Originally posted by Xenos
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Offensive Line Discussion
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Originally posted by blueman View Post
For a 2nd round pick?? Outrageous.
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Originally posted by pacstud View Post
Did you like those huge chunks of yards?
Five in the route, block...wait...wait...
Few teams do what we do. It's high risk high reward.
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Originally posted by pacstud View Post
Did you like those huge chunks of yards?
Five in the route, block...wait...wait...
Few teams do what we do. It's high risk high reward.
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Originally posted by Xenos View Post
Not a fan actually. It's the Bruce Arians, Norv Turner, Mike Martz attack style that is going to get our QB killed. There's got to be a better balance or approach. Or are we just limited by our personnel Pac?
It's what he's built for.
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Originally posted by pacstud View Post
It's what should be done so long as we have 17.
It's what he's built for.
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Originally posted by Xenos View Post
I don't know about that. I thought the quick strike attack in 2013 and 2014 to an extent fitted him better. I thought one of the reasons it dried up in 2014 was because we had no running game after Ryan Mathews went down. If our OL is better at run blocking than pass protection, there's got to be a way to take advantage of that to protect PR.
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Wish I could post the videos as well but Daniel Popper did a great breakdown. He has been an excellent replacement for Sam Fortier at the Athletic. Key bolded part about Trent Scott.
The Chargers' new-look offensive line performed well in run blocking but had some issues with pass protection.
2. The pass protection was not outstanding
Scott is Okung's replacement at left tackle, and he had an up-and-down day in pass protection against the Colts.
It really came down to an ugly stretch in the third quarter. Apart from that, Scott was solid. But one missed block on the edge can result in a game-changing play, and that almost happened a couple times Sunday.
The first concerning play for Scott ended up not counting. Still, it's worth mentioning and showing here. Scott was beat badly off the left side by Colts edge rusher Kemoko Turay.
Justin Houston (No. 99 on the interior) was actually offsides on the play, so the strip sack was negated. But Turay was not offsides. He didn't start moving forward until the ball was snapped.
Scott's struggles continued on the ensuing series. He was beat for a sack on first down by defensive end Al-Quadin Muhammad.
Two plays later, he let up a strip sack to Turay. Luckily, Scott was able to jump on the fumble to prevent a turnover.
Scott returned to the bench dejected. But Okung was in his ear once he got there, encouraging his young teammate. Okung has been an immensely valuable resource for Scott since he joined the Chargers last spring as an undrafted free agent out of Grambling State. And that mentorship has continued, even as Okung sits out.
"It's huge," Scott said. "It's big time."
Scott said Okung told him to "just stay calm, trust your technique and don't get in your head."
"I was frustrated," Scott added. "Nobody likes getting beat, and I'm hard on myself. But I came to the sideline, regrouped and didn't have a problem after that."
That's the key here. Scott is a still a very young and very inexperienced player. Sunday was his second career start. Young players make mistakes. In order to make it in the league, you have to learn from those mistakes and display tangible improvement.
Scott did that. He didn't allow a pressure the rest of the game.
Here he is standing up Turay on a fourth-quarter completion from Rivers to Allen.
And on one of the most crucial plays of the game -- Rivers' throw to Allen to open the overtime drive -- Scott was once again sturdy in protection against Turay.
"That says a lot about a man's character, to overcome adversity and fight back and finish the game the way he did," Lynn said of Scott. "He played a physical football game yesterday."
It's fair to criticize Scott for the blocks he missed in pass protection Sunday. But it's not fair to completely write him off. The Chargers believe he will improve. They view him as a legitimate starter in this league. He has shown he's capable of playing at that level.
And he wasn't the only offensive linemen who broke down in pass pro against the Colts.
Schofield was beat inside late in the first half, and Rivers was forced to escape the pocket.
Schofield and Pouncey then tried to double-team Houston on the next play, but they couldn't stop him. And Rivers again had to throw the ball away.
"You take away four or five plays, and I thought the offensive line played outstanding," Lynn said.
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Originally posted by Topcat View Post
Short and mid-range passes are the key, plus quick release. I'm not a big fan of the long ball--you need great pass pro for this, which we don't have right now...also, throwing a bomb is a lower percentage play than a short pass. Also short passes mixed with ground game eats up the clock.
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