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TDMMC Forums => Dolphins Discussion => Topic started by: EDGECRUSHER on November 07, 2022, 10:01:39 am



Title: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: EDGECRUSHER on November 07, 2022, 10:01:39 am
Tua Tagovailoa completed 21-of-30 passes for 302 yards and three touchdowns in Miami's 35-32, Week 9 win over the Bears.

Tagovailoa continues to have his tendency to underthrow the ball pop up at bad times, as an underfloated ball to Jaylen Waddle down the sideline gave the Bears life at the end of the game and a gopherball to Durham Smythe in the flat forced one of Miami's fourth-down failures. Oh well. He continues to produce in fantasy, which is what we care about, and the Miami offense generates open throws for him in abundance. Tagovailoa will be on the QB1 line against the Browns in Week 10.

That is from NBC's Fantasy Football site. These are some of his stats:
69.9 Cmp % (3rd behind Geno Smith and Burrow)
15-3 TD/INT
5th in Yards PG
1st in YPA
4th in TD despite missing 3 games
1st in QBR
1st in QB Rating (Traditional version)
6-0 as a starter when finishing the game

All that and all we hear about are dropped INTs and under throws. Are they saying that Josh Allen would have 7,000 yards by now if he had our offense? What are they trying to say with this stupidity? It goes against modern human nature to admit we are wrong about things, and almost everyone was wrong about Tua and they can't admit it.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: CF DolFan on November 07, 2022, 10:04:54 am
Tom Brady underthrew a couple of balls yesterday as well a Mahomes and Allen. If someone is bitching about Tua right now it isn't worth arguing with them as they are just stupid. 


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 07, 2022, 10:13:00 am
It's very silly, but it won't go away. Part of it is the left-handed-looks-weird angle, part of it is the insanely stupid offense he was in under Flores (the league-lowest YPA etc massively enabled the narrative), and part of it is that he truly DOESN'T have a cannon for an arm.

The best he can do is get better at ball placement down the field. Even on throws when he easily can throw it longer (no one is saying Tua cannot throw the ball 30 yards), his timing is slightly off and the ball becomes underthrown. Designed underthrows (which obviously aren't really underthrows, but just an expansion of the back shoulder fade concept) can be effective when there is a safety over the top, but otherwise adjusting the trajectory slightly would do wonders.

It often feels like Hill and Waddle are just a lot quicker than even Tua thinks. Maybe that aspect will improve with time.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 07, 2022, 10:36:02 am
He doesn't have the strongest arm in the the league, but that's not his game.  That's not our game.

Every deep ball isn't an underthrow.  He puts the ball in play, lets the receiver adjust, and either gets the catch or they get the PI.

Yesterday, even one of Tua's "underthrows" but the defender, who had his back to the ball, luckily had his hand in the right place.  But that ball is usually caught, too.  That's our offense.  It's not an underthrow.

And God forbid that Tua does actually underthrow a guy on a shorter route, it isn't because of lack of arm-strength.  QBs miss windows all the time....WRs adjust.  Tua's style is beneficial because WRs come back to the ball....this is something they're doing all over the field, even on short routes.


It was a bad narrative early, but the media just hasn't adjusted and they keep saying the same stupid shit.  Tua is balling out on the deep ball and because they aren't walk in TDs in-stride, there is criticism.  But that's not what we're doing here.   We have more successful deep balls in one game than we have had in a full season and the fans are short-circuiting.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: DenverFinFan on November 07, 2022, 12:44:31 pm
It’s gonna be fun if he continues to silence them. Finish out this year well and continue it to next season and they will come around. 

The Dec 11th game is gonna matter a lot. I have a feeling he wants to show off against Herbert.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 08, 2022, 05:18:43 am
Tua is #1 in PFF's ratings, #1 in QBR, #1 in passer rating, #1 in Football Outsider's DVOA (per play) and DYAR (total volume).

He has a passer rating of 147.0 on third down, obviously league-leading.

His current DVOA of 50.5% would be bested by only 4 player seasons if it were to hold for the year (it likely won't): 1984 Marino, 2004 and 2006 Peyton Manning, and 2007 Tom Brady.

Tua's current performance is *ridiculous*.

But...but...it's Hill... it's the system... OH F*CK OFF!


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: CF DolFan on November 08, 2022, 08:39:14 am


But...but...it's Hill... it's the system... OH F*CK OFF!
If Hill was the only reason then he'd have done this in KC but he didn't. Hill is the best WR in the league for someone like Tua and McDaniel's offense. Tua is the clog that makes everything happen or we wouldn't be 0-3 in games he didn't play or finish.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Fau Teixeira on November 08, 2022, 03:36:23 pm
Quote
He has a passer rating of 147.0 on third down, obviously league-leading.

not just league leading .. it's the best of all time, ever since statistics have been kept.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: EDGECRUSHER on November 11, 2022, 09:54:47 am
Tua was named the FedEx Air Player of the Week for the 3rd time this season. That leads all players, although it's mainly a QB award.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: pondwater on November 12, 2022, 03:54:00 pm
Tua gets more heat for "almost interceptions" in a win than Allen gets for actual interceptions in a loss. It's pretty remarkable given the actual numbers. Tua Tagovailoa through 9 weeks:

1st - Passer rating 115.9
1st - QBR 79.9
1st - Yards per attempt 9.2
1st - Touchdown percentage 6.9%
1st - Expected points added per play .19
1st – Net yards per play 8.54
3rd – comp % 69.9%
t-4th – INT % 1.4%
4th – sack % 3.6%


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 14, 2022, 10:31:07 am
Some Tua notables:

0.710 in the NFL (including all games for which he got a stat line). That's 12 wins in a 17 game season.
Obviously #1 in pretty much every passing stat this year.
The first quarterback in NFL history to have 3 consecutive games with 135+ passer rating.
7 of 7 for 80 yards and a touchdown on 3rd down against the Browns.
Now 49 of 64 for 681 yards, 9 touchdowns, and zero interceptions on 3rd down this season (149.8 passer rating).


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: EDGECRUSHER on November 14, 2022, 11:23:47 am
Josh Allen leads the NFL in Interceptions, so it should go without saying that Tua is the best QB in the AFC East.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 14, 2022, 12:20:28 pm
The absolute BEST thing I saw from Tua yesterday was how he handled the high snap on that one play that could have been a disaster. Instead of trying to make something out of nothing he just got control of the ball and got down. THAT is the way you make plays with your head. Bad play, just don't make it worse by trying to make something out of nothing. Just forget that play and get them on the next one. Marino was the BEST at this. He's learning. Avoiding big mistakes is just as important as making big plays in the NFL. He's doing both at an incredible pace now. I would have never thought that he was going to get this point after his rookie year. If he continues to get better, I was wrong about Tua. Miami is fun to watch again.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: CF DolFan on November 14, 2022, 12:33:35 pm
The absolute BEST thing I saw from Tua yesterday was how he handled the high snap on that one play that could have been a disaster. Instead of trying to make something out of nothing he just got control of the ball and got down. THAT is the way you make plays with your head. Bad play, just don't make it worse by trying to make something out of nothing. Just forget that play and get them on the next one. Marino was the BEST at this. He's learning. Avoiding big mistakes is just as important as making big plays in the NFL. He's doing both at an incredible pace now. I would have never thought that he was going to get this point after his rookie year. If he continues to get better, I was wrong about Tua. Miami is fun to watch again.
It's a whole lot easier to eat that ball when the coach isn't trying to replace you or constantly is reminding you that he doesn't like you. The pressure to make something happen even when it isn't there kills a lot of great potential QBs.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: EDGECRUSHER on November 14, 2022, 02:02:55 pm
It's a whole lot easier to eat that ball when the coach isn't trying to replace you or constantly is reminding you that he doesn't like you. The pressure to make something happen even when it isn't there kills a lot of great potential QBs.

100%.

Tua this season is just proof that Flores is not cut out to be an NFL Head Coach. I doubt he ever gets the opportunity again thanks to his ridiculous lawsuit, but just based off of merit he doesn't deserve it either.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 14, 2022, 02:03:08 pm
If he continues to get better, I was wrong about Tua.

I don't mean to harp, but "get better" at what, exactly?  The guy is playing perfect level football.  The guy could regress and still be the best player in the league.  The only thing I think is even worth mentioning is longevity.  He has to do it over the long term, but from what we have seen, the skill set is there.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 15, 2022, 03:38:15 pm
I don't mean to harp, but "get better" at what, exactly?  The guy is playing perfect level football.  The guy could regress and still be the best player in the league.  The only thing I think is even worth mentioning is longevity.  He has to do it over the long term, but from what we have seen, the skill set is there.
What I mean is as long as he continues to play this way. It's not a given that Tua is going to continue to play the way he has the last 3 games. I still had some issues with his play earlier in the year. He had a bunch of bad passes in the first 3 weeks that could have easily been picked off but weren't and he had a number of questionable decisions about holding onto the ball too long as well. The last 3 games he's been terrific, no complaints whatsoever, but the entire year hasn't been that way and there's no telling what the final 7 are going to look like either. I need to see it for the rest of the year to be convinced this is his "normal" and not just a good streak. Basically it's about consistency now. Yes you are right that he's shown he can play at a level higher than even I expected, but he has to be consistent now. I don't expect him to be this good every week, but I expect bad weeks to be the exception so better than he was the first 2 years in the league, not better than what he's played in the last 3 weeks.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 15, 2022, 04:07:54 pm
^ I understand your point now.

That said, I don't agree with it.

The public's evaluation of Tua the first several weeks was bad.  Everyone though his deep ball was off and his throws looked weird and all this other stuff about almost getting INTs.  But I think that all of those were proven to be untrue.  No shade to you, as I believe you're coming at this earnestly, but I think there was a groupthink narrative that somehow he didn't look as good.  He did.  And he just continued to look good and it shut down the clown narrative.

----



I saw Stephen A. Smith with a ridiculous take on Tua today, that he dumps 5 yard passes and lets Waddle and Hill take it to the house.  Not only has that happened 0 times, Tua has the highest average pass distance and I think the 2nd to lowest YAC in the league.  It's like the people setting the national narrative have never even seen him play.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 15, 2022, 04:43:06 pm
The public's evaluation of Tua the first several weeks was bad.
That's your opinion and I understand that as well, but I don't think that's fair either. That's the "Tua lover" take on it in my opinion. I'm not a Tua hater, I'm just not a Tua lover and you don't have to be one or the other. There's you, "Tua Lover", there's Stephen A Smith "Tua Hater" and then there's me, "Tua realist", in my opinion. The "Tua lovers" have been convinced from day 1 and the "Tua haters" will never be convinced. Those are the 2 ends of the extreme, I'm more in the middle. I've loved him the last 3 weeks and really for most of the year, but he hasn't always been like this and I'm not convinced quite yet that this is his new "normal". He's playing much better this year and if it continues, he'll have changed my mind on him, but I still want to see it for a little while longer. Maybe play well in a playoff game? Note that I didn't say "win" as I don't believe Wins or Losses are a QB stat. Play well would be enough, even if they lost. That would definitely do it for me. Something along those lines. Do that and he'll have convinced me he's a franchise QB and the long wait for that is over. I've seen QB's play well for small stretches of games, but that's not their "normal" play. I don't think that's Tua, but I'm not convinced it's not yet either.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 16, 2022, 07:51:26 am
We both said our points, so that's cool.

But I did want to say before we move on that I definitely don't consider myself a Tua lover.

I'm on record here being critical of his bad games and even said that I wouldn't pay to re-sign him.  With Tua, I'm just all about evaluating him for what he's actually doing.  And, not so much here, but with some of my friends and certainly with the national narrative, he kept having great games, especially statistically, and so many people would lead with "yeah...but".  And it's not that Tua is beyond criticism or that you can't see ways that he can limit potential errors.   But my whole thing is that other QBs weren't getting that same criticism for worse levels of play.  You don't see other QBs complete multiple bombs downfield where the TV announcer leads with how underthrown the ball is.

I think what is on my side at this point is that the numbers have been so good for so many weeks that his play can't have been an anomaly.  If he truly was underthrowing everyone and "almost throwing picks" that it would've caught up with him.  Here we are and he's essentially flawless for so many weeks, while Herbert and Josh Allen have ACTUALLY thrown 12 picks since Tua's last one.  And the media and fans-alike were slurping those two guys up.

It's just that Tua has been judged on a different scale this whole time and it's made me defensive of him.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 16, 2022, 08:30:00 am
^ If only Tua had "underthrown" Hill on that long bomb down the middle against the Browns that was defended, it would have been either complete or a huge PI. Hill was looking back for the ball, while the defender was going full tilt to cover him and never looked back (and wouldn't have been able to) - he just got a hand up in there. I'm certainly not saying that underthrowing an open receiver is good, but often you don't know if a receiver is going to pull away (and how much) at the time of your release, so designed underthrows can be effective, especially with shorter receivers that aren't necessarily going to be able to high-point it the same way as larger targets. For reference, Hill is a generous 5-10, while receivers like Cooper Kupp and Justin Jefferson are 6-1 and 6-2, respectively. Obviously, you don't make a *designed* underthrow against a deep safety who's just standing there looking for the ball and can make an aggressive play on it.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Fau Teixeira on November 16, 2022, 09:33:43 am
Tua is a better QB than Justin Herbert.

Period.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 16, 2022, 09:39:57 am
Tua is a better QB than Justin Herbert.

Period.

I'm not even prepared to say that.  And it's kinda missing the point.

It's just that Tua is criticized more for almost interceptions that could've lost the game than Herbert is for actual ones that did lose the games.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dolfanalyst on November 16, 2022, 10:55:13 am
Tua is currently tops in the league in DVOA -- and by an astronomical margin.  That measure incorporates what's expected on a play-by-play basis against the competition faced.

https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/nfl/qb/2022

Wait till this team irons out the remaining wrinkle in the passing game and starts hitting the long bombs for TDs it has available to them.  Couple that with an improvement of the pass defense to merely the mediocre level and this is your Super Bowl winner.  Nobody can stop this.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: EDGECRUSHER on November 16, 2022, 12:07:29 pm
Tua is currently tops in the league in DVOA -- and by an astronomical margin.  That measure incorporates what's expected on a play-by-play basis against the competition faced.

https://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/nfl/qb/2022

Wait till this team irons out the remaining wrinkle in the passing game and starts hitting the long bombs for TDs it has available to them.  Couple that with an improvement of the pass defense to merely the mediocre level and this is your Super Bowl winner.  Nobody can stop this.

How is Kader Kohou holding up? Seems like he is doing okay but looks are deceiving.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 17, 2022, 01:40:36 pm
But I did want to say before we move on that I definitely don't consider myself a Tua lover.
Yeah, you're right that was not fair. What I should have said is the idea that any negative comments about Tua were unfair in my opinion was the "Tua Lover" take on it. Definitely his first 2 years that was true. You could argue that beginning this year anyone still not on the Tua bandwagon was a Tua Hater and I would typically agree with you, but there were many in his first 2 years calling anyone with a negative take on Tua a Tua Hater and that just wasn't true. He hadn't yet shown enough to convince anyone except Tua Lover's that he was the real deal. That changed this year and especially in his last 3 games.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 17, 2022, 01:45:54 pm
Tua is a better QB than Justin Herbert.

Period.
I can't agree with this. Herbert is having the same issues this year that Tua had in previous years where he wasn't getting enough support. Herbert has already shown that he's one of the league's top QB's when given the support. I still maintain that was the major difference between the 2 QB's in college, Tua was on a team with a MUCH better supporting group and therefore his college stats were better. By contrast you could argue that Tua had better WR's in college than he did his first year in the pros. You saw an immediate jump in Herbert's play as soon as he got to the NFL and had NFL caliber WR's. Now that Tua has WR's at least as good as Herbert's are before the injuries this year if not better, you see the same type of performance from him that Herbert had earlier in his career. Of course this has a huge impact on your performance.

I can agree now that we have seen it from Tua that they are on equal footing performance wise, but I would still prefer to have Herbert for durability reasons alone.

I'd like to mention 1 more thing and that's the notion that Miami's coach and owner were actively working against Tua his first 2 years in the league. I don't believe that's true either, they wanted Tua to succeed, they just didn't know how to get the best from him. Their intentions were good I believe, the results were bad. That happens all the time. The current coach has changed all that and it's not simply because the coach believed in him, it's because he's putting him in the best position to succeed and I'm sure the owner is elated. The previous coach was a defensive minded coach, not surprising that he failed to get the best out of Tua especially given the talent upgrade on the offensive side of the ball this year.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 17, 2022, 03:09:38 pm
Tua wasn't nearly as good the last two years.  Obvious.  However, I think that there some kind of offensive line protection / confidence, paired with the way that McDaniel is running the RPO that is making Tua so dangerous this year.

He looks very fast in his reads.  All year.  He gets the snap, the play progresses and he makes the read.   He isn't hanging out with the ball waiting to find a guy.  Tua definitely had happy feet the last two years because the o-line play was just super inconsistent.  And the way the offense worked -- I have never played football, but to my untrained eye -- it just seems like less time is required for Tua to do what he needs to.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 17, 2022, 03:19:31 pm
Tua wasn't nearly as good the last two years.  Obvious.  However, I think that there some kind of offensive line protection / confidence, paired with the way that McDaniel is running the RPO that is making Tua so dangerous this year.

He looks very fast in his reads.  All year.  He gets the snap, the play progresses and he makes the read.   He isn't hanging out with the ball waiting to find a guy.  Tua definitely had happy feet the last two years because the o-line play was just super inconsistent.  And the way the offense worked -- I have never played football, but to my untrained eye -- it just seems like less time is required for Tua to do what he needs to.
I agree with all of what you just said, but I don't think it's merely confidence or the scheme or anything, I think much of it is just that it took Tua time to figure it all out and he has this year. There's a big difference between college and the NFL. There's a lot of new stuff thrown at QB's in the pros. They have to digest it all and then be able to adjust to it. It takes some longer than others to adjust. I just feel like the game has slowed down for him this year and I've seen improvement in that area even from game 1 this year till the last game. Tua has never had a lack of confidence, his decision making has just gotten better/faster.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 17, 2022, 04:04:08 pm
Tua wasn't nearly as good the last two years.  Obvious.  However, I think that there some kind of offensive line protection / confidence, paired with the way that McDaniel is running the RPO that is making Tua so dangerous this year.

He looks very fast in his reads.  All year.  He gets the snap, the play progresses and he makes the read.   He isn't hanging out with the ball waiting to find a guy.  Tua definitely had happy feet the last two years because the o-line play was just super inconsistent.  And the way the offense worked -- I have never played football, but to my untrained eye -- it just seems like less time is required for Tua to do what he needs to.

The Dolphins don't run nearly as much RPO this year. According to a pff article today, Tua has had 29 RPO plays. He has thrown the ball for 248 times, so even if most of those RPOs are passes, 90% (likely more) of all pass plays are NOT RPOs.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Dave Gray on November 17, 2022, 05:08:32 pm
The Dolphins don't run nearly as much RPO this year. According to a pff article today, Tua has had 29 RPO plays. He has thrown the ball for 248 times, so even if most of those RPOs are passes, 90% (likely more) of all pass plays are NOT RPOs.

Good to know.

How does one know when a play is RPO or traditionally called?  Can you tell from watching it as a fan?


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 17, 2022, 05:15:13 pm
Good to know.

How does one know when a play is RPO or traditionally called?  Can you tell from watching it as a fan?
Well for one thing watch the offensive lineman. If they drop off the line to pass block, it's definitely NOT an RPO because the whole purpose of an RPO is that it's blocked the same way for either as the line doesn't know if it will be a run or a pass at the snap.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: fyo on November 17, 2022, 05:53:20 pm
Good to know.

How does one know when a play is RPO or traditionally called?  Can you tell from watching it as a fan?

Not necessarily easy, since something like a standard play-action pass can look similar. But if the quarterback turns his back when handing off / faking the handoff, then it's clearly not an RPO since the quarterback isn't READING anything and the decision has already been made beforehand.

I came across a nice article a couple of days ago that covers recognizing RPOs.

https://985thesportshub.com/listicle/what-in-an-rpo-the-offensive-concept-behind-the-latest-buzzword-around-the-patriots/

Here's a snippet, but it continues with more pointers. It's a good article, even if it does mainly concern the Patriots.

Quote
it can be tough to distinguish what is or what isn’t an RPO at first watching a play live. It might take a replay or two to figure it out. When trying to do so, there are two key things to look for. If a run play looks like an RPO, watch the receivers. If one or two of them go into a route while everybody else is blocking, and the QB glances to that side of the field before a handoff, that could be a tip it’s an RPO.


Title: Re: The Tua Disrespect
Post by: Pappy13 on November 17, 2022, 06:09:02 pm
But if the quarterback turns his back when handing off / faking the handoff, then it's clearly not an RPO since the quarterback isn't READING anything and the decision has already been made beforehand.
Now combine that with what I said. If the offensive line drops into pass blocking setup, it's not an RPO, so that only leaves plays where the offensive line run blocks and the QB doesn't turn his back to the defense while he's performing the hand-off. If both of those things are true, it's a good bet it's an RPO. It could be a run option, but that's not very likely with Tua since he's not a great runner, you see that more with QB's who are very good running backs.