Originally Posted by
ghz in pittsburgh
What I read is more of a philosophical change - from Daboll to now Brady. Used to be the WR role is fairly well defined. Brown/Diggs/Davis outside. Beasley/McKenzie slot. Brady came in and even people said he used Dorsey's playbook, but you see more Cook in route and Diggs in motion etc. I guess multiplicity is high on Brady's list. So overall more of Sean Peyton kind of offense where Brady has his roots.
At the end of the season McDermott and Beane said they need more big plays from the offense. At the owner's meeting, McDermott elaborated more on facing 2 deep safeties, something he played the same defensive system as Chiefs' Spagnola's in limiting big plays from the opposing offense. I guess the direction for big play on offense may be switched from run deep and throw deep because we trust our guys (Digg/Davis) are better than yours to finding mis-matches due to our guys play roles not pigeon -holed for you to match, and the speed our guys can turn a short pass to a big play.
Look at Hill when he's at the Chiefs and now he's in Miami. Hill in most systems would be an outside X receiver with his speed. But his highlights are not really making difficult catches down the field we used to see from Randy Moss; rather we saw him being used in slot, in backfield, in motion etc., some easy completions from Mahomes/Tua, and turned into a big play.
So some easy buttons for Allen, but big things from RAC is what I think they are looking for. Davis was never that guy. Diggs was, even earlier this season, but somehow never replicated in the 2nd half. Maybe the change of Brady's offense is the cause. Shakir actually showed surprising RAC ability - maybe the best we've seen in Buffalo in recent years, but his lack of speed shows. A number of plays where he got away from the first defender could result in long TDs but were not.
There is a lot of speculation that Samuel may have a bigger role than we think as of now in the coming season. And of course they will draft a guy, maybe not for filling an immediate hole but for his potential, in their mind, that can be an eventual #1 receiver on this team.