He played...unfortunately. I think Bishop was in for 2 plays. Why Mitchell and Erin are playing and Bishop isn't makes me wonder even more about our coaches.jackal wrote:I did notice the players slipping on the field and saw some changing out on the sidelines..
A good team would have that all set up ahead of time and have the players test their equipment
in warm up i thought ..
Did Erin Henderson play this week I didn't see him make a single tackle ..
WTF were you thinking
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Re: WTF were you thinking
Re: WTF were you thinking
Five tackles, according to a stat sheet that I just looked at.jackal wrote:Did Erin Henderson play this week I didn't see him make a single tackle ..
How about Sharrif Floyd? Credited with one assist. Did he do anything else? QB pressure, batted balls, step on anyone's ankle?
Re: WTF were you thinking
I think their strategy was probably to score a TD.Hunter Morrow wrote:That whole series was stupid and cowardly. They didn't have the BALLS to stick with a winning strategy. 4 run plays or 4 passes is a winner's strategy there for different reasons but run pass run field goal punt they get it on the 40 is a losing strategy.

I did think squib kicking the ball after the FG and conceding good field position to the Bears was a questionable strategy but I realize that's subject to the same second-guessing as the previous series of plays. I know Hester was killing them on returns but I would have either kicked it away from him or just had Walsh kick it as hard as he could and told the special teams unit to make damn sure they didn't allow another big return. If Hester had made a big return, at least the Bears would have earned the good field position instead of the Vikes handing it to them. If he'd returned it for a TD... well, the Vikes would have had time on the clock to engineer their own game-winning drive.

It's all very easy to criticize in hindsight but in the end, the only decisions in those crucial late game situations that don't get criticized and second-guessed are the ones that work.
Re: WTF were you thinking
I agree with you. I think the more questionable call was running on 2nd and 23 on the previous drive when the game was tied that also ended in FG. It is very easy to second guess. But I also agree with you that this was a fun game to watch, now that I watched it on NFL game rewind condensed, I love that feature (other than the parts of the broadcast that cut out altogether and were not available on game rewind, very strange to have that happen).Mothman wrote:It's all very easy to criticize in hindsight but in the end, the only decisions in those crucial late game situations that don't get criticized and second-guessed are the ones that work.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
I agree with going for it on 4th down. What I don't get is why they passed on 2nd down. If they were worried about the clock, then run it 3 times and then pass on 4th down since the clock stops on a change of possession.
Been discussed though...
Been discussed though...
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Re: WTF were you thinking
I don't think it's a mystery. They called a play they thought would work for a TD. If not for an excellent job by Anderson, it probably would have worked.mansquatch wrote:I agree with going for it on 4th down. What I don't get is why they passed on 2nd down.
I think they were probably more concerned with scoring than with the clock. In all likelihood, they were trying to go against the very tendencies people are reinforcing in this thread. They faked a run, thinking they could catch Chicago thinking "run" and tried to catch the Bears off guard. if it had worked, I doubt anybody would have second-guessed the call or wondered why they passed at all.If they were worried about the clock, then run it 3 times and then pass on 4th down since the clock stops on a change of possession.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
Not to beat a dead horse, but my take also was that the Vikings played ultra-conservatively on their last drive. One pass play with exactly one receiver in the pattern is not exactly aggressive. Yes, the Bears' linebacker covered it well. But that was the only attempt to do anything but hope Adrian would somehow move the pile I to the end zone.
What is the downside to throwing on third down? A stopped clock? The lead still would have been six points, and the Bears still would have needed a touchdown. Who know? We might have actually had more time left on the clock if/when the Bears scored.
I know there are arguments on both sides. But it really reeked of playing not to lose, or at least of hoping your rather porous defense could get a stop. I'm not ready to fire the coaching staff over it, but I do disagree with the strategy.
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What is the downside to throwing on third down? A stopped clock? The lead still would have been six points, and the Bears still would have needed a touchdown. Who know? We might have actually had more time left on the clock if/when the Bears scored.
I know there are arguments on both sides. But it really reeked of playing not to lose, or at least of hoping your rather porous defense could get a stop. I'm not ready to fire the coaching staff over it, but I do disagree with the strategy.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
Completely agree. If there's over 3 minutes left and you have 1st and goal, you shouldn't even be worrying about the clock. Chicago completely screwed up the 2 minute warning and still had plenty of time.J. Kapp 11 wrote: I know there are arguments on both sides. But it really reeked of playing not to lose, or at least of hoping your rather porous defense could get a stop. I'm not ready to fire the coaching staff over it, but I do disagree with the strategy.
Re: WTF were you thinking
I think it's fair to question if they were running Peterson because they were worried about the clock or if they were running him because they score a lot of TDs that way. It did seem like a conservative call on third down.Crax wrote: Completely agree. If there's over 3 minutes left and you have 1st and goal, you shouldn't even be worrying about the clock. Chicago completely screwed up the 2 minute warning and still had plenty of time.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
Moth my objection to that play call is based in the fact they played the clock game on 3rd down. That was stupid IMO. If you want to burn their TO, then run it all three downs and burn them.
Regardless, the FG was the more agregious call IMO. If they had planned to do the squib kick to Hester, then why go for 3 since you are conceding the filed position battle? That is the biggest blunder. Logic would seem to indicate that pinning them on the 4yd line would be hte better tactic even if you come away with zero points. Obviously that has been beaten, but they are not above the criticism IMO. That is the WTF moment for me.
Regardless, the FG was the more agregious call IMO. If they had planned to do the squib kick to Hester, then why go for 3 since you are conceding the filed position battle? That is the biggest blunder. Logic would seem to indicate that pinning them on the 4yd line would be hte better tactic even if you come away with zero points. Obviously that has been beaten, but they are not above the criticism IMO. That is the WTF moment for me.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
It just felt like they were more worried about running the clock than scoring on that last set of downs. I could go along with Mondry's strategy as well. Do one or the other. They seemed to end up doing a half assed job of both.Mothman wrote: I think it's fair to question if they were running Peterson because they were worried about the clock or if they were running him because they score a lot of TDs that way. It did seem like a conservative call on third down.
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Re: WTF were you thinking
they ran peterson because we have a high school qb. allow me to ask, what good will 6-10 or 7-9 do us when we have no franchise qb? we need draft position, we are easily the worst team in our division a win here or there won't do us much good long term.
Re: WTF were you thinking
Well, as I said above, I think it's fair to ask if they ran Peterson to "play the clock game" or because they thought he gave them a good chance to score. Like the previous play, it arguably goes against what the Bears might have expected on that down.mansquatch wrote:Moth my objection to that play call is based in the fact they played the clock game on 3rd down. That was stupid IMO. If you want to burn their TO, then run it all three downs and burn them.
That doesn't make sense to me.Regardless, the FG was the more agregious call IMO. If they had planned to do the squib kick to Hester, then why go for 3 since you are conceding the filed position battle? That is the biggest blunder. Logic would seem to indicate that pinning them on the 4yd line would be hte better tactic even if you come away with zero points. Obviously that has been beaten, but they are not above the criticism IMO. That is the WTF moment for me.
If they run on 4th down and don't score, they might pin the Bears at the 4 yard line but the Bears have to drive 5-10 yards less to get into FG range and send it to OT than they did after the squib kick. I understand why Frazier would opt for the 2 score lead in that situation but I also understand why a coach might go for it and try to put the game out of reach on 4th down. I guess I just don't see a WTF moment in the whole series. I think there were lots of options, many of which could have worked. The wrong choice is the one that fails but at the time the coach makes it, he has no way of knowing it's the wrong choice. After the fact, we do. I would have been more aggressive on the first 3 downs but I still would have kicked the FG on 4th down.
Suppose the Vikes had run the ball on 4th down, failed to gain anything, given the ball to Chicago at the 4, and then let them march into FG range as easily as they ended up letting them score that final TD. Then suppose the Bears kick the FG and go on to win in OT. Do you think anybody would be second guessing the choice to pass on an almost certain 3 points in that scenario?
Let's face it: the right call is the one that wins the game. Anything else is going to be second-guessed.

Last edited by Mothman on Tue Sep 17, 2013 1:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: WTF were you thinking
But I think it only seems that way because they failed.Crax wrote: It just felt like they were more worried about running the clock than scoring on that last set of downs. I could go along with Mondry's strategy as well. Do one or the other. They seemed to end up doing a half assed job of both.
If Peterson takes that last carry into the endzone, are we questioning the call now? No way. We've seen him run it in from 4 yards out too many times. Nobody would even think twice about it. They'd just rejoice in the win.
Heck, I doubt we'd even be talking about it if the defense had just done their job on that final Bears drive.
Re: WTF were you thinking
I'd prefer just going for the TD or going for the clock wasting. The vikings ended up with neither. I felt it was already likely the Bears had a great chance to score a TD with over 2 minutes left. Ignoring whether they scored or not, what do YOU feel is the correct strategy in this situation? You say that maybe that run by Peterson was trying for the score on 3rd down, but it didn't really seem that way to me.Mothman wrote: If Peterson takes that last carry into the endzone, are we questioning the call now? No way. We've seen him run it in from 4 yards out too many times. Nobody would even think twice about it. They'd just rejoice in the win.
It's first and goal from the 6 with 3:33 left in the game. What strategy do you employ? If you pass on 2nd down, you aren't running the clock correctly. If you're going for the TD, is running on 3rd and 4 really the right call?
Well, that seems even less likely than hoping for the offense to get a TD there at 1st and goal from the 6.Mothman wrote: Heck, I doubt we'd even be talking about it if the defense had just done their job on that final Bears drive.