IrishViking wrote:
The Chili special?

Good name for it. OTOH, I hate to think the Vikings ever go back to Chili Ball.
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IrishViking wrote:
The Chili special?
OMG. Teddy is better than Aaron Rodgers. That much is clear to me now. Whew! Now I don't have to worry about things.Boon wrote:
not really saying much other than slow down folks.
dead_poet wrote: OMG. Teddy is better than Aaron Rodgers. That much is clear to me now. Whew! Now I don't have to worry about things.
Boon wrote:
Well, it IS a good point...mansquatch wrote:Jim, I'm the one of the folks who has been making that point 5 or 6 times.
... and that team lost a lot of very close games. If they'd won most of those games, they might have been another example of one of those teams that win in the margin. Interesting stuff! thanks for sharing it.After the 2012 campaign I heard a bit from Nate Silver about how to spot good vs. lucky football teams. Essentially his case was that teams that win in the margin, ie wins by 3 or fewer points may not be as good as their record. I think the 2012 Vikings were an example of this, especially since it took a historic campaign from AP just to get to the playoffs. The 2013 season makes the case also... man that defense was BAD.
I feel the same way. It's almost eerily similar (but the defense is better... at least to this point).This squad is similar to that group in many ways. The QB inadequacy vs. the potency of the rushing attack is deja vu. I will argue that the defense this year is superior to the 2012 group, but the 2012 group wasn't bad, it finished in the top half of the league. So very similar.
So let's look at our close games this year, we've had 4:
KC, STL, DEN, and CHI. We went 3-1 in that stretch which probably means we should be a 6-3 team vs. 7-2. I might argue that we should have beaten SF to bring it back up to 7-2, but we didn't. We'll go conservative and say we are probably +1 in the luck category.
I think the STL and DEN games are a wash. In both cases we played a team similar to ourselves: Very strong defense, struggling offense. We won the game at home and barely lost the game at home. KC and CHI were games I didn't see, but they sounded like cases that fit what you are alluding to: An opponent makes plays and the offense needs to make something happen to get the win. I know Chicago was that way since Teddy needed big plays late in the 4th to get that W.
In the playoffs we might not be able to pull off such a comeback, which I sense is your fear.
Yes, can he do it consistently and just how much of it is really his doing in the first place? Upon close examination, it always feels to me like this ability he supposedly has to lead the team from behind is heavily reliant on big plays from others. He's played his part but there's a common theme in some of these oft-referenced come-from-behind performances. For example. in Denver, Bridgewater is given credit for leading the team from behind with 10 second half points on 2 drives. One of those drives was a 38 yard drive that ended in a field goal and the other was a 97 yard drive (impressive) capped by a 48 yard TD from Peterson. He did some nice work on both but it was really Peterson that turned the long drive into a TD drive.However, I think it is worth giving Teddy some credit here. We almost did pull off such a comeback against the league's best defense on the road. Again, a missed field goal was the difference and Teddy played a solid game that day. So in that respect there is some history to support a view that against tough competition TB can make it happen. Of course it all comes back to the thread title, can he do it consistently?
Bah... I'm not exactly quaking in my boots here and I doubt anybody else is either. We're just talking about an aspect of the team as we see it. I've watched enough football to know that in this era, teams built like the Vikings, with the kind of passing game they're fielding, usually don't advance very far in the postseason even if they get there. I just want to see them succeed.fiestavike wrote:Good God. What a bunch of nervous Nellies.
Last season's Vikings team did not have Adrian Peterson. ...the Vikings tailored their offense around rookie quarterback Teddy Bridgewater, running 64.8 percent of their plays, including 44.7 percent of their handoffs, out of the shotgun or pistol. Bridgewater posted a 69.7 QB Rating when in those sets, compared to a 19.6 rating under center
They've largely scrapped the shotgun handoffs they were giving Peterson early this season, returning to a power running game with multiple-tight end sets and emerging fullback Zach Line. They've had Bridgewater under center 52.6 percent of the time
So he's gone from being under center 30% of the time to 53% of the time. He clearly plays better QB according to ESPN when in the shotgun. Does anyone know where we can look at the standard QB rating splits by formation? I'd be interested to see if they also show improvement in both realms. It may be that Teddy looks like he's less effective than last year because we are threatening the run more by having him under center, where a QB can't scan the field in the same way.Bridgewater has been more efficient than he was as a rookie, both in the shotgun and under center. He's 11th in the league with a QBR of 71.0 in the shotgun, and he's jumped up to 49.8 under center
It's certainly another factor worth considering. Thanks for the link, John. I'd point you to the QB splits info you're after if I knew where to find them.John_Viveiros wrote:Another factor to think about with Bridgewater - they are playing completely to Peterson's strengths, and not to Teddy's. From http://espn.go.com/blog/minnesota-vikin ... ridgewater
[disclaimer - yes, I realize that a lot of you don't like the ESPN QBR.] So he's gone from being under center 30% of the time to 53% of the time. He clearly plays better QB according to ESPN when in the shotgun. Does anyone know where we can look at the standard QB rating splits by formation? I'd be interested to see if they also show improvement in both realms. It may be that Teddy looks like he's less effective than last year because we are threatening the run more by having him under center, where a QB can't scan the field in the same way.
It sounds to me like Bridgewater's coaches are basically asking him to do what I, and some other fans here, have been suggesting: play more freely and turn it loose. In other words, make more plays. As Turner said, there's a fine line. I don't think anybody wants overly reckless play from TB but falling on the safe, "check down" side of the fine line isn't good either. Playing under center rather than in the shotgun may be having some impact on his game but I get the feeling it's more that he plays "tight", that he tries to play it too safe it too safe. It's not hard to read between the lines and see that his coaches are thinking along similar lines."He does not make very many negative plays," quarterbacks coach Scott Turner said. "He's a very smart player, and he understands what it takes to win. We've played some very good defenses in the first half of the season, and we've had opportunities that we didn't make the most of. Some of that's on Teddy; some of that's on some other people. But I see the progress, and I feel like a lot of things, we're really close. If we keep pushing, we're going to make some of those plays."
There's little doubt the Vikings would like to see Bridgewater play freer at times; Zimmer noted last week how well the 23-year-old has handled late-game situations, and would like to see him carry some of his mentality in two-minute drills over to the rest of the game. And Scott Turner said he'll often remind Bridgewater to "turn it loose."
"We trust him as a player," Turner said. "We trust that Teddy's going to make the right decisions. I think, for the most part, he does. I agree with Coach Zimmer that he needs to turn it loose. I do think, though, that there is a fine line. We've played some good defenses; our defense is playing unbelievable. We're not giving the defense the ball in plus territory by making mistakes. With a guy like Teddy, who we do really trust, you can take the shots, and if they're not there, check down; be smart, and not just force something."
As do we all, Jim. One of these days hell will freeze over and the Vikings will win a Super Bowl.Mothman wrote: Bah... I'm not exactly quaking in my boots here and I doubt anybody else is either. We're just talking about an aspect of the team as we see it. I've watched enough football to know that in this era, teams built like the Vikings, with the kind of passing game they're fielding, usually don't advance very far in the postseason even if they get there. I just want to see them succeed.