The defense doesn't take many risks either.TSonn wrote: ↑Mon Sep 30, 2019 11:14 amYep. To me it screams that Zimmer has told Cousins to stop taking risks because our philosophy is great defense, good running, win time of possession. After his bone-head throw in week 2, I'm sure Zimmer had a nice talk with Cousins and now he's terrified of taking the slightest risk out there.mansquatch wrote: ↑Mon Sep 30, 2019 11:06 am IMO, this represents a total coaching debacle. How did they manage to take what they had and make it worse?
With all the high draft equity we have on our starting defense, it'd be great if we had a coach who still felt confident that the defense could hold or force stops/turnovers when the offense takes some risks.
The whole team is a glorified Brad Childress reboot. Strict adherence to scheme, then execute that scheme. Don't deviate. Wait for the other guys to make the mistakes.
It's not a terrible philosophy provided A) you are as or more talented than most of your opponents and B) you aren't the ones making the mistakes. If either of those are not true, winning is at best a 50-50 proposition. If neither of those is true, you lose nearly every time and in the vast majority of those losses you will lose convincingly.
The thing that amazed me the most about yesterday's game wasn't how the offense played. I expected the Bears to be tough to run against, and I expect Cousins to struggle. No, the thing about yesterday that amazed me was how the defense kept rushing 4 against the Bears backup QB. He was rarely under any pressure. For most of the game he could just drop back, stand there, set and deliver the ball. Did Zimmer (I seriously almost typed Childress there...) decide to mix it up to throw him off? Nope. Did the DBs play tighter, perhaps take some chances by jumping on shorter routes, if nothing else than to just get in Daniels' head? Nope.
No, the defense sat back and played their standard cookie-cutter formula, a formula the Bears were very familiar with and knew exactly how to deal with. Stats-wise, the defense looked OK. Points-wise, you can argue they played well. But in terms of what the Vikings defense needed to do to give the offense a chance to win the game, they fell woefully short of that.