heartofthebear;842299827 said:
What's interesting is that the outside receivers are supposed to be the big guys and the inside receivers are supposed to your speed guys, unless you have a TE type inside. Last year we had it completely opposite. I still don't understand why.
Treggs and Harper were outside because they were downfield threats. Basically, if you look at the deep routes that X and Z run, it's a lot of go-routes and posts. These routes aren't going to get lost in coverage any time soon. They're almost always going to be contested by CB's, so first and foremost you need guys who can get separation. The ideal guy is someone who is fast enough to get a step on his defender and then physical enough to maintain his positioning and compete for the ball in the air. Rodgers was never going to be anything but a Y, where he was basically a wing TE when we ran power. That position has to be able to block LB's and catch the ball, so that was definitely Rodgers. Plus, he probably wasn't fast enough to stress CB's on the outside.
The problem was that the other big guys we had at H and Y were neither fast enough nor physical enough to do what I've described above, or they dropped balls, or whatever. At least Harper and Treggs were extremely talented in some respects, and could beat their man one on one enough to be dangerous.
heartofthebear;842299827 said:
So what does Lawler have to do get some love around here. He was our most productive WR the second half of the season. To me it's very simple
X: Lawler/Powe
H: Harper/S. Anderson
Y: Treggs/ Grissom
Z
avis/Harris
I'm 100% in agreement on Lawler. Even if he's covered he's open because he can catch balls that are so far from his body. He made some great catches on the backside of Y-cross, and his chemistry with Goff on the back-shoulder throw on 4-verts was really starting to look good at the end of the season. The big depth chart concern is how do you play Harper and Treggs at the same time if you want your Y to be a TE-type to help the run game? The pieces still don't quite fit perfectly to get our best talent on the field every snap, but I think we're getting closer. If we had a great Y we'd be there, but since we don't (at least not that we've seen) we're left with our four best receivers competing for three spots. All four of Harper, Treggs, Davis, and Lawler will play a lot this season, though, and we might find a situational rotation that maximizes everyone's strengths.