So during my lunch I see that Bayhawks listened to his Monday morning show before chiming in. It sounds like the hosts are warming to Bryant a little now that Bayhawks has softened stance, but I don't buy that they need to run the ball more, or that they didn't try to run the ball when they should have. Sounds like typical local radio time filling chatter.
And if you are going to call that 80 yard TD a blown assignment in prevent D (it wasn't), you still need to ask yourself why it happened? Was it because Brown was getting extra attention? Pause at the 45 second mark of this link
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/gamechannel?app=st&lid=187779&gid=331&tid=
Let's not lose focus here by arguing which coverage it was. Does it matter if he was facing prevent D and overpowered it with his speed or facing one on one coverage with the 2nd best corner on the team and burned him (which is what he will be facing most often)? He has the speed/height to produce under both situations Either way it supports the argument for Bryant scoring many more TDs in the future, but let's breakdown the play anyway just for fun.
In nickel coverage with bracket focus to Brown, Jets rushed 4, with 1 LB (#52) spying the left side of the field and one (#58) spying on the right side covering short routes, screens or run plays. Obviously these 6 defenders will not play a role in covering Bryant or Brown on this play as they are part of the pass rush and coving short routes/runs. that leaves 5 defenders. How are they utilized? Heath Miller is at the 35 yard line, middle of the field with 1 defender, Wheaton is at the 32 on the right side with 1 defender and this route is short enough that #58 is cheating towards him. That accounts for 8 defenders and leaves 3 defenders left to defend Brown and Bryant. Guess who got double covered? You can see if you pause at :47 Brown was near the 45 yard line on the right side with double coverage focus. Also you can see Brown is facing press coverage at the los to begin the play, so the deep defender also moved toward Brown on this play for bracket coverage. Don't be fooled into thinking this was a broken play with missed assignments on prevent D. #26 is running back towards the ball when Bryant catches it near the :50 mark, but Ben has released the ball 4 seconds ago so he has been running from his bracket coverage on Brown for 3-4 seconds already. As far as the play was concerned
everybody was on assignment and covering the person they were supposed to be covering. Bryant just beat his defender so bad it looked like blown coverage to the laymen. He was left with one on one coverage.
This is going to be the modus operandi going forward and a big reason why Bryant's situation is ideal. Not only will he be facing the 2nd best corner on each team, but he will be facing them in one on one deep routes that pay huge fantasy dividends. This isn't CAR where he is the WR1 and being double or triple covered on every play. You cant do that with Brown on the other side and Bell in the backfield catching short passes. You can;t take all three away. He is going to be facing the 2nd best corner in one on one coverage, guys like Adams who (runs a 4.5) was burned like a roman candle on July 4th.
Ben must be credited for this TD, as he extended the play, but he did miss Bryant badly on 2 other deep balls from the pocket so this makes up for those poor throws. Also when Bayhawks discounts Bryant as only having had 63 yards (he had an 8 yard screen pass play called back because of a Wheaton penalty which would have put him at 71 yards), Brown had 74. So please don't insinuate he wasn't producing up to WR1 standards for the team going into that last catch. He was pretty much matching Brown's yardage on the day before the 80 yard TD. This isn't a situation where Bryant got one late game target during a blowout late in the game for a lucky 80 yard TD. He had 1 RZ target on a costly turn over, and had two other high value targets on deep routes that were missed (2 were also hit), but pretty much the only offensive success yesterday was going through Bryant. If not for the 4 turnovers, all the WRs would have had more opps for yards/TDs at that point in the game.
So let's move on to the whole "they need to run the ball more" argument. The funny part about saying they should focus on the running game more is
they did focus on the running game in the beginning of the game and on key RZ plays. It just wasn't working. Most of the other non Bryant passes were for short yardage chain movers or during 2 minute offense, dinks and dunks to move the ball quickly down the field seeing as how Pit was behind by multiple scores. Bell was not effective in receiving 8 check down recs for 33 yards (4.1 ypc) which I classify as a slightly more risky extension of the running game. The actual running game totals ended yielding 11/36 from Bell and Blount ran for 5/0 (16/36 2.3 ypc), but as bad as those stats sound, it's even worse than those stats indicate.
They didn't really go to Bryant until they experienced lack of success in the running game. He didn't receive his first target until halfway through the 2nd quarter (a poorly thrown ball INT at the 2 yard line), but he did end up receiving the most potentially high value targets by the end of the game. This is important to understand for all the people thinking he got a lucky garbage time TD and that was all. He had plenty of other high value targets that didn't hit, two deep balls and 1 RZ target. If Brown didn't muff the punt, they would have had another drive before the end of the half to try and score, but instead they got it back with only :52 seconds to run the 2 minute offense (Bryant doesn't see the field yet in 2 minute offense) so Bryant got 1 lonely target in the 1st half, but it was a RZ target at least. Most of the focus was running the ball with short passes sprinkled in to move the chains.
Second half opened with a target to Bryant, a catch then they went back to 2 minute offense and Bryant came off the field again and the drive ended with another poorly thrown ball to the Jets defense. Next drive opens with a pass deep to Bryant and ends with a deep pass deep to Bryant, both poorly underthrown by Ben, no fault of Bryant.
Next drive opens with a deep ball to Bryant, another underthrown ball, but nice adjustment by Bryant for a 45 yard catch. They dink and dunk from there to get to the RZ. This time they go to Bell exclusively on the next 4 RZ plays from the 18 mixing 2 runs and 2 short passes. Doesn't work. The drive ended when they "tried to run the ball" on 3rd and 1 from the 4 yard line to lose a yard before missing the FG. Would a fade to Bryant be a better choice? Bryant received no RZ looks on this drive. *shrug*
Next drive Bryant involved again on a screen pass but Wheaton's penalty calls it back. Also received another target on an out pattern that Bryant didn't catch, couldn't tell who's fault this was from the angle of the camera on condensed game, might have been a drop. Anyway they dink and dunk to get to the RZ again and it goes down like this:
Bell runs from the 16 to the 14 for 2 yards (Bryant on sidelines). Pass to Brown for 13 yard gain to the 1 (Bryant was on the field for this play). Note that the only successful play in the RZ came with Bryant on the field taking some attention away from Brown. 1st and goal from the one. Pass to Harrison!?!?! WTH (Bryant not on field), maybe it was a target to Miller. I am guessing Harrison screwed up. Defense roughing the passer penalty makes it moot point. Now its on the half yard line 1st and goal. What do they do this time? Run Blount in I formation for half yard loss with Harrison as the lead up back blocker (desperation?). 2nd and goal from the 1. Run Blount for -8 yards. Getting the theme here? These were jumbo formations with no WRs on the field. They have no running game with either Bell or Blount in the RZ under ideal short yardage conditions for converting a TD.
They are helplessly ineffective trying to run the ball from 1st and goal from the half yard line in a manner that is comical. Equally comical is their running game in the red zone. They were net negative -8.5 yards on 3 runs from Bell/Blount on short yardage plays where they only needed a half yard on one play for a TD, a single yard on 3rd and 1 inside the 3 for a 1st down, and a single yard on 2nd and goal on the 1. THEY DO NOT HAVE A SHORT YARDAGE POWER RUNNING GAME!!! This has been the theme all year. In space Bell is a good runner, but in space Brown/Wheaton/Miller/Moore are also good options. So those guys on the radio calling for Pit to return to their glory days of running the football have no idea what they are talking about and in turn neither do you since you listen to them and regurgitate their nonsense. The only success they have to score is to throw the ball. Bryant is their best RZ option with Miller as the 2nd option.
Back to the drive ... after Blount ran for -8 we have 3rd down from the 9 and we see 3 wide formation, sending out the 3 munchkins Brown (5'10 186) / Wheaton (5'11 182) / Moore (5'9 190) and we get an incomplete pass to Brown at the goal line that had a zero chance of being a TD even if caught. Bryant saw the field on only 1 of the 6 RZ snaps and wasn't targeted on any with the only play that had any success being the one where Bryant was on the field. They went run (Bell)/ pass (Brown)/ pass (Harrison)/run (Blount)/ run (Blount)/ pass (Brown) and ended up with 3 points. When they review this tape, they will realize that Bryant was worthy of at least one RZ target on a fade route down there, and that might have given Pit 7 points with 9 minutes left in the ball game for a score of 10 to 20. That earlier missed FG from the 4 yard line really hurt as well because that would have put them at 13-20, and Bryant's late game TD would have been for the tie, but that's a lot of ifs. The morale of the story is PIT did try to run the ball and they couldn't budge the line up front for half a yard on multiple tries near the goal line. Think this is the reason they don't have many rushing TDs? If they cant score from inside the 1, how can they from inside the 5?
Overall I think this was a good game for Bryant's future going forward. They had no scoring success with Bryant on the sidelines and if you count Wheaton's penalty play, Bryant actually got 8 targets this game, which is the most he has seen along with another uptick in snaps. If he can learn the 2 minute offense then he should see a large increase in his production. Overall, there really are few negatives you can point to during Bryant's 4 game trend as a rookie, his targets, snaps, usage are all trending up or being sustained under ideal conditions, but as we saw last game, even under non ideal situations he still put up WR1 numbers in spite of only receiving 8% of the RZ targets. The only negative I can point to is I don't like how he only got 1/13 RZ targets this week, however, seeing as they were unsuccessful to the point of comedy in the RZ running game and how the other WRs/TEs were also not effective in the RZ, one can only hope that this brings into focus how effective Bryant has been in the RZ and should refocus the coaching staff back to using what is successful, Bryant in the RZ.
This is staring the coaching staff right in the face after losing to the Jets like they did. They left their best RZ weapon on the bench for 10/13 RZ looks. They have had a lot of success going to Bryant in the RZ and he should have received more that one target, or at least have been on the field during those 10 RZ looks as a decoy instead of on the bench. They need to get it through their head that while Brown is their best WR between the 20s, Bryant, not Brown should be the WR on the field in the RZ. Brown is small and not an elite RZ target like Bryant.
This is a guy that has scored 40% of the TDs over the past 4 games. They went away from Bryant this game in the RZ and tried to run the ball and it got them nada. Calling for more ineffective running is not the answer. The guys on the radio should have been calling for more Bryant in the RZ, not more running. I believe after watching the tape the coaching staff will go back to more Bryant in the RZ going forward.