While it’s “possible”, Wilson and the Seahawks were committed to throwing the ball. Some have argued that Wilson should have kept the ball and tried to run it or go through his reads. Maybe if Lockette fought off Butler this would have been an incompletion instead of a INT, but I feel like Butler’s full acceleration and jump at the ball was greater than any additional strength Lockette could have mustered to stop the interception. Chandler Jones was on him from the start of the play and his only role on this play was to clear the linebackers which is why his “shoot” route was on the complete opposite side of the field.īevell was quoted in saying that “Lockette could have been stronger through the ball.” – While I agree with this, I don’t personally think this was the game changer here. Some have argued that “Lynch was open.” He was open for the slightest of moments AFTER the ball was thrown. ![]() Give credit to Butler and Browner for making a great play, but more importantly, give credit to Belichick and NE’s DC Patricia for recognizing the play and teaching their defense how to attack it. The fault was the decision to throw it, the physical throw, but not the mental aspect of “looking off a CB” or something. He took the snap and immediately threw the ball. It’s a designed pick route that the Patriots KNEW it was coming. People are saying that “Wilson telegraphed his throw.” No. Remember in a league where the talent disparity is so minuscule that even an undrafted rookie can make an impact. BUT the key here is that Kearse HAS to be able to interfere with Butler’s coverage responsibilities. Some people are instantly throwing Bevell under the bus, but from a pure objective standpoint this is a good play on goal line when you have man-to-man coverage across the board plus a larger WR going up against a rookie undrafted CB. Simply by studying the tape they knew a rub route was coming on this goal line play. Instead he leads him too much on a quick slant route over the middle of the field. Wilson sees his receiver and leads him too far up the middle allowing Butler to jump over the back of Lockette for the interception.Īt the point where Wilson snaps the ball and Kearse can’t interfere with Butler, he needs to throw the ball at the feet of Lockette or throw it low and behind his target so that Butler can’t make the play. Lockette steps forward and runs a slant route to the middle of the field. Once Browner jams Kearse, Butler is free to attack Lockette’s route. This is an amazing jam that set up the play for Butler. Kearse’s goal is to interfere with Butler’s man-to-man coverage responsibilities on Lockette, but Browner stops Kearse immediately at the line. Wilson snaps the ball and Browner immediately jams Kearse on the line of scrimmage. Pick plays work best against man-to-man coverage and that’s exactly what NE was showing here. ![]() This signals man-to-man coverage at least where Revis is concerned since none of the other defenders switch or move around they don’t “re-adjust” their zones if they are playing zone coverage here. ![]() Wilson motions Baldwin across the formation and Revis follows. This is a very standard defensive call against twins stack. The Patriots have Revis directly over Baldwin and Browner playing shallow on the twins right with Butler directly behind. Pre-snap, Wilson is in shotgun with twins stack right with Baldwin in the slot. Offensive Grouping: 11 (1 RB – Lynch, 1 TE – Willson, 3 WR – Lockette, Kearse, Baldwin)ĭefense Formation: Cover 1, Man-to-man coverage across the board Offense Formation: Shotgun Twins Stack Right Near
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