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dzrams
Feb 2021 zn:
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...you also claimed that the OL improved significantly in the 2nd half of 2019, which is not really accurate--it got better than it was, and Goff's play reflected that, but it was still not a solid line, since it was starting 3 inexperienced injury replacements, including 2 rookies.
Feb 2020 zn:
(note: the research I posted here helped you arrive at the conclusion above. Do I need to post the link where you copied my post about the passing efficiency improvement on to another board?)
According to you, the 2019 OL went from bad to "not bad." I call that significant improvement. Tomayto, Tomahto.
Do your positions change depending on what you're arguing?
They did improve over the previous incarnation. But they were still an OL with three completely inexperienced injury replacements. Which is what I said in 2020.
Do you misrepresent as a habit even while presumably protesting it?
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zn
July 23, 2020 12:57PM
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ramsrule.com]
And as we know there were 2 OLs last year. The first played for 9 games and was shaky, with both OTs playing poorly and 2 newbies inside. In the final 7 games Whitworth played better and they also started 3 inexperienced injury replacements.
The 2nd OL did better than the first but it still struggled against teams that could bring pressure
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zn
June 27, 2020 04:30AM
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ramsrule.com]
As it happens last year the OL did stabilize toward the end, which is kind of unusual since you shouldn't expect that from a unit that is starting 3 completely inexperienced injury replacements (including 2 rookies).
It wasn't high caliber but it got to be pretty solid. As many have noted the playcalling shifted too, a concession by McVay that they couldn't just keep banging away running the exact same offense behind an altered OL.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 02/13/2021 10:16PM by zn.