I think this is incorrect. From my research 2/3 jet are 6 man pass pros. It’s west coast verbiage. Scat means 5 man pass pro in the west coast world that’s what we see on video. What jet protection means is that half of the line is slide protecting while opposite side is pretty much man on man with the RB on a duel read from Mike to the nicke. I’ll explain this video. Based on your pre snap drawing, the LT, LG, and C are sliding to their left. The RG and RT on man on man unless there’s a stunt. The RB is responsible for two players. He is responsible for the LB #57 first then the nickle who you can barely see on screen. He is on a duel read. If everybody blitzed, then the RB would get #57 and the nickel would be the person unblocked since the defense is bringing 7 guys and there’s only 6 blockers. There’s muliple ways you can block things up, but team use this method so you have your RB blocking LBs and DBs rather than blocking DEs. This is probably confusing to figure out over a RU-vid comment, idk who will see this, but there’s awsome RU-vid video going over 6 man pass pro. Pass pro means pass protection
If it was scat pass protection then Jones would be into the pattern right away and wouldn't be looking for the 5th rusher (you can see him delay and look inside). backs still check release on jet. Thanks though.
What’s the defensive personnel for this? 3 IDL 2 Edges 1 ILB 3 CBs and 2 Safeties? Asking because I think the eagles are going to be running a lot of these penny fronts this year and I’m trying to learn more about them.
It’s a 3 DL/3 LB/5 DB defense. The two wide DEs are on the ball LBs with a LB in the middle of the formation (59 walked out over #3 in trips). The 3 DL are two 2 DT’s and traditional DE. Secondary is in nickel. Here’s the article the video is in. www.acmepackingcompany.com/2022/9/22/23366479/packers-film-room-penny-front-defense-puts-the-pressure-bears-quarterback-justin-fields It’s a Fangio-style system, GB’s old DC is off that coaching tree. The Eagles have been running Fangio-style scheme since at least 2022 when Fangio was an advisor to the defense that year.
This one is the one that kills me. I don’t understand cmc you’re the best rb in the league. All time greats DO NOT FUCKING FUMBLE THE FOOTBALL IN THE BIGGEST GAME OF THEIR LIVES! It just sucks man because I knew we weren’t winning that game after that. Subscribed lol I haven’t looked at your full inventory but if you don’t have them already you should upload the Trent Williams penalty in the 1st qt of the SB. The other one is where greenlaw gets injured. 🥴
Stupid Post. He Pulled. Do You KNOW That He Wasn’t Supposed To? This Dude Is A Stud. Few Penalties. Fewer Sacks Allowed. Who Plays The Left Side In The NFL, Starts Every game, And Sucks? NOBODY, That’s Who. He’s A Rock
Would have liked to see Purdy throw to Jennings, who ran a deep in at the 25 and was open. That said, I love that CMC made a last-second adjustment to block Chris Jones, who had beaten LG Banks quickly on the play (I like Banks, but CJ just whipped him here...as CJ often whips everyone he plays against) and I love the step-up in the pocket by Purdy. The reality of the throw to Deebo was that he was just well covered by McDuffie. I note that Sneed got away with shoving Aiyuk to the ground here.
Buddy that was literally his assignment, you never leave a guy inside unblocked. Not even the center has the power to fuck up the assignments like that
@@kja6336buddy wtf are you talking about? "Leaving a guy unblocked on the inside" would have been leaving a defensive lineman(Chris Jones) unblocked. Say what you want about Banks missing his assignment, but calling a blitzing linebacker an unblocked guy on the inside means you don't know what you're talking about.
@@rjmadrid05you're the one that needs to "learn ball." Who talks like that? That's a dead giveaway that you don't know what you're talking about. Sure, a small part of this is Banks not accounting for Chenal,(entirely different than missing his block, his block was Chris Jones) but Purdy not checking the blitz and CMC not chipping Chenal are more responsible for Chenal than Banks is. There's also another consideration that's called reality. It's hard for many to comprehend, but there's such a thing as the opposing team making a damn good play rather than the other team "blowing it." This was a beautifully designed blitz from Spagnuolo and perfect timing from Leo Chenal. You whiner fans really are something else aren't you?
@@nickjg1587 You also don't know what you're talking about. Look at the direction the OL slides away from the center. Banks is the only one who goes the wrong way. They're all down blocking/fanning out to the side away from the puller. You can go read the articles at the video description for more detail. I don't have time to hand walk you through this process. Learn the game and do your own homework.
No Penality, Just the PERFECT defensive play. There's 70 cameras on the Super Bowl field, had there have been holding? The NFL New York Office would have relayed any holding to the field of play. That Simple...
Despite being very 'handsy', Aiyuk beat Sneed pretty consistently (not all the time). That catch by Ray-Ray should have been a long TD to Aiyuk instead.
More than 80% of these plays Aiyuk is open because the ball is already in the hands of another receiver and the DB covering Aiyuk leaves him to make a play on the ball.
@@rjmadrid05 You can use all the fancy words you want like leverage and route concepts but the tape don’t lie he was covered like a blanked almost the entire game. Just because a DB is trailing him doesn’t mean he’s beat, Purdy made the right reeds and decisions. How many of those plays did he throw incompletions? Hardly any besides the ones near the endzone. According to your logic you understand leverage and concept routes, but I guess Purdy has no clue because he went somewhere else with the ball…right!
@@demetrigomez9360 He did, but that is seldom called these days, unless it is blatant (like the receiver jumping up to try and catch a ball and one of his arms is pinned and the defender is still on the ground, making the arm hook obvious to see). I would've like Deebo to simply stop a step sooner than he did and try to high-point the catch here. McDuffie probably runs into him for a PI call in that event.
@@lifeaintbadshorts It's the smart thing to do. If you're a receiver and the defender is right on your heels bearing down on you, stopping before jumping will almost always draw a flag, if the ball is deemed catchable. I played WR, so I know that. Deebo just needed to be a bit savvier there. Jerry Rice would have drawn a flag (or caught the pass). I still give McDuffie credit for his coverage.
Not sure why BA slowed down on his route. If he keeps his pace, he has a chance at the ball, even though Purdy could have thrown a better ball (2-4 feet left of where it landed).
Actually Purdy was hitting deep throws all year. In fact he had best deep throw percentage all year. Jimmy never had a 63 percent deep completion percentage Purdy did it. His intermediate passing was 70 percent. So I don’t get the narrative Purdy throws like Jimmy. Purdy isn’t the reason Niners lost. The oline couldn’t protect Purdy at all. Kyle called some stupid plays. The defense game plan softened up in the second half. Yes Greenlaw was out but Wilks also called some of dumbest plays I have ever seen. Running a cover zero. Kyle had call a timeout
BA slowing down had nothing to do with that.... SMH GUYS BA slowed down on that play. Misscommunication. I guess all three of you commenting here dont know how to football BP leads the league in so many categories its not even funny! But he is just slightly better than JG hahaha! Clown talk boys. How about go watch some film yea?
@@rjmadrid05 Yes BA slowed down. At first while the game was live I was like WTF. Then the retake on the play showed the full story. BA was to continue increasing his speed on the play. Plain and simple he let off the gas.
@id05 Rich, are you telling us our eyes are lying? Of course he slowed his route. He's another step, maybe two, closer to the ball if he keeps his pace. This reminds me a bit of Emmanuel Sanders in Superbowl 54. Sanders slowed his pace (the defender caught up to him) and the ball landed 3 or 4 yards past him. If he runs through the ball and makes a diving attempt, who knows?
@@rjmadrid05 yes he did you can see that he kind of second guessed where he wanted to go once he was passing the corner seemed like he was going to go out to the corner even with that had he not slowed down he still would've just slightly missed him not as bad as it looked but still a miss
McKivitz thinks he has help inside but Feliciano steps down the wrong way as the Chiefs defensive tackle backdoor slants against the run game, leaving McKivitz to try and step back inside to make the block. Usually, those two would combo block before McKivitz would move to the second level to block a linebacker.
After watching all of your footage, my biggest takeaway is 1. the Chiefs D-Line generally beat the Niners O-Line, & 2. Kyle shouldn't pull guards or centers for play-action vs the Chiefs. There was one clip where it was zone blocking, not only was there no penetration, but the play action worked in drawing the linebackers toward the run.