Idgit;4166808 said:
To the OP, I more or less agree with the assessment of the play if you isolate it and analyze it, this pick was a tight ball and a great play by the CB. My problem is with the fact that we didn't need to be risking the ball on a throw like that at that juncture in the game. *Especially* after the awful pick-six into double coverage that had just preceded it. Of all times, we needed to protect the ball on that drive, establish some momentum, and take the high-percentage throws and play field position and the clock. Instead, we forced a throw into tight coverage to a new WR and threw a bucket of accelerant onto an explosive offense. It was about the one thing we could not do at that point, and we did it. Both our coach and our QB are responsible for it; especially the QB.
My apologies for the delay. I was still inside the thread and saw your reply, but thought best to cobble up some images quickly to better illustrate my answers.
The pass was thrown into tight coverage created by the wide receiver. Basically, the only time a quarterback should consider writing off the quick slant is when: a) the cornerback immediately jams the receiver as he releases from the line of scrimmage; or b) when the quarterback reads the cornerback looking into the offensive backfield.
Good examples of the latter can be provided by interception opportunistic cornerbacks such as Assante Samuel and Darrelle Revis. The key to a quarterback's read of the cornerback's read of the offensive play would be his positioning.
In example one below, the cornerback is positioning himself face up and parallel to the line of scrimmage. A quarterback would read this as the DB not peaking into the backfield for the quick pass.
http://i356.***BLOCKED***/albums/oo4/DallasEast1701/449493bf.jpg
http://i356.***BLOCKED***/albums/oo4/DallasEast1701/d2f68413.jpg
Example 1
In example two, the cornerback has positioned himself to face slightly diagonal (sp?) in relation to the receiver and the line of scrimmage. The key for the quarterback would be the DB's stance.
The DB can hold this stance and maintain power in his backpedal once the receiver releases on the snap and make a step towards the quarterback immediately if the ball is thrown in his direction. Samuel exaggerates his feet positioning in this fashion a lot in man-to-man schemes.
http://i356.***BLOCKED***/albums/oo4/DallasEast1701/449493bf.jpg
Example 2
As shown in the video before the snap, Houston is clearly positioning himself primarily for receiver coverage and not for the interception.
Haha. I drew those feet so close together that they look like they have been hogtied. :laugh1: