https://images.wisconsinhistory.org/...05009333-l.jpg
Murphy and McCarty out with the Wash Water? Are they tied at the hip?
Printable View
https://images.wisconsinhistory.org/...05009333-l.jpg
Murphy and McCarty out with the Wash Water? Are they tied at the hip?
http://www.packersnews.com/story/spo...le/1021107001/
Dougherty: Can Mike Pettine succeed? Answer's simple
Pete Dougherty, USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin
Published 6:07 p.m. CT Jan. 10, 2018 | Updated 6:25 p.m. CT Jan. 10, 2018
http://www.packersnews.com/story/spo...se/1022846001/
Podcast: Draft alone won't fix Packers' defense
Packers News Published 5:54 p.m. CT Jan. 10, 2018 | Updated 5:54 p.m. CT Jan. 10, 2018
I actually agree with wist on this one - 3rd down efficiency is pretty important. I'd also put Quarterback passer rating allowed up there, along with points allowed as among the most important defensive metrics.
GB has let pedestrian QB's have QB ratings over 100 too often lately...
Forcing more punts gives ARod more chances to work his magic, and less points given up by the D is an obvious part of the game.
I too agree with Wist that the three-and-out was the rarest of rare occurrences with DC's defenses.
My own sense of Poutine is that we'll see instant and significant improvement in that defense, whether or not Guttykut drafts an OLB in the first round. Sorry, Tex. Too many years of guys in the back end throwing their hands up in confusion and frustration after some pedestrian wide receiver ends up catching the ball thirty yards downfield, no Packer defender within ten yards of him.
The more I marinate on Pettine, the more I wish we would have poached Fangio.
Fangio has really never put a bad defense on the field. Very impressive. When Pettine's defenses fell apart, they did so in Capers fashion. They were called complicated, lacking adjustment, and poorly tailored to the talent on the field. The league trends are to be simpler with an emphasis on reliably putting a hat-on-a-hat as Seattle assistants spread through the league. We seem to be going against the grain.
That's my fear too. He had some fearsome talent on the front end (especially in Buffalo) for pass rush and that Jets D was loaded.
He still produced some middling results although being that low for yardage and high for scoring does mean the team had some self inflicted wounds.
I hope he picked up a few things in Seattle. His Cleveland D was pretty bad.
Copied from somewhere else but Fangio has had bad defenses.
By his fourth and final year in Carolina as DC, his defense was 30th in the league in yards and 27th in points.
By his third and final year in Indy as DC, his defense was 29th in the league in yards and 31st in points.
By his fourth and final year in Houston as DC, his defense was 31st in yards and 32nd in points.
His only true outstanding years as a DC were with the 49ers, but look at the talent he had on those teams - he had Justin Smith, an at-worst Hall of Very Gooder, anchoring the defensive line, and then four!!! All-Pro LBs.
Looks like there’s a pattern. Players not schemes. The best schemes are done in by pedestrian players.
A lot of people have questioned whether Clay Matthews is worth keeping around at his salary. A case for keeping him with Pettine coming in.
http://packerswire.usatoday.com/2018...thews-in-2018/
Quote:
Pettine likes to play multiple fronts, with disguised blitzes and coverages. It’s a scheme that could help revitalize Matthews’ ability to disrupt, possibly even as a pass-rusher.
Former NFL safety Jim Leonhard recently described Pettine’s defense as flexible and creative. That sounds exactly like what Matthews needs. He needs a playcaller capable of finding the right matchups and creating the right situations for playmakers to take advantage. The days of Matthews lining up every down on the edge and beating left and right tackles all afternoon are gone. Get him moving around and good things happen. Pettine will find ways. It’ll be one of his top priorities.
Ideally, the Packers would love for Pettine to find Matthews the perfect new role and inject some life into his game, all while grooming a young rookie – presumably a top pick – to be the defense’s next true difference maker.
Clearing a big chunk of cap space is a tempting scenario, but the Packers will be better off in 2018 with Matthews on the roster.
Maybe Petite can revive the "W" position for Matthews. Maybe. But the above reminds me that Jim Leonhard learned at the feet of the master.
He has been doing this for a while. He has spent a good deal of time at ILB on run downs in nickel and rushing from the interior on pass downs.Quote:
The days of Matthews lining up every down on the edge and beating left and right tackles all afternoon are gone. Get him moving around and good things happen. Pettine will find ways. It’ll be one of his top priorities.
There are many ways to do this but I don't think, other than surprise until its on film, will this revitalize his career. The problem is that unless Perry is healthy, CMIII is still their best playmaker in the front seven. And best pass rusher.
One of Pettine's strengths is supposed to be using multiple fronts and disguising coverages. I had the sense this past year that the Packers under Capers were doing a poor job of disguising things. Seemed like teams kind of knew what was coming. An example was the devastating effectiveness of screen passes against the Packers defense. Screen passes should only work that well against certain defensive calls.
swapping one complex system for another...
https://m.popkey.co/107488/OwVql_s-2...=search&f=.gif
pre free-agency/draft prediction for 2018... ummmm...8-8
Swapping one complex system for another is about the best we can hope for. Pettine sounds like he's a lot like Capers. That's exactly what maximizes any defense, and it's exactly what a team with mediocre personnel needs to present an adequate NFL defense.