1 00:00:00,400 --> 00:00:02,760 Speaker 1: Tom said this morning that the offense could have put 2 00:00:02,840 --> 00:00:05,039 Speaker 1: up about fifty points if it weren't for the turnovers 3 00:00:05,040 --> 00:00:07,840 Speaker 1: against the Colts. Curious to get your assessment of the 4 00:00:07,840 --> 00:00:10,520 Speaker 1: team's ball security after five games. I believe you're a 5 00:00:10,560 --> 00:00:14,480 Speaker 1: plus one. Well, we haven't had a game yet, um 6 00:00:14,520 --> 00:00:18,560 Speaker 1: without a turnover, So that's that's definitely a goal force 7 00:00:18,640 --> 00:00:23,160 Speaker 1: every week. So hopefully we can hit that this week. Yeah, 8 00:00:23,200 --> 00:00:27,200 Speaker 1: I also if I could, Yeah, if I could follow up. 9 00:00:28,680 --> 00:00:31,240 Speaker 1: Curious when you when you see deflections that wind up 10 00:00:31,240 --> 00:00:35,000 Speaker 1: in turnovers, are they considered differently by your staff yourself 11 00:00:36,080 --> 00:00:39,000 Speaker 1: as opposed to you know, interceptions right into the arms 12 00:00:39,000 --> 00:00:41,600 Speaker 1: of somebody else. And who's curious to get your read 13 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:44,320 Speaker 1: on on ball deflections because I think he had a 14 00:00:44,360 --> 00:00:51,120 Speaker 1: couple of those against the Colts. Talk about when a 15 00:00:51,159 --> 00:00:57,600 Speaker 1: defender deflects the ball, No, when ball like goes off 16 00:00:57,760 --> 00:01:01,000 Speaker 1: one of your receiver's hands, like either Chris or more 17 00:01:01,080 --> 00:01:04,080 Speaker 1: like Chris Hogan, uh, and it winds up in the 18 00:01:04,080 --> 00:01:08,680 Speaker 1: hands with somebody else. I mean, I'm just curious if 19 00:01:08,760 --> 00:01:11,760 Speaker 1: that's the situation of ball security to you, or a 20 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:17,560 Speaker 1: turnover is a turnover, it doesn't matter. Well, I mean 21 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:19,920 Speaker 1: that's that's part of the execution of the passing game. 22 00:01:19,959 --> 00:01:26,679 Speaker 1: And UM. So sometimes the timing between the quarterback and 23 00:01:26,720 --> 00:01:30,960 Speaker 1: the receiver. UM where the ball is located, or where 24 00:01:31,040 --> 00:01:33,080 Speaker 1: what the receiver does right at the end of the route, 25 00:01:34,200 --> 00:01:37,680 Speaker 1: where he does or doesn't do the right you know, 26 00:01:37,920 --> 00:01:39,760 Speaker 1: the thing that the quarterback thinks he's going to do, 27 00:01:39,920 --> 00:01:44,080 Speaker 1: or vice versa. UM. And then sometimes those balls end 28 00:01:44,120 --> 00:01:47,319 Speaker 1: up not being either where the receiver thinks it's going 29 00:01:47,400 --> 00:01:49,360 Speaker 1: to be or the receiver's not exactly where the quarterback 30 00:01:49,400 --> 00:01:52,000 Speaker 1: thinks it's going to be. So those are things that 31 00:01:52,160 --> 00:01:58,600 Speaker 1: just have to UM work on and fine tune and execute. 32 00:02:00,080 --> 00:02:02,200 Speaker 1: That's why the execution of the passing game has to 33 00:02:02,240 --> 00:02:05,720 Speaker 1: be so precise. In this league, defenders are close by 34 00:02:05,880 --> 00:02:09,480 Speaker 1: and ball it's not taught cleanly, it could turn into 35 00:02:09,639 --> 00:02:15,040 Speaker 1: get into their hands. So it really comes down to 36 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:21,280 Speaker 1: the execution. Thank you, Bill Nicky. Next question Anthony Gluzia, 37 00:02:21,360 --> 00:02:25,919 Speaker 1: followed by Phil Perry. Morning, Bill, UM, A lot to 38 00:02:25,919 --> 00:02:29,400 Speaker 1: be made about the Chiefs. You know, their offense when 39 00:02:29,480 --> 00:02:31,840 Speaker 1: Patrick Mahomes has been able to do for that team, 40 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:37,560 Speaker 1: but their defense to become of five turnovers. Just what 41 00:02:37,680 --> 00:02:39,960 Speaker 1: have you seen in them that that can make that 42 00:02:40,120 --> 00:02:46,680 Speaker 1: unit of legitimate problem on some day. Yeah, they're very 43 00:02:46,680 --> 00:02:50,519 Speaker 1: good defensively, they do a good job, they're well coached, 44 00:02:50,520 --> 00:02:52,160 Speaker 1: they mix it up well, and then they have a 45 00:02:52,200 --> 00:02:55,919 Speaker 1: lot of disruptive players. Um. You know, I get several 46 00:02:55,960 --> 00:03:03,040 Speaker 1: guys on the front for Houston Jones, Um Kitchens, very 47 00:03:03,040 --> 00:03:11,400 Speaker 1: experienced linebacker experiencing the secondary with Parker Nelson, Scandrick Fuller. 48 00:03:12,160 --> 00:03:16,040 Speaker 1: So not all of them have been there, um, you know, 49 00:03:16,120 --> 00:03:18,919 Speaker 1: for their whole careers, but uh as like Ford and 50 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:24,760 Speaker 1: Jones haven't. Um you know Bailey. Um, they they do 51 00:03:24,800 --> 00:03:27,480 Speaker 1: a good job. They're just they're solid across the board, 52 00:03:27,520 --> 00:03:33,120 Speaker 1: their front, their linebackers, safety's corners, mix up the scheme. Um, 53 00:03:33,160 --> 00:03:39,280 Speaker 1: so yeah, they do a good job. Next question Phil Perry, 54 00:03:40,040 --> 00:03:46,360 Speaker 1: probably by Mike Chery. Bill Anthony mentioned Mahomes there. Just 55 00:03:46,400 --> 00:03:48,360 Speaker 1: want to ask you what what has impressed you about 56 00:03:48,400 --> 00:03:52,680 Speaker 1: his game that's part the season. Yeah, pretty much everything. 57 00:03:53,240 --> 00:03:59,320 Speaker 1: Um gets the ball to uh to all his receivers, UM, 58 00:04:00,160 --> 00:04:04,880 Speaker 1: quick quick release. Um these things quickly can extend plays. 59 00:04:05,960 --> 00:04:09,000 Speaker 1: Got a great arm, got a got a fabulous arm 60 00:04:09,200 --> 00:04:13,320 Speaker 1: for the ball out of the stadium. So nice, good decisions, 61 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:21,240 Speaker 1: accurate and get the ball out on time build just 62 00:04:21,360 --> 00:04:24,760 Speaker 1: to follow up on his arm strength. You can obviously 63 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:28,039 Speaker 1: throw it a long way. But because the quarterbacks arm 64 00:04:28,080 --> 00:04:32,839 Speaker 1: strength ever alter a defensive defensive timing in some way, 65 00:04:33,080 --> 00:04:35,359 Speaker 1: it seems like somebody throws to the sideline. Even the 66 00:04:35,360 --> 00:04:41,000 Speaker 1: shorter ones get there pretty quickly. They do. Yeah, well, 67 00:04:41,120 --> 00:04:42,920 Speaker 1: no matter where it goes, it gets there pretty quickly. 68 00:04:44,560 --> 00:04:48,000 Speaker 1: But I mean the further quarterback and throw it, the 69 00:04:48,000 --> 00:04:52,760 Speaker 1: more you got to defend. So balls on their twenty 70 00:04:52,839 --> 00:04:54,280 Speaker 1: yard line, you still got to defend of the goal 71 00:04:54,320 --> 00:04:58,680 Speaker 1: line against him. So's he's just you can rip it. 72 00:05:00,240 --> 00:05:08,960 Speaker 1: M hmm. Next question morning build, Um, you're talking about 73 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:11,480 Speaker 1: his arm strength has just to sort of fall up 74 00:05:11,480 --> 00:05:16,320 Speaker 1: on that is there? Does it open up more more tough, 75 00:05:16,800 --> 00:05:20,560 Speaker 1: more variances in Andy's offense to have someone who has 76 00:05:20,600 --> 00:05:23,520 Speaker 1: that kind of arm as opposed to you know, Alex 77 00:05:23,560 --> 00:05:26,280 Speaker 1: who not that he couldn't throw the ball downfield, but 78 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:34,240 Speaker 1: attended to prefer the shorter underneath stuff. Oh, I think, 79 00:05:34,240 --> 00:05:39,360 Speaker 1: And he's always done a good job of attacking the field, um, 80 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:44,480 Speaker 1: all parts of it. And I would just say Mahomes 81 00:05:44,480 --> 00:05:51,440 Speaker 1: has that's a real good arm. Um, So the quarterbacks 82 00:05:51,440 --> 00:05:53,359 Speaker 1: that and he said in Philadelphia, and Kens said he 83 00:05:53,400 --> 00:05:57,839 Speaker 1: had to look. Every guy has his own individual trades 84 00:05:57,880 --> 00:06:08,320 Speaker 1: and characteristics. SOM's got up, he's got a big arm. 85 00:06:08,440 --> 00:06:13,920 Speaker 1: Thanks so called by Andrew Callahan. Right, thanks Stacy. Um. So, 86 00:06:14,160 --> 00:06:17,240 Speaker 1: whether it was your time as a defensive coordinator head coach, 87 00:06:17,920 --> 00:06:21,479 Speaker 1: what do you recall like the time when the spread 88 00:06:21,520 --> 00:06:25,839 Speaker 1: offense you notice that that was an effective approach and 89 00:06:26,200 --> 00:06:41,599 Speaker 1: or put stress on a defense. Uh, I'm not us 90 00:06:41,680 --> 00:06:44,320 Speaker 1: try to understand the question like a contracting or where 91 00:06:44,360 --> 00:06:47,040 Speaker 1: we're heading on this one. Okay, Yeah, I was thinking 92 00:06:47,080 --> 00:06:49,760 Speaker 1: about how the Chiefs and the Patriots are two teams 93 00:06:49,760 --> 00:06:53,560 Speaker 1: that have shown an excellence and you know, the spread 94 00:06:53,600 --> 00:06:59,040 Speaker 1: passing game, empty formation, spreading the ball around, and it's 95 00:06:59,080 --> 00:07:01,839 Speaker 1: a different game to see now than it was however 96 00:07:01,880 --> 00:07:04,359 Speaker 1: many years ago. And I was curious from your experience 97 00:07:04,400 --> 00:07:07,240 Speaker 1: if there was the time that you recalled after becoming 98 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:12,600 Speaker 1: more prominent part of the game. I would say in 99 00:07:12,600 --> 00:07:18,640 Speaker 1: the eighties, And was there something that that changed that 100 00:07:18,760 --> 00:07:23,240 Speaker 1: led to that, Whether it was a rule or personnel, 101 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:31,480 Speaker 1: I don't know. I mean just I would say I'd 102 00:07:31,480 --> 00:07:35,400 Speaker 1: say that's wanted of all in the seventies, it was 103 00:07:35,680 --> 00:07:37,960 Speaker 1: you know, you didn't see a lot of multiple receiver sets. 104 00:07:38,680 --> 00:07:40,200 Speaker 1: I didn't see a lot of the tight end and 105 00:07:40,240 --> 00:07:49,240 Speaker 1: flexed out empty formations things like that. In the eighties, yeah, 106 00:07:49,840 --> 00:07:56,880 Speaker 1: Males Davis and the running shoot philosophy came into the 107 00:07:56,960 --> 00:08:01,400 Speaker 1: league and that extended into the nineties. Then you had 108 00:08:03,440 --> 00:08:08,040 Speaker 1: the one back offenses with Coryell, which was late seventies, 109 00:08:09,360 --> 00:08:13,720 Speaker 1: Joe Gifts and the eighties with Redskins and you know, 110 00:08:13,920 --> 00:08:17,440 Speaker 1: Dennis Green Minnesota and so forth. So it's then the 111 00:08:17,520 --> 00:08:21,160 Speaker 1: three receiver sets and some teams will became you know, 112 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:23,840 Speaker 1: they chunk of the offense, and I just got to 113 00:08:23,880 --> 00:08:27,600 Speaker 1: expand that from there. But I would say the eighties, 114 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:30,440 Speaker 1: if I had to pick a time, it would be 115 00:08:30,520 --> 00:08:37,319 Speaker 1: that That decade for me. Got it. Thank you. My 116 00:08:37,480 --> 00:08:42,320 Speaker 1: next question Andrew Callahan full of by Doug Kie. Good morning, Bill. 117 00:08:42,360 --> 00:08:44,480 Speaker 1: I'm wondering if you could take us back to when 118 00:08:44,520 --> 00:08:48,000 Speaker 1: Mahomes is coming out, your evaluation of him and whether 119 00:08:48,400 --> 00:08:51,000 Speaker 1: you know, evaluation is generally a quarterbacks in the system 120 00:08:51,040 --> 00:08:53,599 Speaker 1: like you played a tech to tech um complicates that 121 00:08:53,720 --> 00:09:01,640 Speaker 1: evaluation process. H yeah, I mean yeah, again, we don't 122 00:09:01,679 --> 00:09:04,439 Speaker 1: look at all the players, but you know, when we're 123 00:09:04,440 --> 00:09:06,320 Speaker 1: picking sixty first, I mean there's a lot of guys 124 00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:12,640 Speaker 1: you can eliminate. Wouldn't say we spent um, you know, 125 00:09:13,160 --> 00:09:17,600 Speaker 1: in an ordinate amount of time on players that sixty 126 00:09:17,640 --> 00:09:21,880 Speaker 1: one we had no chance of getting so or whatever. 127 00:09:21,880 --> 00:09:24,600 Speaker 1: It was two years ago when we traded for Cooks, 128 00:09:24,600 --> 00:09:27,960 Speaker 1: so we didn't a first round pick. So yeah, i'd 129 00:09:27,960 --> 00:09:32,720 Speaker 1: say no, we didn't. Mean you could probably list thirty 130 00:09:32,720 --> 00:09:36,080 Speaker 1: guys that. I mean, we obviously scouted them in the fall, 131 00:09:36,120 --> 00:09:37,800 Speaker 1: and we were aware of them, and we you know, 132 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:41,040 Speaker 1: worked on them and so forth, but they weren't a 133 00:09:41,120 --> 00:09:43,040 Speaker 1: factor for us in the draft. Is based on where 134 00:09:43,040 --> 00:09:45,040 Speaker 1: we were drafting and where they were going to go. 135 00:09:50,760 --> 00:09:53,360 Speaker 1: It's like the last question will be Doug Kaite period joke. 136 00:09:55,000 --> 00:09:59,199 Speaker 1: But Kelvin Noise putting an snap pretty evenly between coverage 137 00:09:59,200 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 1: and paths rush, but just allowed him more opportunities to 138 00:10:02,679 --> 00:10:10,160 Speaker 1: rush the pass for this season. Oh yeah, I mean 139 00:10:10,200 --> 00:10:16,640 Speaker 1: some of it's game plan, some of its game situation. Um, 140 00:10:17,040 --> 00:10:19,880 Speaker 1: Kyle has a lot of versatility for us, and he 141 00:10:19,960 --> 00:10:23,240 Speaker 1: can you can do all the things really that a 142 00:10:23,360 --> 00:10:27,480 Speaker 1: lonbacker needs to do, play the ron, rush the pass, 143 00:10:27,559 --> 00:10:30,320 Speaker 1: or playing coverage. So he does a good job at 144 00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:36,360 Speaker 1: all of them and versatilities Than Die, the Force. Thanks 145 00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:40,280 Speaker 1: you're up. Thank you, Thank everyone.