IMO, 50% are probably on Dak but I'd love to see tape on all of them
Drops are drops, not bad throws. The QB is responsible for bad throws, but if it is a drop, it's on the receiver, not the QB.IMO, 50% are probably on Dak but I'd love to see tape on all of them
Drops are drops, not bad throws. The QB is responsible for bad throws, but if it is a drop, it's on the receiver, not the QB.
IMO, 50% are probably on Dak but I'd love to see tape on all of them
I've seen some of that in the past, but I didn't notice it being a problem last night.true but he's been behind too many crossing patterns, catch-able throw yes
The one drop that stuck out was the deep seam pass to cooper where he had both hands on the ball but he dropped it. It was a good pass.Drops aren't on Dak. I agree he had a rough night, but some of his passes were fine and they were dropped. WR's and Dak should share the blame for the rough offense last night though.
Drops are drops, not bad throws. The QB is responsible for bad throws, but if it is a drop, it's on the receiver, not the QB.
The one drop that stuck out was the deep seam pass to cooper where he had both hands on the ball but he dropped it. It was a good pass.
Every pass that a receiver gets his hands on is equal in difficulty and has the same catch-able percentage?It is Dak's fault that players can't catch balls that hit them in the hands?
Fascinating.
I need to go back and look at that one. Initially, I thought it was a drop, too, but I don't know if Cooper did more than reach for it enough to touch it with both hands. Not every pass a receiver touches is a drop.
The screen pass to Pollard and short pass to Witten were both clear drops.
Yes, but some bad throws are classified by some as drops.
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This was a dime by Dak Prescott that Amari Cooper has to catch. <a href="https://t.co/wgzSQuGFEG">pic.twitter.com/wgzSQuGFEG</a></p>— Marcus Mosher (@Marcus_Mosher) <a href="">November 5, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This was a dime by Dak Prescott that Amari Cooper has to catch. <a href="https://t.co/wgzSQuGFEG">pic.twitter.com/wgzSQuGFEG</a></p>— Marcus Mosher (@Marcus_Mosher) <a href="">November 5, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Some drops are likely thought by some as bad throws too. I think of "drops" as balls that can be caught without an extraordinary effort. The throw doesn't have to be perfect, and as long as the receiver can get both hands on the throw without the need to dive or for a dramatic contortion of the body, it has to be considered a ball that should be caught.
Looks like a classic case of hearing footsteps.
I was curious on the one down the seam to Cooper. First look made it seem like it was behind Cooper a bit but still should have been caught but they didn't show a replay, to my knowledge. Anyone have a clip of that one?
Every pass that a receiver gets his hands on is equal in difficulty and has the same catch-able percentage?
Fascinating.