I was looking at McCarthy's bio, and found an interesting stat. The only NFC team he has a losing record against is the San Francisco 49ers at 3-4. There are some teams that he's .500 against and/or hasn't played that often, but I thought it was an interesting stat.
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Interesting McCarthy Stat
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There is one consistency I wish he would abandon.
Scott Kacsmar @FO_ScottKacsmar Aug 11
Sample table from Arizona chapter of FOA 2016: Arians is off the charts
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Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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There has been no shortage of late game breakdowns by the defense, that is true. But I fault the offense much, much more for most of the recent ones. Going back at least to the 49er playoff game at Lambeau.Originally posted by hoosier View PostWell, you can't have everything. And lately, in games that really matter, it has been the defense that has collapsed last and loudest. Maybe that is what you get when you annually field the youngest team in the league.
The defense kept the team in the game at home versus the 49ers, at Seattle in the NFCCG and at Arizona. In the first a finally healthy team still had not solved the 49er defense for the third game in a row, in the second McCarthy gave the Seahawks three additional possessions (Bostick gifted them a fourth). In Arizona, he should have tried a 2 point conversion in a one point game that his offense sniffed the red zone twice and was, except for two gifts of hail marys, completely ineffective.
There are other numerous examples. So I give Capers credit for improvement, but McCarthy is going backward. His late game management has never been strong, but his unit isn't dominating like it did.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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The offense has to take its share of the blame, sure, but is it really McCarthy and his play calling in each case?
Arizona: In hindsight I agree, going for two was the right call. But in the heat of the moment I saw things differently: the Packers had outplayed a superior opponent for much of the game (if Shields holds on in the red zone they basically have the game won), they've just scored and they have all the momentum. Kick the PAT and go to overtime seemed like a reasonable call.
Seattle: I agree MM got conservative in his play calling, and I would have liked to see him go after Sherman at least once to test him. But if the defense doesn't give up two quick scores or if Bostick does his job, the game is over and MM's conservatism looks very smart.
San Fran: the offense was very disappointing. But was it play calling or execution?
The common denominator in Packer playoff losses since 2010 has been that Rodgers and the offense hasn't been able to duplicate its 2010 roll. How much of that is MM and how much is Rodgers and/or leaky pass protection?
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It took an extraordinary set of circumstances to get beat in Seattle, and the Packers D had a hand in letting them convert. Not saying D is blameless. But you do lose some battles, its inevitable.
McCarthy possessed the power to limit possessions by gaining first downs. He chose the Schottenheimer method of run-run-run to maximize the guaranteed clock or TO run off and ignored probabilities. Any play action had a better than 70% chance of succeeding because the Seahawks were all in on stopping the run. Not to mention that their safety and CB were beaten up.
I am not blaming execution or play calling alone, I am also calling out horrendous 4 minute offense and clock management.
I can't agree that the Packers out-played the Cardinals except Packers D versus Cardinals O. Packers D was the only reason the game was in reach. The offense spent no time in Cardinals territory. When they got back down there, you take the opportunity. I agree hindsight in 20/20, but its a sound strategy regardless if your offense is anemic.
The Packer D in OT is another matter that should be addressed. I want to say it has failed uniformly and across the board. But that is just anger at the content of my own post speaking.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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Except the Cardinals decided not to do the run-run-run method and it almost cost them the game. If GB went for 2 or won in OT, Arians is getting his butt chewed up and down for throwing away time to try for the 1st down.Originally posted by pbmax View PostIt took an extraordinary set of circumstances to get beat in Seattle, and the Packers D had a hand in letting them convert. Not saying D is blameless. But you do lose some battles, its inevitable.
McCarthy possessed the power to limit possessions by gaining first downs. He chose the Schottenheimer method of run-run-run to maximize the guaranteed clock or TO run off and ignored probabilities. Any play action had a better than 70% chance of succeeding because the Seahawks were all in on stopping the run. Not to mention that their safety and CB were beaten up.
I am not blaming execution or play calling alone, I am also calling out horrendous 4 minute offense and clock management.
I can't agree that the Packers out-played the Cardinals except Packers D versus Cardinals O. Packers D was the only reason the game was in reach. The offense spent no time in Cardinals territory. When they got back down there, you take the opportunity. I agree hindsight in 20/20, but its a sound strategy regardless if your offense is anemic.
The Packer D in OT is another matter that should be addressed. I want to say it has failed uniformly and across the board. But that is just anger at the content of my own post speaking.But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
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Sure. But that is hindsight and its unhelpful unless you have enough plays to look at the probabilities of possible outcomes. If the Packers were guarding against the run, that was a good call.Originally posted by ThunderDan View PostExcept the Cardinals decided not to do the run-run-run method and it almost cost them the game. If GB went for 2 or won in OT, Arians is getting his butt chewed up and down for throwing away time to try for the 1st down.
I don't remember the Packer D on that play. But I do remember the Seattle D lined up to stop the run entirely. Running three times without even the threat of a pass was just dumb. You are literally ceding a possession to them in exchange for clock. The Seahawks needed possessions more than they needed the time/TO that he was able to subtract.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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Seattle needed both time and possessions that late in the game. If Bostick doesn't fuck up it is game over. It was OK from the Packers point of view to give an extra possession. Bostick gave them the extra extra possession them need. Plus the fucking 2 point conversion fiasco that should have never happened.Originally posted by pbmax View PostSure. But that is hindsight and its unhelpful unless you have enough plays to look at the probabilities of possible outcomes. If the Packers were guarding against the run, that was a good call.
I don't remember the Packer D on that play. But I do remember the Seattle D lined up to stop the run entirely. Running three times without even the threat of a pass was just dumb. You are literally ceding a possession to them in exchange for clock. The Seahawks needed possessions more than they needed the time/TO that he was able to subtract.
So in summary, the Packers gave Seattle an extra possession and 2 points more than they should have using the run-run-run method correctly as they did.But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
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DPOriginally posted by pbmax View PostSure. But that is hindsight and its unhelpful unless you have enough plays to look at the probabilities of possible outcomes. If the Packers were guarding against the run, that was a good call.
I don't remember the Packer D on that play. But I do remember the Seattle D lined up to stop the run entirely. Running three times without even the threat of a pass was just dumb. You are literally ceding a possession to them in exchange for clock. The Seahawks needed possessions more than they needed the time/TO that he was able to subtract.But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
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Good, keep it up! Now do you have some material for the San Fran wildcard loss? We need to distract PB and keep his mind from wandering into forbidden territory.Originally posted by ThunderDan View PostSeattle needed both time and possessions that late in the game. If Bostick doesn't fuck up it is game over. It was OK from the Packers point of view to give an extra possession. Bostick gave them the extra extra possession them need. Plus the fucking 2 point conversion fiasco that should have never happened.
So in summary, the Packers gave Seattle an extra possession and 2 points more than they should have using the run-run-run method correctly as they did.
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