Showing posts with label chan gailey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chan gailey. Show all posts

The Watchtower: Lions at BIlls

>> 11.13.2010

Bison_Devils_Tower

There aren’t 25 bison in that picture, but let’s pretend there are. Twenty-five horned, furry demons, each representing a road defeat.  The herd has been rolling the Lions for years now, and now they have to take a stand.  The 0-8 Buffalo Bills are the best chance the Lions will have all season to break the streak.  It’s now, or never.

Chan Gailey vs. Gunther Cunningham

Chan Ornk PgG YpA YpC Gun Drnk PpG DYpA DYpC PTS ΔPTS YpA ΔYpA YpC ΔYpC
PIT 11th 21.5 6.23 4.38 KCC 11th 18.8 6.60 3.78 17 -20.9% 10.65 70.9% 3.06 -30.1%
PIT 7th 23.2 6.57 4.33 KCC 1st 14.5 6.43 3.92 10 -56.9% 4.81 -26.8% 6.17 42.5%
DAL 9th 23.8 7.25 4.04 KCC 22nd 22.7 6.23 3.81 17 -28.6% 5.69 -21.5% 3.12 -22.8%
MIA 8th 21.5 6.97 3.52 TEN 25th 24.2 7.31 3.53 24 11.6% 11.25 61.4% 2.48 -29.5%
BUF 26th 18.8 5.70 4.3 DET 23rd 22.4 7.13 4.79            

You may notice a few tweaks in the format.  Team Coached, Rank, PpG, YpA, YpC for offense, then the same for defense.  Then Real Points, Delta-Points, indicating the percentage away the season mean, YpA, Delta-YpA, YpC, and Delta-YpC.  The idea here is to see, at a glance, that in their four meetings as coordinators and/or head coaches, Gunther Cunningham’s defenses allowed Chan Gailey’s offenses to score 20.9% below, 56.9% below, 28.6% below, and 11.6% above their season averages on the year.

. . . but I’m getting ahead of myself.  From 1974 to 1993, Chan Gailey bounced around both the college and NFL ranks.  He served as an assistant, coordinator, or head coach for six different teams, which includes multiple positions (or multiple stints) at Troy State, Air Force, and with the Denver Broncos under Dan Reeves.  It wasn’t until he got a gig as the Steelers’ wide receivers coach in 1994 that his career in the NFL took off.  Under OC Ray Erhardt, the Steelers pounded the run game.  But Cohwer wanted to open it up a bit—and that philosophical dispute led to Erhardt’s ouster after the ‘95 season.  Bill Cowher gave Gailey the reigns—and a directive to score points.

That Gailey did.  The Steelers were ranked 11th and 7th in the NFL in scoring during his two years as offensive coordinator, and Gunther faced him with his fearsome Chiefs D both times.  In the first meeting, the 21.5 PpG Steelers performed to expectations when facing the 11th-ranked defense, scoring 17 points.  They were much more effective through the air then typical (70.9% better!), but could only muster 3.06 yards per carry.

In the 1997 matchup, both units were better.  Gailey’s Steelers were racking up 23.2 PpG, but the Chiefs were only allowing 14.5.  The Chiefs put the clamps on even better than expected, though, allowing the Steelers just 10 points (56.9% below their average).  Oddly, they allowed 6.17 yards per carry on the ground, but held the Steelers to a meager 4.81 yards per attempt.  This jibes with something we’ve seen before from offenses that like to spread it out against Gunther’s D: when he lets them run wild but stops the pass, they can’t score for beans.

Chan's success with the Steelers’ offense got him his first crack at the Big Chair in the NFL, with the Dallas Cowboys.  With Dallas’ vaunted skill position trio of Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, and Michael Irvin, Chan’s offense scored 23.8 PpG, good for 9th in the NFL.  With a very robust 7.25 YpA, and a very Emmitt-like 4.04 YpC, Dallas’ offense had plenty of teeth.  The Chiefs were significantly down that year, dropping from the #1 scoring defense in the NFL to only the 22nd-best.  They were allowing points at a 22.7 PpG clip—and yet, they held the ‘boys to just 17 points; an extremely impressive performance.  Interestingly, YpA and YpC were both depressed by just over 20%.

In the final matchup, we have what’s likely to be the best test. It’s a recent Chan Gailey offense versus a Schwartz/Cunningham defense—unfortunately, it’s an 8th-ranked Dolphins offense versus a 25th-ranked Titans D.  The ‘fins were scoring 21.5 points per game, while the Titans were allowing a significant 24.2.  Expectations would be that Miami would score well above their average—and they did exceed their average, but not by much.  They put up 24 offensive points, exactly matching the Titans’ average on the season (remember, Miami was a well-above-average offense!).  This time, it’s more like the first meeting, where the offense went wild through the air, but did nothing on the ground.

Given the data above, I’m more than comfortable proclaiming that given greater, equal, or lesser talent, Gunther Cunningham’s hyperaggressive defenses disproportionately depress the scoring output of Chan Gailey offenses.  There is no consistent mechanism in terms of run/pass disruption—and typical depression mechanisms like sacks or turnovers aren’t the causes either (they’re not on the chart this time, but trust me, those numbers weren’t exceptional).

The 26th-ranked Buffalo offense has been averaging just 18.8 points per game, by far the worst Chan Gailey offense we’ve looked at.  The Lions, ranked 23rd, are allowing 22.4 points a game.  In theory, we should split the difference here—but applying a moderate systemic advantage, I’ll project the Bills to score 13-16 points.  I’m not even going to attempt YpA and/or YpC, given how all over the map those numbers are this time, but I have high confidence in this scoring projection.

Mitigating/Aggravating Factors:

Even if I’m wrong about the systemic advantage for Gunther, we’re still looking at 17-20 points—not enough to overcome our next matchup.

Scott Linehan vs. George Edwards

Lin  Ornk PgG YpA YpC GE Drnk PpG DYpA DYpC PTS ΔPTS YpA ΔYpA YpC ΔYpC
DET 7th 25.4 5.52 3.50 BUF 32nd 29.1 6.94 4.84            

Here’s a problem.  Except for two years in Washington around the turn of the century, Bills defensive coordinator George Edwards hasn’t been a defensive coordinator before.  Since Linehan didn’t face off against Edwards in either of those years, we have no data to go on, save for this season’s averages.  The only real “coaching tree” substitute we can look at is Dom Capers, for whom Edwards was the linebackers coach in Miami.  From a Capers-y Watchtower:

. . . As we've seen with Gregg Williams and Dick LeBeau, Scott Linehan's balanced, conventional offense is disproportionately successful against an aggressive, blitzing 3-4.

I can’t at all be sure that this applies to Edwards’ flavor of 3-4.  In terms of pass rush, they don’t seem effective; they’re 25th-ranked in sacks.  But, they’ve faced fewer pass attempts than anyone but the Broncos, meaning their pass rush rate is closer to middle-of-the-pack.  They’ve faced so few pass attempts because A) they’re usually playing from behind, and B) they’re terrible against the run.  Buffalo’s faced more rushing attempts than anyone else—295 in just 8 games.  That’s 36 rushing attempts per game.  Despite every team attempting to put it in the cooler via the run, the Bill are still allowing a walloping 4.84 YpC.  This still isn’t as bad as the 2008 Lions, but it’s not much better.

So what’s going to happen when the 7th-ranked Lions offense comes to town?  Since most of those points were scored with Shaun Hill at the helm, there shouldn’t be any dropoff from the usual rate of production.  Even if there is . . . well, we’re talking a team that averages 25 points a game going up against the worst defense in the NFL.  Even if we presume there is no systemic advantage, the Lions should score 30-35 points.  Due to the total lack of systemic historical data, I have low confidence in this projection.

Mitigating/Aggravating Factors:

If Shaun Hill’s performance is limited by his injury—or if the playbook has been cut down because he can’t take snaps under center—then this number could very well fall.  However, I see a big, big day for Jahvid Best against this defense, and at least a just-plain-old-big day for the passing game.  Unless there is some serious defensive/special teams scoring for the Bills, the Lions should get an early lead and hold it.

Conclusion:

Somehow, the tenor of the national conversation surrounding the Bills-Lions game has become “Oh, sweet, the Bills will get a chance to get off the schneid!  They pretty good for 0-8; they just almost beat the Bears, you know.”  But the numbers just don’t support it.  This is one of the best offenses in the NFL going against, by far, the worst—and on the other side, a mediocre offense against a mediocre defense.  The Lions have a clear upper hand in this game, and mostly likely will win, 30-14.  Hey, twenty-five fell demons of meadow grazing and road defeats!  We are apex predators; you lose.


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One Man's Trash: Ashlee Palmer to the Lions

>> 2.19.2010

Yesterday, the Lions acquired former Bills OLB Ashlee Palmer.  Palmer, a 2009 undrafted free agent out of Ole Miss, played 14 games for the Bills last season, including two starts.  The Lions’ interest was probably piqued in fourth preseason game, when Palmer started against them, and had five solo tackles, an assist, and a pass defensed. 

That's quite the season for an undrafted rookie.  Check out his performance against the Jets in week 6: he got the start, six solo tackles (none on special teams, all as an LB), and a pass defensed.  So what would cause them to let such a promising young player go?  The Bills’ new head coach, Chan Gailey, wants to switch to a 3-4.  Quoth Gailey:

There’s two things involved here. One, 3-4 personnel allows you when you start there to create more problems for the offense.  That’s the No. 1 thing. You are creating more problems. I know the problems it gives us offensively to have to prepare for that. You get to some nickel situations and now it’s back to 4-2 with the nickel guy in there. Now you’ve got to prepare for that.

A 3-4 defense doesn’t cause an offense a lot of problems—a good 3-4 defense does.  A bad 3-4 defense sucks just as much as a bad 4-3 defense does—likewise, a good 4-3 defense causes just as many problems for an offense as a good 3-4 does.  The schemes have different inherent strengths, but what matters most is the talent and execution.

The Bills's 4-3 has been somewhere between pretty good and really good over the past decade or so; their problem has been an inconsistent running game and terrible quarterback play.  Dismantling the only part of a team that was working makes no sense to me—but I’m glad Chan Gailey decided to do it, because their loss is our gain.

Gunther Cunningham caused a bit of a flap recently, when he hinted that Kansas City’s switch from a 4-3 to a 3-4 was forcing them let good young players go—players he knew well, like Turk McBride.  Jason Hunter’s another young Lions role player, and he was ousted in Green Bay when they switched alignments.

It’s true that Ashlee Palmer isn’t going to step in and outperform Ernie Sims—he may not even make the roster.  But this is a kid who stepped in and made himself valuable in a good defense, with no expectations whatsoever.  If DeAndre Levy really is going to start in the middle this year, then a committed, driven young player like that will doubtlessly be a factor in relief of Sims.

It’s good to see Martin Mayhew using and abusing that waiver priority again.  Lions’ll continue to have dibs on almost everyone when good young players are trashed due to a scheme change—here’s hoping that sifting through them all uncovers some treasures.

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