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09.01.2019 14:04
ed from a December rookie stretch in which?he looked like a future star.To that mix, Minnesota added another weapon by using its Antworten

As our look at the starting quarterbacks from the 2014 draft class continues, todays progress report brings us to the most controversial quarterback remaining from that class. With Johnny Manziel out of football, that moniker belongs to Teddy Bridgewater for entirely different reasons. As Blake Bortles status rose during the pre-draft process, Bridgewaters stock fell precipitously. Thought of as a possible first overall pick during his final season at Louisville, Bridgewater tested out poorly and had what was widely regarded as a dismal pro day, leading teams to drop him significantly on their draft boards. He eventually fell to the final pick of the first round, where the Vikings traded up to grab him as their starting quarterback of the future.Since then, Bridgewater has put the pro day behind him and developed into a functional starter. In many ways, he is the antithesis of Bortles, even if their respective value and overall level of performance isnt entirely dissimilar. Bortles does things well that Bridgewater needs to work on and vice versa. And like Bortles, while Bridgewater has exhibited a set of skills that bode well for his future, there are areas of the 23-year-olds performance that might not be sustainable in 2016.Some of the pre-draft concerns surrounding Bridgewater have looked accurate so far. Others seem absurd. The list of overblown concerns begins with fears about Bridgewaters hand size. Bridgewater, you might remember, had 9.25-inch hands, which paled in comparison to those of passers such as Manziel, who had 9.9-inch hands. There were fears that it would be too easy to knock the ball out of Bridgewaters hands, and that he wouldnt be able to execute in a professional offense, particularly one that operates in cold weather.It is ironic, then, that Bridgewaters duties in Minnesota require him to do more with the football in his hands than any other quarterback Ive seen in the NFL. In terms of ball manipulation, Vikings offensive coordinator Norv Turner asks for a lot out of his young?QB. Bridgewater is liable to line up under center, in the pistol or in a traditional shotgun on any and all downs.Turner is a traditional coach, but he has updated his offensive attack to throw in wrinkles of the modern game. A fair number of Minnesotas running plays have the look of a run-pass option (RPO) immediately after the snap, with Bridgewater looking up for a moment as if hes going to throw a quick screen or quick hitch to a receiver on the outside before handing the ball off to Adrian Peterson. There are times where Bridgewater actually does have the option to make that pass, but I suspect many of these plays are designed runs that are supposed to merely have the look of a quick pass. See what I mean on this run against the Cardinals at 4:15.The rushing attack Turner has developed in Minnesota, probably in part compensating for a middling offensive line, is built around timing and slowing down the pursuit of opposing defenders. The Vikings discourage over-pursuit with the play fakes, freezing backside and secondary defenders, and bring blocking tight end Rhett Ellison and fullback Zach Line across the formation on wham blocks against those reacting defenders. The end result is a lot of plays where frozen linebackers and safeties have to try to?bring down Peterson with a full head of steam. That doesnt go well for them. You need a quarterback who can reliably hold onto the football for all those pump fakes and play fakes, and Bridgewater has grown comfortable in that role.As you might suspect in an offense with Peterson, the Vikings are a run-first team. The numbers put this in context. My best simple measure of what a team wants to do offensively is what it?calls on first-and-10 while the game is within two scores. Any more or any less and youre reacting to game situations.The most pass-happy teams are the ones you would expect: the Raiders, Patriots, Jaguars and the LeVeon Bell-less Steelers. The run-first teams were the Buccaneers, Bills, Rams and, to a staggering extent, the Vikings. The average team ran the ball 51.2 percent of the time in that situation. With Peterson healthy for the entirety of 2015, Minnesota ran the ball in those situations 66.5 percent of the time. Running the ball two out of every three times on first-and-10 is about as run-first as it gets in the modern NFL.Likewise, with such an emphasis on the run, the Vikings are heavily dependent upon play-action in stringing together their passing offense. The same principles of misdirection and timing that?freeze linebackers in run support also slow them down in coverage. As a result, they cant offer support in the short-to-intermediate range, where Bridgewater throws the vast majority of his passes. According to ESPN Stats &?Information,?27.3 percent of Bridgewaters dropbacks involve play-action, which was the highest rate in the league among starters. Anecdotally, Id say that number might even be low -- defining a dropback as play-action can mean different things to different people, and on the vast majority of his pass attempts, Bridgewater at least hints at a handoff or begins his dropback with the cadence and tempo of a running play.I mentioned short-to-intermediate throws as Bridgewaters bread and butter, and that represents the main criticism surrounding him: He cant throw deep. While I wouldnt say Bridgewater is incapable of throwing downfield, it is the most obvious hole in his game and one that is borne out by the data. Heres Bridgewaters career 2015?QBR split out by 10-yard zones, with the yellow line representing the line of scrimmage:Hard to get clearer than that. Bridgewater last season ranked seventh in the league in QBR on throws that?traveled 10 yards in the air past the line of scrimmage or less, sixth in the league on throws between 11-20 yards, and ... 30th on throws of 21 yards or more. If anything, he should have the element of surprise in hand on those downfield throws, given that just 9.6 percent of his pass attempts traveled 21 or more yards in the air, which ranked?29th in the league. Even the relative rarity of those throws doesnt matter. Vikings fans are probably screaming about how Bridgewater didnt have enough time to throw deep last year by virtue of the teams offensive line, but that didnt make a difference. When Bridgewater threw that deep on plays where he was not pressured by the opposition, his QBR was 31st in the league. That actually improved to 18th when he was pressured on bombs.There was one possession in Week 17 against the Packers in which?Bridgewater left as many as three touchdowns on the field by missing on deeper throws. The worst of those three passes was on a simple go route by halfback Jerick McKinnon, who motioned out of the formation late and was matched up one-on-one on the outside against Packers inside linebacker Jake Ryan. This is a touchdown with a good throw or a 50-yard gain with an adequate one. Instead, Bridgewater overthrew McKinnon by two yards:He then missed tougher throws to MyCole Pruitt and Jarius Wright to finish the drive, which ended in a field goal.Passers can succeed by dominating in the short-to-intermediate range, but their margin for error is small. Tom Brady and Alex Smith manage to pull it off by virtually eliminating turnovers, which is one of the next steps Bridgewater?will have to take. His interception rate dropped from 3.0 percent as a rookie to 2.0 percent as a sophomore, and it will have to continue going south for Bridgewater to continue advancing as a pro. Both Brady and Smith have routinely posted sub-2 percent rates in recent years.You also need excellent decision-making in close situations, and while Bridgewater was wise beyond his years in terms of his propensity for throwing the ball away when nothing was open, he did make the sort of mistakes that come early in quarterbacks careers. He threw an interception with his left hand while trying to avoid a third-down sack against the Packers in that crucial Week 17 contest. Weeks earlier, he took a brutal strip sack with 13 seconds to go against the Cardinals?while the Vikings were in range to try a potential tying field goal attempt. To be this sort of quarterback, Bridgewater cant make those sorts of mistakes.In all, Bridgewater finished the season 13th in QBR, but that also overstates where he stands around the league as a passer. The Vikings dont ask for a lot out of their young starter in terms of volume. Minnesota finished last in the league with only 454 pass attempts last season; throw in sacks,?and just 51.2 percent of their play calls were passes last year, ahead of only the Panthers and Bills.Bridgewater?had games in which?he looked phenomenal and just didnt have to do very much. Take his best game of the year per QBR, which came in Week 2 against the Lions. Bridgewater posted a 98.5, which was the fifth-best game for any starting quarterback of the 2015 season. Looking back at that game, Bridgewater really was close to perfect: his throws were all in stride, he scrambled effectively, and when the Lions got pressure, Bridgewater took the right steps to avoid sacks. He also had to throw only 18 passes. Two of his four incompletions were drops, but Bridgewater still finished with only 153 yards and a passing touchdown to go with a fourth-and-goal scramble for an easy score. Thats not Bridgewaters fault, but on a cumulative basis, a quarterback who played slightly worse on each given play but threw 40 passes would be more valuable and productive, just like how a shooter who takes 30 shots and hits 35 percent of them is more valuable than one who hits on 40 percent but takes only 10.Theres one other fascinating part to Bridgewaters season that hell need to repeat in 2016: Both he and the Vikings did great work on third down. By down, both Bridgewaters individual QBR and Minnesotas offensive DVOA as a whole were significantly better on third down than they were on first or second down:That didnt manifest itself in terms of overall conversion rate, strangely: Minnesota converted 34.0 percent of its?third downs, which was below the league average of 36.2 percent. Instead, as the new Football Outsiders Almanac 2016 noted, the Vikings were great on third-and-short, which is probably a product of Peterson?and teams fearing what AD?can do as a runner.While the Vikings have helped Bridgewater by giving him an excellent running back and a sound offensive scheme with an effective coaching staff, the next step is protecting their young quarterback. Bridgewater came out of school with a reputation for having preternatural pocket presence and ability to execute around pressure. The Vikings have done their best to test those reports. In part because of the absence of center John Sullivan and right tackle Phil Loadholt, each of whom missed all of 2015 because of injuries, Bridgewater spent too much time running for his life last season. He was pressured on a league-high 36.6 percent of his dropbacks, beating out even the perpetually bothered Russell Wilson.It doesnt help that Bridgewater held the ball for 2.81 seconds before his average pass, which was second longest in the league behind Tyrod Taylor, who was throwing far longer passes. Taylor had the second-longest average pass in the league at 10.3 air yards per throw; Bridgewater averaged 6.7 air yards per pass, which was 33rd and ahead of only Matthew Stafford and the aforementioned Smith for the shortest typical pass in the league. Bridgewaters patience can be a virtue as he cycles through his reads, but slow and short is a tough combo to pull off.Minnesota has taken strides in helping out Bridgewater, even with Loadholt retiring this summer. It?signed Andre Smith, who figures to step in as the starter at right tackle, and added Alex Boone as an upgrade at guard. The Vikings are?still hoping that left tackle Matt Kalil returns to the form he showed as a rookie, but they should be better elsewhere along the line. Ellison, a crucial blocking component both in the running and passing games, will himself need to recover from a torn patella suffered at the end of the season. His absence could be telling.General manager Rick Spielman also has given Bridgewater a deep group of receivers, even if theres no yet-obvious star among the bunch. Many of them have flashed brilliance at times, even if they havent yet put it together for even a full season. Stefon Diggs?last season averaged 105 receiving yards across his first four professional games before slowing down. Charles Johnson, for whom he took over, had 355 yards over a six-game stretch in 2014. Oft-injured tight end Kyle Rudolph stayed healthy and played all 16 games for the first time since his Pro Bowl season in 2012. Wright and McKinnon have been useful secondary weapons. The Vikings are even complimenting Cordarrelle Patterson, who isnt that far removed from a December rookie stretch in which?he looked like a future star.To that mix, Minnesota added another weapon by using its?first-round pick on Laquon Treadwell, who might end up as the weapon Bridgewater needed most. Treadwell probably isnt going to be the downfield threat?who might open up the offense by virtue of a lack of top-end speed, but the DeAndre Hopkins comparisons Treadwell received before the draft speak to what his role might end up looking like in the years to come. Bridgewater is proving that he can work through his progressions and put throws in stride to his receivers, arm strength be damned. Treadwell is the sort of big-bodied physical receiver who is going to create easy targets and steady chunks of yardage for his quarterback.The Vikings didnt draft a downfield burner like Will Fuller to try to change their offense, and in the long run, I dont know that trying to change Bridgewater and molding him into another style of quarterback is the right move. Quarterbacks do occasionally pick up another few octanes of arm strength -- Bradys enormous leap after college at Michigan being the most notable example -- but chances are that the quarterback weve seen with Bridgewater is the style of passer hes going to be moving forward.And if thats the case, the Vikings shouldnt be disappointed that?Bridgewater isnt Aaron Rodgers. Theres still some refining to be done, but the obvious comparison for Bridgewater is the post-Jim Harbaugh version of Alex Smith, who dinks and dunks his way to a consistently effective and successful offense by making smart decisions and avoiding turnovers. Thats a valuable player, especially right now, given that Smiths $17.9 million cap hit is $16 million ahead of Bridgewaters ($1.9 million). His ceiling isnt as high as that of Bortles, but based on what weve seen so far, Bridgewaters floor looks to be higher. Site Air Max 95 Pas Cher . -- On the field, it was business as usual for Jameis Winston and No. Air Max 95 Pas Cher Solde . Deulofeu injured a muscle in his right leg in Evertons 4-1 win over Fulham in the English Premier League on Saturday. Barcelona says that its team doctors will "co-ordinate" with Evertons medical staff as Deulofeu recovers. http://www.airmax95france.fr/ . Most important, perhaps, it went off without a hitch. Organizers poked a little fun at the now-infamous opening ceremony gaffe that saw only four out of five snowflakes open up into rings, leaving the Olympics logo one ring short. Achat Air Max 95 Pas Cher . - Raiders general manager Reggie McKenzie never doubted he would bring back coach Dennis Allen for a third year despite back-to-back 4-12 records. Vente Air Max 95 . "I was fortunate to play many years at this level with a great organization and unbelievable teammates," said Hejduk in a statement. TAMPA, Fla. -- South Florida co-offensive coordinator T.J. Weist will lead the 25th-ranked Bulls in the Birmingham Bowl following coach Willie Taggarts departure to Oregon.Taggart resigned Wednesday to take over a program that appeared in the national championship game just two seasons ago. He went 24-25 in four years at USF, including 18-7 and two bowl berths the past two seasons.Weist will serve as interim coach the rest of the season, which concludes with a Dec. 29 matchup against South Carolina in the Birmingham Bowl.Meanwhile, athletic director Mark Harlan said a national search for a permanent successor will begin immediately.We will work quickly, but with careful thought and discussion to find our next football coach. ... I want to thank Willie Taggart for the leadership, energy, and excitement he brought to our program over the last four years, Harlan said, adding that the strides the Bulls made under the former Jim Harbaugh assistant both on and off the field speak for themselves.Taggart lost 21 of his first 28 games at USF before going 17-4 over his past 21.We now have the foundation of our football program in place, school president Judy Genshaft said. We have a terrific group of student athletes who are laser-focused on the Birmingham Bowl and next yearrs season.ddddddddddddTaggart leaves USF (10-2) with four seasons remaining on a five-year, $9 million contract he received for turning around a program that fell on hard times after climbing as high as a No. 2 ranking in 2007. The deal he received last winter included a provision for a $1.7 million buyout.The Bulls won a school-record 10 games this season -- losing only to Florida State and Temple -- with quarterback Quinton Flowers and running back Marlon Mack leading Taggarts high-paced Gulf Coast offense.The Oct. 21 road loss to Temple cost the team the American Athletic Conference Eastern Division title and an opportunity to play in last weeks AAC championship game.Weist, completing his first season at USF, shared offensive coordinator duties with Darren Hiller.The trajectory of USF athletics is strong. It has elevated the spirit of our campuses as well as our national profile, USF Board of Trustees chair Brian Lamb said. I know that the young men in our football program will continue to be highly successful on the field and in the classroom.---More AP college football: www.collegefootball.ap.org and https://twitter.com/AP-Top25 . China NFL Jerseys Cheap Nike NFL Jerseys NFL Jerseys Cheap Wholesale NFL Jerseys Cheap Basketball Jerseys Online Stitched Hockey Jerseys Wholesale Baseball Jerseys Football Jerseys Outlet College Jerseys For Sale Cheap MLB Jerseys Wholesale Soccer Jerseys Wholesale Jerseys For Sale Wholesale NFL Jerseys ' ' '

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