billw55, on 2015-February-03, 10:45, said:
I rethought this, and realized that of course they can always run the ball on 4th down. So technically they are only forced to pass once, not twice. Still, passing on 2nd down keeps the rush in play on 3rd down, forcing the Pats to defend both on that play. That could make the difference between getting in and not.
OK, maybe a slant into traffic wasn't the best choice of passes. Maybe a fade, or something else safer. But I don't think that passing was automatically wrong.
SEA thought they were getting exactly the look they wanted to score on the pick play with NE putting 8 in the box to stop the run with 3 CBs on the 3 WRs. The problem as has already been said was that NE (particularly Butler) knew the exact play that was coming when they stacked the receivers. If SEA had thrown in any tiny wrinkle, Butler was selling out 100% to the pick route, so it would have been an easy pitch and catch. Some sports science guys were showing that when the WR planted his foot to cut inside on the slant, Butler was able to react in less than a 10th of a second or something ridiculous.
And then on top of that, Butler made an amazingly athletic play to beat the WR to the ball and instinctively shield the ball with his body so that he could make a pretty difficult catch. When the ball leaves Russell's hands, if you watch the play, it looks like it's exactly what they wanted from the play. The break Butler makes on the ball though is unreal.
To me, if this were an ATB problem, I've got like 10% on the play call and 90% on pats/butler preparation and execution.
Maybe someone can dig up the actual percentages, but I'd guess the difference in win expectancy between pounding ML and throwing there is very small, except of course when NE knows beforehand what the play is going to be, which obv they didn't account for.