting players who only get playing time in the preseason? In any other business, that kind of tactic is called a bait-and-switch. It’d be one thing if Rodgers or the players in question were hurt, but if they’re all healthy, then the team is doing its paying customers a major disservice by sitting their players. Other industries have far better track records. To make a callback to where I usually write, WWE offered rebates to their fans on their house show tickets after Randy Orton got injured. They went above and beyond what I’m asking football teams to do because they understand that they’re a customer service outfit first. Obviously, this comparison is a little disingenuous since football is very much an outcome-based sport, while wrestling is more full-contact theater, but the idea is similar.

I might understand the reasoning if resting starters actually helped, but there’s no reason to suggest it does at all. Furthermore, it seems in this isolated case, the two-week layoff for Rodgers and by proxy his receivers hurt the team more than any extra rest would have. It’s hard to second-guess the management of a team that had just won last year’s Super Bowl, but at the same time, fortune favors the bold, and no one likes complacency. If a team has a chance to win, they should do so at all costs. Playing to avoid unlikely injuries is not the way to do so.

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