WEBVTT - How Does Bart Scott Think the Jets Can Get Back on Track? (11/12)

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<v Speaker 1>Welcome into the Official Jests Podcast.

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<v Speaker 2>Dangling a stake in front of the lion and you

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<v Speaker 2>ain't got no cage in between you. He gonna get

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<v Speaker 2>to that state.

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<v Speaker 3>So let's go inside the matchup.

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<v Speaker 1>Motivated Aaron Rodgers, Is It Dangerous?

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<v Speaker 4>Aaron Rodgers?

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<v Speaker 1>Game Day and every day?

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<v Speaker 3>Score a jewelry touchdown with Kendra Scott Shot Fashion and

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<v Speaker 3>find jewelry fit for another winning season at your local

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<v Speaker 3>store or at Kendrascott dot com.

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<v Speaker 1>Shine Bright, Do Good with Kendra Scott Bart. The Jets

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<v Speaker 1>are three and seven.

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<v Speaker 3>We thought they had fouled momentum Thursday night against the

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<v Speaker 3>Houston Texas, but it didn't carry over to the desert.

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<v Speaker 1>What happened against the Cardinals.

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<v Speaker 2>That was a good old fashioned butt whooping. There's been

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<v Speaker 2>a lot of games this year with the Jets. You

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<v Speaker 2>can find excuses for why they weren't successful.

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<v Speaker 4>This is simple. It was one physicality.

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<v Speaker 2>You know, you talk about tackling, you talk about running, blocking,

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<v Speaker 2>shedding blocks. That's all physicality and that's technique some but

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<v Speaker 2>it's also tenacity. And you know, you look at James Connell,

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<v Speaker 2>you knew what type of day it was going to be.

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<v Speaker 2>You know, about his yards after the catch. You know

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<v Speaker 2>about how you know they run the ball almost forty

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<v Speaker 2>seven percent of the time.

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<v Speaker 4>You knew all this coming in. It wasn't complicated.

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<v Speaker 2>You know, to allow Kyler Murray to complete seventeen straight

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<v Speaker 2>passes is blasph me. I don't know, like if that's

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<v Speaker 2>ever happened to a Jets defense in our existence, for

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<v Speaker 2>somebody to be that efficient James Conners with the screen

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<v Speaker 2>pass for forty yards. It was just all this this

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<v Speaker 2>It was disheartening, right because the season essentially's on the line,

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<v Speaker 2>and once again the football guys give you another opportunity

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<v Speaker 2>to just put that carrot in front of you, dangle

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<v Speaker 2>it around like, oh, well, the Jets still have a

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<v Speaker 2>thirteen percent chance to make the playoffs.

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<v Speaker 4>Everybody that everybody lost.

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<v Speaker 2>Yesterday, and you look at like I tell everybody, like,

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<v Speaker 2>if you really want to see like coaching, coaching, and

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<v Speaker 2>like how instilled in the culture.

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<v Speaker 4>Look at the Chargers.

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<v Speaker 2>The Chargers have less personnel than they had a year before,

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<v Speaker 2>but their defensive rankings have gone up because they know

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<v Speaker 2>who they are. Their coach brought in a level of physicality.

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<v Speaker 2>They said, hey, justin Herbert not gonna let you throw

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<v Speaker 2>the ball a million times.

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<v Speaker 4>Justin Herbert.

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<v Speaker 2>They put up twenty seven points in Los Angeles and

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<v Speaker 2>Herbert threw the ball eighteen times. So like we lost

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<v Speaker 2>at some point, we lost that element on the defense

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<v Speaker 2>side of the ball and the offensive side of the ball,

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<v Speaker 2>and we tried to make it cute and we forgot

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<v Speaker 2>about football at the end of the day, is about

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<v Speaker 2>moving a man against his will one way or the other,

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<v Speaker 2>being able to be physical at the point of attack

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<v Speaker 2>and to wear guys down, and we lost sense of that.

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<v Speaker 2>And the display was if you went down the roster

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<v Speaker 2>of Arizona outside of Buddha Baker, you couldn't name anybody

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<v Speaker 2>like we wouldn't know like Okay Scanling Buttoning or somebody like.

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<v Speaker 2>But let's be real, the better roster was in New York,

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<v Speaker 2>but the better team was in Arizona.

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<v Speaker 1>What do you attribute the mistackles to? Next gen stats?

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<v Speaker 3>At twenty I saw other out let's say seventeen, but

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<v Speaker 3>it was north to fifteen.

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<v Speaker 1>You was such a sound tackler throughout your career.

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<v Speaker 3>When you see a team do that and it's at

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<v Speaker 3>every level, what do you point.

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<v Speaker 2>To technique like, like this was funny right. See, in football,

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<v Speaker 2>you can think you're a big person like or you're

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<v Speaker 2>a big hitter. So I think it was Adams yesterday.

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<v Speaker 2>That's a tight end, man. You ain't taking no tight

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<v Speaker 2>end down with a flipper. You have to wrap, squeeze,

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<v Speaker 2>and run your feet on every person you touched, because

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<v Speaker 2>this whole notion that you can hit somebody with the

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<v Speaker 2>flipper like you Bob Sanders or Sean tayl or Agent

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<v Speaker 2>or Adrian Wilson, those guys are two twenty. You can

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<v Speaker 2>get away with it. You two twenty. I think sometimes

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<v Speaker 2>some of our players don't realize how small they are

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<v Speaker 2>in comparison to their opposition. When you look at our

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<v Speaker 2>Jets defense, we're small, man, we're little. We're little at safety,

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<v Speaker 2>we're a little at linebacker, and we're a little at

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<v Speaker 2>defensive tackle. Like so the fact that you don't have

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<v Speaker 2>to use your technique is it's crazy to me. You

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<v Speaker 2>have to run your feet. Let's just take sauce right

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<v Speaker 2>for instance, on McBride, the.

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<v Speaker 1>Third dollar player is fourteen to six, right there.

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<v Speaker 2>Big opportunity to get off the field. He wrapped his

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<v Speaker 2>arms around him and he's and he dropped his feet

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<v Speaker 2>and he went for a ride. So when you go

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<v Speaker 2>up when you when you jump on somebody's back and

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<v Speaker 2>your feet's not attached to the ground anymore, you can't

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<v Speaker 2>drive him either way, and he just flung him off.

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<v Speaker 2>But the proper notion would be, you can't tackle somebody high.

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<v Speaker 2>You have to tackle them around their midsection or waist.

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<v Speaker 2>You run and you either pull or you push, and

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<v Speaker 2>you get those arms around you don't let go, and

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<v Speaker 2>you keep running your feet even if you have to

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<v Speaker 2>grab around his waist, and then you trip them by

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<v Speaker 2>putting your feet in between his feet or in front

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<v Speaker 2>of his feet, but like they don't run their feet.

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<v Speaker 2>We live in this error where a lot of guys

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<v Speaker 2>think that they can just come up and ooh, But

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<v Speaker 2>what happens is when you do that and they don't fall,

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<v Speaker 2>you're on the ground and they're still running. So I

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<v Speaker 2>don't believe in this hot tackling stuff either putting your

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<v Speaker 2>head behind a man's body when you're small, because they

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<v Speaker 2>just run through those arm tackles, so they're not bringing

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<v Speaker 2>their ass when they come tackle. They're not taking a

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<v Speaker 2>power step, they're reaching. So like when you look at

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<v Speaker 2>Jalen Mills to tackle on conter on the sideline. He's

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<v Speaker 2>pulling the tackle that he attempted. You got to take

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<v Speaker 2>two more steps because what happens is when you're running

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<v Speaker 2>right when somebody's running and you're here, you're gonna you're

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<v Speaker 2>slowing down because you're stopping and you're falling here and

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<v Speaker 2>they're moving away. So as you go like you're you're

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<v Speaker 2>you're hitting something that's moving. The feet are always moving.

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<v Speaker 2>So you don't tackle the feet because you can come

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<v Speaker 2>here and miss a foot, and then now you gotta

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<v Speaker 2>try and swipe their feet. You need to be up here.

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<v Speaker 2>The mid section don't move, so you can go and

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<v Speaker 2>then you take them down. They're not taking enough steps.

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<v Speaker 2>They have to continue to run before they attempt their tackle.

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<v Speaker 2>They got to get up on people. And then because

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<v Speaker 2>remember I'm up high, as I lean forward, I come,

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<v Speaker 2>I become shorter and shorter and shorter. I never want

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<v Speaker 2>to hit the feet because their feet or it can

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<v Speaker 2>be this far apart where we catch somebody in midstride.

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<v Speaker 2>You might not be able to get your arm rout

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<v Speaker 2>and that's gonna kick your arm off. You gotta tackle

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<v Speaker 2>around the waist man. You gotta rise up. They're not

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<v Speaker 2>taking enough steps man, And I don't know why they

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<v Speaker 2>don't do that, and they don't tackle enough, and they

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<v Speaker 2>don't practice tackling enough live tackling. Hitting dummies is not

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<v Speaker 2>live tackling because when you hit the dummy, it goes

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<v Speaker 2>it falls.

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<v Speaker 4>Every time you hit a.

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<v Speaker 2>Donut or a rolling wheel or whatever, it goes down

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<v Speaker 2>every time. It's like into the dragon. When he punched

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<v Speaker 2>a board. Boards don't hit back.

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<v Speaker 1>Can you speak to the rhythm of game, the rhythm

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<v Speaker 1>of a game?

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<v Speaker 3>You mentioned that third down play where it looked like

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<v Speaker 3>the Jets we're gonna have an opportunity to get off

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<v Speaker 3>the field, because at that point each team had had

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<v Speaker 3>two possessions, and each team had scored on each of

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<v Speaker 3>their possessions, unfortunately for the Jets, two touchdowns for the Cardinals,

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<v Speaker 3>two touchdowns for the Green and White. And then also

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<v Speaker 3>later on that drive, Quincy Williams came unimpeded on of

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<v Speaker 3>Blitz and that was what might go down is the

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<v Speaker 3>biggest hit of the year in the National Football League.

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<v Speaker 3>Somehow Kyler Murray did not bumble that ball away. His

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<v Speaker 3>helmet was dislodged, and that sets up a six second

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<v Speaker 3>and eighteen and they're able to convert and then before

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<v Speaker 3>you know it, they're back in the end zone again.

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<v Speaker 1>Murray hits Mar Harrison Jr.

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<v Speaker 2>To Actually he did fumble the ball, yep, but Quincy

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<v Speaker 2>got up so fast he didn't recognize that he didn't

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<v Speaker 2>have the ball. Kyler recovered the ball by his feet

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<v Speaker 2>while he was trying to get up, but he was dazed.

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<v Speaker 2>If if if Quincy would have stayed on top of him,

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<v Speaker 2>he's a dead player with his helmet off, and that

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<v Speaker 2>ball was still sitting there around his shins, and it

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<v Speaker 2>was another jet player there. But if he would have

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<v Speaker 2>recognized it. He was so excited that he made a

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<v Speaker 2>probably one of the hardest hits, you know, unseen hits

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<v Speaker 2>that he's ever made. He didn't recognize that the ball

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<v Speaker 2>was actually loose, and the ball wasn't in Kyler's hands.

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<v Speaker 2>Soon than Kyle got here, he dropped the ball and

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<v Speaker 2>he landed on top of it, but he didn't have it.

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<v Speaker 4>And while Quincy was celebrated, he picked the ball up.

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<v Speaker 4>The little things. Little things, Now that's exciting that what

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<v Speaker 4>he did. It was an amazing hit. Way to dial

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<v Speaker 4>it up.

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<v Speaker 2>But when you're losing doing the football season, it's like

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<v Speaker 2>things like that. That's like, man, we got the hit man,

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<v Speaker 2>we could have got the ball and nobody was around.

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<v Speaker 4>Everybody stopped.

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<v Speaker 2>If you go back and watch it, you'll see Kyler

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<v Speaker 2>like get up and reach and grab the ball by

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<v Speaker 2>his knees and grab it.

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<v Speaker 4>But that ball was free.

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<v Speaker 3>The Cardinals scored five consecutive possessions. If you're Jeff Ballbrick

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<v Speaker 3>right now, and he's taken on a lot of the

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<v Speaker 3>responsibilities saying that it's he's he said, hey, I didn't

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<v Speaker 3>get my team prepared, but he's not out there on

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<v Speaker 3>the field, the one responsible for making tackles. Defensively, we

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<v Speaker 3>always talk about it. Me and you love fights. Styles

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<v Speaker 3>make fights. What do they have to do before this

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<v Speaker 3>game against Indianapolis Colts as far as defensively trying to

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<v Speaker 3>fix what held them against the Cardinals, but also looking

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<v Speaker 3>ahead to these fine on seven games.

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<v Speaker 2>I mean, listen, if you can show that consistently that

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<v Speaker 2>you can't stop it, you're going to continue to see it,

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<v Speaker 2>and you're gonna continue to see twelve personnel, You're going

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<v Speaker 2>to continue to see you know, saying that this is

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<v Speaker 2>how we adjust to it. You got it, like you

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<v Speaker 2>can in my opinion, you have to go to a

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<v Speaker 2>three four. When you have that, you gotta have some

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<v Speaker 2>form of a heavy package, and it can't be you know,

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<v Speaker 2>bringing an extra linebacker at the second level walking in

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<v Speaker 2>safety down.

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<v Speaker 4>I need three defensive tackles in there.

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<v Speaker 2>So I got three over there, three, and I got

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<v Speaker 2>two over there two and the centers to extra guy.

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<v Speaker 4>And now let me see if you can't double team.

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<v Speaker 2>So now you got a block Quincy Quinnen one on one,

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<v Speaker 2>you can double, you can double ken Law. But then

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<v Speaker 2>now whoever you decide to put that, whether it's Clemmings

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<v Speaker 2>rather it's Taylor, put them in that gap right in

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<v Speaker 2>between the B gap, Like you can't double because the

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<v Speaker 2>tackle you can double the tackle. But then I got

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<v Speaker 2>a fighter's chance that way. But when I have four

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<v Speaker 2>and they got six, two tight ends on the line,

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<v Speaker 2>paired up tackle guard, center guard tackle, that's seven people,

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<v Speaker 2>seven people against four, who's gonna win that battle unless

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<v Speaker 2>you got two fat dudes, Like, it doesn't usually work

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<v Speaker 2>out when you go four against seven because that allows

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<v Speaker 2>them to double team you. Never you don't know who's

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<v Speaker 2>the double team.

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<v Speaker 4>Coming to.

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<v Speaker 3>Seven takeaways so far through ten games, two interceptions.

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<v Speaker 1>Why haven't the takeaways been there? You know, specifically the

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<v Speaker 1>interceptions too.

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<v Speaker 3>I know teams are running the ball, but you see

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<v Speaker 3>a lot of teams in the league they have better success.

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<v Speaker 3>I mean, they kind of stands out in terms of

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<v Speaker 3>when we're talking about complimentary football because this is not

0:11:56.280 --> 0:11:58.480
<v Speaker 3>all on the defense, this is not the entire team,

0:11:58.760 --> 0:12:01.520
<v Speaker 3>and we're gonna get to that why they are three

0:12:01.559 --> 0:12:04.600
<v Speaker 3>and seven, But the takeaways, what would you say, what

0:12:04.640 --> 0:12:06.959
<v Speaker 3>would you point to and say why they haven't done there?

0:12:07.880 --> 0:12:09.800
<v Speaker 2>So when a team can run the ball on you,

0:12:09.880 --> 0:12:12.839
<v Speaker 2>it creates play action opportunities. So a lot of your

0:12:13.160 --> 0:12:17.199
<v Speaker 2>defensive plays are one on one right because you committed

0:12:17.240 --> 0:12:19.880
<v Speaker 2>so much to trying to stop the run that their

0:12:19.880 --> 0:12:22.440
<v Speaker 2>linebackers have to respect the run. So if it's a playfake,

0:12:22.520 --> 0:12:24.920
<v Speaker 2>you have to step up. That creates a lot of

0:12:24.960 --> 0:12:27.800
<v Speaker 2>horizontal space. Like you said, come on, man, you saw

0:12:27.800 --> 0:12:31.640
<v Speaker 2>the o Ch screen yesterday, right, You saw all the

0:12:31.760 --> 0:12:36.600
<v Speaker 2>routes you saw was horizontal, Like it's very few vertical

0:12:36.600 --> 0:12:39.839
<v Speaker 2>shots horizontal. That's because they know that they've earned the

0:12:39.920 --> 0:12:42.520
<v Speaker 2>respect that the linebackers knowing they have to come downhill,

0:12:43.480 --> 0:12:45.840
<v Speaker 2>so they just create space. And then now you got

0:12:45.840 --> 0:12:48.840
<v Speaker 2>the defender having to chase through traffic. And then especially

0:12:48.840 --> 0:12:51.160
<v Speaker 2>if you're chasing a tight end, even though you can

0:12:51.240 --> 0:12:53.439
<v Speaker 2>run with a tight end, if you're running behind a

0:12:53.480 --> 0:12:55.160
<v Speaker 2>tight end, because you have to be in a trail position.

0:12:55.679 --> 0:12:57.920
<v Speaker 4>He's six ' five, he's kicking your.

0:12:57.760 --> 0:13:01.480
<v Speaker 2>Shin every other step right, so then like he can

0:13:01.559 --> 0:13:04.040
<v Speaker 2>just he basically just positions and bodies you out. And

0:13:04.080 --> 0:13:06.679
<v Speaker 2>then you end up jumping on his back no matter

0:13:06.679 --> 0:13:08.800
<v Speaker 2>if you're faster than him or not, because you have

0:13:08.920 --> 0:13:11.040
<v Speaker 2>to stand relation. Because you get in front of him,

0:13:11.120 --> 0:13:13.000
<v Speaker 2>he stops and goes back the other way. You have

0:13:13.040 --> 0:13:16.520
<v Speaker 2>to be in a trail relationship. Usually what you do

0:13:16.640 --> 0:13:19.160
<v Speaker 2>is when people are doing all that and and the

0:13:19.160 --> 0:13:20.600
<v Speaker 2>linebackers have to have good eyes.

0:13:20.640 --> 0:13:24.560
<v Speaker 4>But they got some inexperienced linebackers out there. Like the backside.

0:13:24.120 --> 0:13:27.960
<v Speaker 2>Linebacker, like yesterday when they had the big the big boot,

0:13:28.400 --> 0:13:30.439
<v Speaker 2>it's the backside linebacker that's supposed to see it. The

0:13:30.480 --> 0:13:33.240
<v Speaker 2>front side linebacker's play side. He's of course, the tight

0:13:33.320 --> 0:13:35.240
<v Speaker 2>end could be there at like he blocking and run

0:13:35.280 --> 0:13:38.200
<v Speaker 2>past him. But the backside linebacker has to stay be

0:13:38.400 --> 0:13:41.840
<v Speaker 2>slow and understand he has to check the backside gap.

0:13:41.880 --> 0:13:44.080
<v Speaker 2>The front side gap and let me look at him.

0:13:44.480 --> 0:13:47.360
<v Speaker 2>That's a problem. They're trying to make other people's plays.

0:13:48.280 --> 0:13:50.760
<v Speaker 2>It's not your play. And that's what happens when you

0:13:50.800 --> 0:13:53.880
<v Speaker 2>start losing, you start reaching and trying to do other

0:13:53.920 --> 0:13:56.079
<v Speaker 2>people's job instead of doing your job. So that now

0:13:56.080 --> 0:13:58.520
<v Speaker 2>the coach has to coach two positions instead of one.

0:14:00.040 --> 0:14:02.480
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, you always speak about farming your own land.

0:14:02.559 --> 0:14:06.560
<v Speaker 3>Over the year, you can start pressing and then you

0:14:07.160 --> 0:14:11.800
<v Speaker 3>actually instead of helping, your creating a second boy. Yeah,

0:14:11.880 --> 0:14:14.040
<v Speaker 3>all right, So flipping the offensive side of the ball,

0:14:14.679 --> 0:14:17.400
<v Speaker 3>Jets moved the ball early. They had a number of

0:14:17.960 --> 0:14:21.160
<v Speaker 3>drives where they sustained the football right and we saw

0:14:21.200 --> 0:14:25.680
<v Speaker 3>them moving it between the twenties, but they weren't finishing possessions.

0:14:26.120 --> 0:14:29.320
<v Speaker 3>What do you make of where they are offensively right now?

0:14:29.960 --> 0:14:32.240
<v Speaker 2>I don't know who they are, what they do well,

0:14:32.960 --> 0:14:34.480
<v Speaker 2>And I don't know if they know, Like I don't

0:14:34.520 --> 0:14:36.600
<v Speaker 2>know what their bread and butter runs are. I don't

0:14:36.600 --> 0:14:39.960
<v Speaker 2>know if they bred and brother past combinations are and

0:14:40.040 --> 0:14:43.720
<v Speaker 2>so and the thing is like the best I think

0:14:43.760 --> 0:14:46.200
<v Speaker 2>I've seen the offense. Look, you know, people can talk

0:14:46.240 --> 0:14:48.520
<v Speaker 2>to the Texans game that was that was cool, But

0:14:48.640 --> 0:14:52.360
<v Speaker 2>for me, it was against the Bills. Yeah, that game

0:14:52.440 --> 0:14:54.520
<v Speaker 2>in that game, and that game featured a bunch of

0:14:54.520 --> 0:14:58.000
<v Speaker 2>ships and most remembers the first game out feature a

0:14:58.040 --> 0:15:00.760
<v Speaker 2>lot of ships and most And what Aaron has to

0:15:00.800 --> 0:15:04.640
<v Speaker 2>realize is he doesn't need answers to the test.

0:15:05.040 --> 0:15:06.000
<v Speaker 4>Everybody else does.

0:15:06.520 --> 0:15:09.600
<v Speaker 2>So here's what's happening, in my opinion, when Aaron Rodgers

0:15:09.600 --> 0:15:12.200
<v Speaker 2>goes to the line of scrimmage and it's eighteen seconds

0:15:12.200 --> 0:15:16.080
<v Speaker 2>that he's going through talking to everybody, right, he's getting

0:15:16.080 --> 0:15:19.600
<v Speaker 2>everybody tell him what to do, Phil Joe. But me

0:15:19.640 --> 0:15:22.960
<v Speaker 2>as a linebacker, me as a safety, what that allows

0:15:23.120 --> 0:15:26.320
<v Speaker 2>me to do is to look at you for eighteen

0:15:26.360 --> 0:15:30.480
<v Speaker 2>seconds without a distorted view. So when I see you,

0:15:30.720 --> 0:15:33.040
<v Speaker 2>I'm like, I'm looking like this three by one. Aaron's

0:15:33.040 --> 0:15:35.360
<v Speaker 2>still talking. I can one thing I can do when

0:15:35.360 --> 0:15:37.640
<v Speaker 2>it's not a lot of emotions. I can communicate to everybody.

0:15:38.160 --> 0:15:41.320
<v Speaker 2>I can say watch this, watch that. I can start

0:15:41.360 --> 0:15:45.560
<v Speaker 2>looking and man, these linemen their hands look a little light.

0:15:45.960 --> 0:15:49.000
<v Speaker 2>Alert bird right. I can look and say, hey man,

0:15:49.040 --> 0:15:51.960
<v Speaker 2>this guard is laying him back. Hmmm, alert the pull.

0:15:52.920 --> 0:15:56.480
<v Speaker 2>Alert the pull. Lets me tell tell the front side linebacker,

0:15:56.520 --> 0:15:58.720
<v Speaker 2>hey man can be ready to come downhill like a Batshie,

0:15:58.880 --> 0:16:01.880
<v Speaker 2>I think this guy's pulling, and then it also allows

0:16:01.880 --> 0:16:03.160
<v Speaker 2>me to tell the backside tackle.

0:16:03.160 --> 0:16:04.320
<v Speaker 4>Hey man, you getting the back block.

0:16:04.960 --> 0:16:09.080
<v Speaker 2>So now everybody's more prepared for the play, right, because

0:16:09.080 --> 0:16:12.840
<v Speaker 2>I had eighteen seconds of watching when we when we

0:16:12.880 --> 0:16:16.040
<v Speaker 2>see it like a fire drill, it's when God, what

0:16:16.200 --> 0:16:19.280
<v Speaker 2>game was that? Remember the Jacksonville game against this year

0:16:19.360 --> 0:16:22.800
<v Speaker 2>Jacksonville and Buffalo. Yeah, when it was all those shifts

0:16:22.800 --> 0:16:26.440
<v Speaker 2>in motion and everything. Hey hey hey, it was frantic, right, Yeah,

0:16:27.120 --> 0:16:30.160
<v Speaker 2>when you shift in motion creates chaos to the defense

0:16:30.600 --> 0:16:33.080
<v Speaker 2>because sometimes you have to change that.

0:16:33.160 --> 0:16:36.680
<v Speaker 4>You have to change the strength. Call close left, okay,

0:16:36.760 --> 0:16:39.400
<v Speaker 4>Rett relottle close right. Everybody has to move.

0:16:39.560 --> 0:16:41.560
<v Speaker 2>Then you have to say all right, y know, Deuce

0:16:41.640 --> 0:16:44.240
<v Speaker 2>Deuke's over here, all right, pack pack pack over here?

0:16:44.320 --> 0:16:46.000
<v Speaker 4>Right, you have to then you got to say all right,

0:16:46.120 --> 0:16:47.040
<v Speaker 4>nice nine nighte.

0:16:47.480 --> 0:16:49.720
<v Speaker 2>So now you got to communicate, and all it takes

0:16:49.760 --> 0:16:51.480
<v Speaker 2>is one person not to get it right and he's

0:16:51.480 --> 0:16:52.080
<v Speaker 2>out of his gap.

0:16:53.000 --> 0:16:53.560
<v Speaker 4>You win.

0:16:55.680 --> 0:17:00.640
<v Speaker 2>Primarily just because you created movement. You created you forced communication,

0:17:01.200 --> 0:17:04.760
<v Speaker 2>And what Aaron's not doing is not forcing communication because

0:17:04.800 --> 0:17:09.320
<v Speaker 2>you're not motioning and shifting. He doesn't need it. But

0:17:09.320 --> 0:17:13.800
<v Speaker 2>his teammates need it, right, because for your offense, if

0:17:13.840 --> 0:17:16.320
<v Speaker 2>you're going in motion and nobody goes with you, then

0:17:16.400 --> 0:17:18.440
<v Speaker 2>now you know for sure that it's a zone or

0:17:18.560 --> 0:17:23.720
<v Speaker 2>man right. It reaffirms what you assume. Aaron Rodgers doesn't

0:17:23.760 --> 0:17:26.479
<v Speaker 2>need that affirmation because he already knows because he's been

0:17:26.520 --> 0:17:28.639
<v Speaker 2>around long enough. He has different keys that he can

0:17:28.640 --> 0:17:31.240
<v Speaker 2>get his stuff for him. Other people need those keys,

0:17:31.520 --> 0:17:33.359
<v Speaker 2>and that's the problem. Sometimes when you play with a

0:17:33.359 --> 0:17:35.919
<v Speaker 2>great player, they assume that everybody else is great and

0:17:36.000 --> 0:17:39.600
<v Speaker 2>think great, that's not the case. Like I remember when

0:17:39.600 --> 0:17:41.639
<v Speaker 2>I was coaching, I said all the time by singletary,

0:17:41.840 --> 0:17:43.320
<v Speaker 2>you'd be like, man, didn't you see that?

0:17:44.520 --> 0:17:49.920
<v Speaker 4>No, like you see it. That's why you're one.

0:17:49.800 --> 0:17:52.119
<v Speaker 2>Of the greatest players ever played the position, because you

0:17:52.160 --> 0:17:53.360
<v Speaker 2>see stuff I don't see.

0:17:53.600 --> 0:17:54.280
<v Speaker 4>No, I did not.

0:17:54.720 --> 0:17:59.240
<v Speaker 2>I absolutely didn't see it. So Aaron is expecting ten

0:17:59.280 --> 0:18:02.280
<v Speaker 2>people on the field to see what he sees, but

0:18:03.280 --> 0:18:05.760
<v Speaker 2>they don't. So he has communicated to him and by

0:18:05.800 --> 0:18:08.600
<v Speaker 2>the time that happens, the defense has already had an

0:18:08.600 --> 0:18:12.240
<v Speaker 2>opportunity to decipher what they think is going to be

0:18:13.600 --> 0:18:15.960
<v Speaker 2>and they're allowed to play fast because guess what, once

0:18:16.000 --> 0:18:16.960
<v Speaker 2>I see the clock.

0:18:16.760 --> 0:18:19.560
<v Speaker 4>Get underneath two seconds or three seconds.

0:18:19.640 --> 0:18:22.800
<v Speaker 2>Man, whatever hut hut you're doing, I'm firing off because

0:18:22.840 --> 0:18:25.080
<v Speaker 2>if it's not hut hut, it's either the delayed game,

0:18:25.160 --> 0:18:26.320
<v Speaker 2>it's not gonna be all sides.

0:18:26.840 --> 0:18:29.119
<v Speaker 4>So I'm firing off. So now I'm getting off the

0:18:29.119 --> 0:18:31.560
<v Speaker 4>ball faster game day.

0:18:31.400 --> 0:18:32.080
<v Speaker 2>And every day.

0:18:32.119 --> 0:18:34.320
<v Speaker 3>Score a jewelry touchdown with Kendra Scott.

0:18:34.440 --> 0:18:37.399
<v Speaker 2>Shot Fashion and Fine Jewelry fit for another winning season

0:18:37.440 --> 0:18:39.919
<v Speaker 2>at your local store or Kendrascott dot com.

0:18:40.000 --> 0:18:44.280
<v Speaker 3>Shine Bray, do good with Kendra Scott. It's so interesting

0:18:44.320 --> 0:18:47.560
<v Speaker 3>to bring off that Bills game because it doesn't seem

0:18:47.640 --> 0:18:49.720
<v Speaker 3>too long ago. And I mentioned this in the postgame

0:18:49.760 --> 0:18:53.359
<v Speaker 3>show that the Jets were hosting Buffalo on Monday Night Football.

0:18:53.400 --> 0:18:55.320
<v Speaker 3>There were two and three, the Bills were three and two.

0:18:55.480 --> 0:19:00.000
<v Speaker 3>They had a chance to tie a top the ass

0:19:00.119 --> 0:19:05.440
<v Speaker 3>the East. In that game, Bark, the Jets had fifteen

0:19:06.160 --> 0:19:11.159
<v Speaker 3>plays of ten plus yards eight plays of twenty plus

0:19:11.280 --> 0:19:17.560
<v Speaker 3>yards against the Cardinals. Arizona averaged ten point four yards

0:19:17.560 --> 0:19:20.840
<v Speaker 3>per pass the time. The Jets averaged three point four

0:19:20.960 --> 0:19:22.160
<v Speaker 3>yards per passive time.

0:19:23.680 --> 0:19:26.160
<v Speaker 2>Because the concepts are easy to read, like and tell

0:19:26.200 --> 0:19:28.240
<v Speaker 2>me this, how many deep shots did they take?

0:19:30.280 --> 0:19:32.880
<v Speaker 1>Got many got many.

0:19:35.080 --> 0:19:35.720
<v Speaker 4>That's my point.

0:19:35.760 --> 0:19:38.280
<v Speaker 2>They didn't stress the feel like I don't understand. Like

0:19:38.320 --> 0:19:40.879
<v Speaker 2>I understand teams are taking things away, but at some

0:19:40.960 --> 0:19:42.520
<v Speaker 2>points you got to be able to say, hey, we

0:19:42.600 --> 0:19:45.119
<v Speaker 2>got great players, let's see if they gonna make plays.

0:19:45.160 --> 0:19:47.120
<v Speaker 4>You got to give them chances. And I didn't see

0:19:47.160 --> 0:19:48.040
<v Speaker 4>them get chances.

0:19:48.320 --> 0:19:51.040
<v Speaker 2>And when fashion came in, because tim Rhine has been

0:19:51.119 --> 0:19:55.600
<v Speaker 2>been struggling a bit, I thought that the pressures slowed

0:19:55.640 --> 0:19:59.840
<v Speaker 2>down and alligned with solidified as well.

0:20:03.000 --> 0:20:05.760
<v Speaker 1>Bresee Hall averaged more than five yards per carry. Yet

0:20:06.080 --> 0:20:08.879
<v Speaker 1>it's never enough though, Yeah.

0:20:08.359 --> 0:20:09.680
<v Speaker 4>Like it's got to be a commitment.

0:20:09.720 --> 0:20:13.800
<v Speaker 2>Like I said before on my on my on the

0:20:13.800 --> 0:20:16.880
<v Speaker 2>post game, it's no way that the Giants run game

0:20:16.960 --> 0:20:20.520
<v Speaker 2>should be producing more yards than the Jets. We got

0:20:20.520 --> 0:20:22.399
<v Speaker 2>a better line and we got better players. And I

0:20:22.400 --> 0:20:26.399
<v Speaker 2>don't like to farm other people's teams, but it's just

0:20:26.440 --> 0:20:30.200
<v Speaker 2>it's more apparent because you know, yo, who the kid

0:20:30.320 --> 0:20:33.920
<v Speaker 2>Tyrone is, and you know like who they because we're

0:20:33.960 --> 0:20:36.199
<v Speaker 2>in the same market. You know who their offensive line is.

0:20:36.240 --> 0:20:38.760
<v Speaker 2>You like, it's no way that this guy should be

0:20:38.840 --> 0:20:40.720
<v Speaker 2>rushing for one hundred and forty seven yards and we

0:20:40.720 --> 0:20:43.960
<v Speaker 2>can't get breeze the ball consistently. That's the best way

0:20:44.000 --> 0:20:46.720
<v Speaker 2>to open up the passing games by consistently committing to

0:20:46.760 --> 0:20:50.680
<v Speaker 2>the run. Like I said, Justin Herbert threw the ball

0:20:50.800 --> 0:20:54.600
<v Speaker 2>eighteen times yesterday and put up twenty seven points. And

0:20:54.800 --> 0:20:59.560
<v Speaker 2>that's not You see that throughout the league. That running

0:20:59.560 --> 0:21:02.119
<v Speaker 2>the football, it's the thing to do. You see that

0:21:02.680 --> 0:21:05.120
<v Speaker 2>maybe like if you look at you look at the Chargers,

0:21:05.119 --> 0:21:08.120
<v Speaker 2>you look at the Ravens, you look at you look

0:21:08.160 --> 0:21:15.400
<v Speaker 2>at the Chiefs, you look at Miami fullbacks because the

0:21:15.400 --> 0:21:18.720
<v Speaker 2>linebackers have gotten so small because they're trying to keep

0:21:18.800 --> 0:21:21.240
<v Speaker 2>up and be able to play in space. The best

0:21:21.240 --> 0:21:23.679
<v Speaker 2>way to gate that and how teams are doing that

0:21:23.800 --> 0:21:26.639
<v Speaker 2>is by going old school on them. It used to

0:21:26.680 --> 0:21:29.240
<v Speaker 2>be just New England that had a fullback. Now you

0:21:29.280 --> 0:21:31.440
<v Speaker 2>look at the teams that's running the ball down people's throat.

0:21:31.480 --> 0:21:34.200
<v Speaker 2>They have a fullback and they're committed to the run

0:21:34.600 --> 0:21:38.040
<v Speaker 2>and it keeps the pass attempts. Now, Jalen Hirts looks

0:21:38.080 --> 0:21:40.160
<v Speaker 2>like Jalen Hirts now because he doesn't throw the ball

0:21:40.200 --> 0:21:42.840
<v Speaker 2>and put the ball at risk. Dak Prescott looks like

0:21:42.880 --> 0:21:44.720
<v Speaker 2>he looks because he throws the ball too much. Because

0:21:44.720 --> 0:21:45.560
<v Speaker 2>they're one dimensional.

0:21:48.040 --> 0:21:51.119
<v Speaker 3>What is a challenge right now for Josh Wallbrick at

0:21:51.400 --> 0:21:54.879
<v Speaker 3>three and seven with this team coming off this game

0:21:55.480 --> 0:22:00.600
<v Speaker 3>against the Arizona Cardinals and now hosting Indianapolis Colt at home.

0:22:01.320 --> 0:22:04.840
<v Speaker 2>It's it's losing the crowd and it's losing your locker room,

0:22:05.840 --> 0:22:09.119
<v Speaker 2>like trying to fight and keeping them together, like just

0:22:09.240 --> 0:22:13.000
<v Speaker 2>keep fighting, like Indianapolis in the same place, Joe Flacco

0:22:13.040 --> 0:22:16.640
<v Speaker 2>through two interceptions. It's like first quarter, but they came

0:22:16.680 --> 0:22:19.600
<v Speaker 2>back and took the lead. So it's not gonna be easy.

0:22:19.640 --> 0:22:21.560
<v Speaker 2>And that's the thing you think, because you got good players,

0:22:21.560 --> 0:22:22.840
<v Speaker 2>it's gonna be easy.

0:22:22.920 --> 0:22:23.080
<v Speaker 1>You know.

0:22:23.119 --> 0:22:25.000
<v Speaker 2>They need to figure out how to find the balance

0:22:25.080 --> 0:22:27.480
<v Speaker 2>between incorporating and all the Sometimes you can have too

0:22:27.560 --> 0:22:32.199
<v Speaker 2>much talent and you try and serve everybody. At some

0:22:32.280 --> 0:22:33.920
<v Speaker 2>points you just got to say, this is what we're

0:22:33.960 --> 0:22:35.920
<v Speaker 2>doing because it's best for the team, and we'll figure

0:22:35.960 --> 0:22:38.320
<v Speaker 2>it out going forward. They have to find a way

0:22:38.359 --> 0:22:40.600
<v Speaker 2>to move the football. They got to find a way

0:22:40.600 --> 0:22:42.440
<v Speaker 2>to score points, and they got to find a way

0:22:42.480 --> 0:22:45.760
<v Speaker 2>to stop the run because guess what, Indianapolis offensive line

0:22:45.840 --> 0:22:47.360
<v Speaker 2>is better than Arizona's.

0:22:47.880 --> 0:22:49.399
<v Speaker 4>Right, Like we getting the ball.

0:22:49.320 --> 0:22:51.800
<v Speaker 2>Ran out our throat with an offensive line that featured

0:22:51.840 --> 0:22:55.840
<v Speaker 2>beat them and Will Hernandez. When you hear those names

0:22:55.960 --> 0:22:59.000
<v Speaker 2>that you should say, no, we're good like those like

0:22:59.040 --> 0:23:03.159
<v Speaker 2>we know those players good people, not great players. But

0:23:03.359 --> 0:23:06.000
<v Speaker 2>if you commit it to what you're doing and you

0:23:06.040 --> 0:23:07.800
<v Speaker 2>know your role and you do it at one hundred percent,

0:23:08.200 --> 0:23:08.840
<v Speaker 2>you can do that.

0:23:10.760 --> 0:23:16.280
<v Speaker 3>I know coaches typically say it takes four six games

0:23:16.320 --> 0:23:20.520
<v Speaker 3>before you can say we have an identity for the

0:23:20.640 --> 0:23:24.560
<v Speaker 3>Jets after ten games, what do you want them to

0:23:24.640 --> 0:23:27.760
<v Speaker 3>strive for in terms of what their identity should be.

0:23:27.800 --> 0:23:29.120
<v Speaker 1>I'm both sides of the ball.

0:23:31.240 --> 0:23:34.760
<v Speaker 2>Most football teams should be about being identity should be

0:23:34.800 --> 0:23:39.560
<v Speaker 2>disciplined and tenacity. And we know what it looks like

0:23:39.600 --> 0:23:45.840
<v Speaker 2>when we see it, like tenacity, like like you can

0:23:45.920 --> 0:23:48.240
<v Speaker 2>see when teams play with a record as abandon but

0:23:48.240 --> 0:23:51.440
<v Speaker 2>they play physical like we don't have to. We've seen

0:23:51.440 --> 0:23:53.399
<v Speaker 2>this defense play like that last year.

0:23:54.920 --> 0:23:58.440
<v Speaker 1>But I need you to tell me what you want

0:23:58.480 --> 0:24:00.720
<v Speaker 1>them to be on both sides of the ball right now.

0:24:01.880 --> 0:24:05.439
<v Speaker 3>Take away the guys who are no longer here physical.

0:24:06.480 --> 0:24:08.920
<v Speaker 2>I want them to be physical. I want them to

0:24:08.960 --> 0:24:13.000
<v Speaker 2>be violent. That takes care of That's how you win

0:24:13.040 --> 0:24:19.440
<v Speaker 2>the trenches. It's all out fight and too often they're

0:24:19.480 --> 0:24:22.639
<v Speaker 2>taking the path of least resistance. See, people assume and

0:24:22.680 --> 0:24:26.560
<v Speaker 2>people that fight always assume that when you're fighting that

0:24:26.600 --> 0:24:28.520
<v Speaker 2>you don't get hit or hurt too.

0:24:30.119 --> 0:24:31.960
<v Speaker 4>Quite the crime, Charry, You're gonna.

0:24:31.760 --> 0:24:34.480
<v Speaker 2>Get hit a lot, but you gotta be able to

0:24:34.520 --> 0:24:37.800
<v Speaker 2>take one to give one, and sometimes you gotta take

0:24:37.800 --> 0:24:39.879
<v Speaker 2>that out. But you can't let that deter you from

0:24:39.920 --> 0:24:44.080
<v Speaker 2>doing what you need to do. Like if I'm all brick,

0:24:44.160 --> 0:24:46.679
<v Speaker 2>I'm saying, listen, I don't want any.

0:24:46.440 --> 0:24:51.040
<v Speaker 4>Tackles for my defensive line. I want sacks.

0:24:51.480 --> 0:24:53.840
<v Speaker 2>I don't expect my defensive line and to make no

0:24:53.960 --> 0:24:57.640
<v Speaker 2>tackles because they supposed to be hunking down making sure

0:24:57.640 --> 0:25:01.000
<v Speaker 2>that nobody gets to my linebackers. That's your job. It's

0:25:01.000 --> 0:25:04.480
<v Speaker 2>not your job as a defensive tackle to make tackles.

0:25:05.720 --> 0:25:08.199
<v Speaker 2>It's not your job. Your job is to dominate the

0:25:08.200 --> 0:25:11.960
<v Speaker 2>line of scrimmage. And that doesn't have that doesn't say

0:25:12.200 --> 0:25:17.280
<v Speaker 2>getting tackles. I think people, you know, they think that

0:25:17.480 --> 0:25:19.520
<v Speaker 2>you know, Oh man, if I get a hundred, listen,

0:25:19.600 --> 0:25:23.800
<v Speaker 2>I much rather have thirty tackles as a defensive tackle

0:25:24.600 --> 0:25:27.719
<v Speaker 2>and our defense ranks number one against a run than

0:25:27.760 --> 0:25:31.560
<v Speaker 2>to have a hundred tackles on defensive line and be

0:25:31.680 --> 0:25:37.119
<v Speaker 2>twenty eighth because that's telling a story, a story of selfishness.

0:25:37.520 --> 0:25:39.800
<v Speaker 2>Because when you sign up to be a defensive line

0:25:39.880 --> 0:25:42.720
<v Speaker 2>it's not glamorous. When you sign up to be a

0:25:42.760 --> 0:25:46.680
<v Speaker 2>will linebacker, it ain't glamorous. Listen, I spent many a

0:25:46.800 --> 0:25:51.159
<v Speaker 2>days or many of plays underneath piles while David or

0:25:51.240 --> 0:25:55.280
<v Speaker 2>ray Lewis was celebrating over my head because it wasn't

0:25:55.280 --> 0:25:57.320
<v Speaker 2>my job. It was my job to go blow up

0:25:57.359 --> 0:25:59.479
<v Speaker 2>the play. It was their job to make the tackle.

0:26:00.440 --> 0:26:05.600
<v Speaker 2>You gotta embrace your role like nobody cares about how

0:26:05.600 --> 0:26:07.399
<v Speaker 2>many tackles you got. You can add them up all

0:26:07.440 --> 0:26:10.200
<v Speaker 2>you want, like I'll take I'll take I'll take this.

0:26:10.440 --> 0:26:13.160
<v Speaker 2>I'll tell you all time. I'll take my eight hundred

0:26:13.200 --> 0:26:17.680
<v Speaker 2>career tackles every day of the week over a bunch

0:26:17.720 --> 0:26:21.359
<v Speaker 2>of guys that got fifteen hundred because guess what I got,

0:26:21.560 --> 0:26:24.000
<v Speaker 2>I got, I got eight hundred tackles or whatever. However,

0:26:24.040 --> 0:26:27.199
<v Speaker 2>my my career status is eight hundred tackles. Whatever I

0:26:27.240 --> 0:26:30.240
<v Speaker 2>got mines because guess what we was off the field

0:26:30.560 --> 0:26:33.800
<v Speaker 2>were no opportunities. We was three and out. You can

0:26:33.840 --> 0:26:35.960
<v Speaker 2>have a bunch of tackles and showed me. I show

0:26:35.960 --> 0:26:37.240
<v Speaker 2>me a dude with a bunch of time, Show you

0:26:37.240 --> 0:26:40.520
<v Speaker 2>a dude that's on a scrub team on week defense.

0:26:40.720 --> 0:26:45.160
<v Speaker 2>When you first, you second in defense, it ain't enough

0:26:45.160 --> 0:26:48.040
<v Speaker 2>tackles for everybody because guess what we over there drinking

0:26:48.080 --> 0:26:50.440
<v Speaker 2>gatorade while you're out there giving yourself.

0:26:50.480 --> 0:26:57.680
<v Speaker 3>CTE, you got a prediction for Jake Paul and Mike Tyson.

0:26:59.000 --> 0:27:02.959
<v Speaker 4>I refuse to watch that.

0:27:01.560 --> 0:27:04.120
<v Speaker 1>Baby, right Tyson in that ring.

0:27:04.720 --> 0:27:08.480
<v Speaker 2>I mean if it goes past three rounds al for Tyson, right,

0:27:09.520 --> 0:27:12.400
<v Speaker 2>if Tyson gets to him and touching him early, it's

0:27:12.400 --> 0:27:12.760
<v Speaker 2>a ride.

0:27:12.840 --> 0:27:13.159
<v Speaker 4>Listen.

0:27:13.600 --> 0:27:15.359
<v Speaker 1>You know he's close to sixty years old.

0:27:15.640 --> 0:27:19.439
<v Speaker 2>I know Jacob's done a great job in making a

0:27:19.480 --> 0:27:23.359
<v Speaker 2>bunch of money and excitement over fighting people. That's a

0:27:23.440 --> 0:27:27.760
<v Speaker 2>nun threat to him, but we fall for it because

0:27:27.800 --> 0:27:31.640
<v Speaker 2>it's the name, not what we think they are. Come on, man,

0:27:31.720 --> 0:27:36.840
<v Speaker 2>Nate Robinson washed up UFC fighters. One time that he

0:27:36.880 --> 0:27:41.320
<v Speaker 2>stepped up and fought a real fighter. He lost Tommy Fury,

0:27:41.720 --> 0:27:43.080
<v Speaker 2>who is not even a good fighter.

0:27:45.000 --> 0:27:47.800
<v Speaker 1>So let's get out on this. Can you explain to

0:27:47.920 --> 0:27:49.240
<v Speaker 1>people what it was like.

0:27:50.720 --> 0:27:57.520
<v Speaker 3>When Tyson was on pay per view back in his heyday.

0:27:57.920 --> 0:27:59.879
<v Speaker 4>See, because we didn't have a bunch of options.

0:28:00.440 --> 0:28:04.080
<v Speaker 2>We didn't have Netflix, we didn't have Prime, we didn't

0:28:04.119 --> 0:28:11.040
<v Speaker 2>have Disney Plus. Like things were limited. So sometimes too much,

0:28:10.720 --> 0:28:13.720
<v Speaker 2>too many options could be a bad thing because you

0:28:13.760 --> 0:28:16.480
<v Speaker 2>don't know what to pick. But man, when Tyson was on,

0:28:16.600 --> 0:28:20.840
<v Speaker 2>it was like like grandfriend, my grandfather were rent the fight.

0:28:20.880 --> 0:28:24.160
<v Speaker 4>We all come down. You got the house packed, and I.

0:28:24.119 --> 0:28:26.480
<v Speaker 2>Can remember a couple of times people went to go

0:28:26.520 --> 0:28:28.080
<v Speaker 2>get something to drink and came back and the fight

0:28:28.200 --> 0:28:31.159
<v Speaker 2>was over there like what happened like if you blink.

0:28:31.240 --> 0:28:34.560
<v Speaker 2>It was like it was always a threat of danger

0:28:34.600 --> 0:28:37.399
<v Speaker 2>of it being stocked with one punch, And that was

0:28:37.440 --> 0:28:39.440
<v Speaker 2>the beauty of it, right, And that's why it makes

0:28:39.480 --> 0:28:41.880
<v Speaker 2>him so exciting. That's what makes people love him. That's

0:28:41.880 --> 0:28:44.720
<v Speaker 2>what makes people still revere him. He's not the best

0:28:44.960 --> 0:28:47.600
<v Speaker 2>heavyweight champion. I mean, hell, he lost to Holy Phil,

0:28:47.920 --> 0:28:50.080
<v Speaker 2>he lost to Lennox Lewis, you know what I mean.

0:28:50.400 --> 0:28:53.280
<v Speaker 2>He was a flawed man. But he was exciting and

0:28:53.320 --> 0:28:54.800
<v Speaker 2>you knew it was going to be exciting. You knew

0:28:54.800 --> 0:28:56.840
<v Speaker 2>he was going for broke and that was that was

0:28:56.840 --> 0:28:59.360
<v Speaker 2>the beauty of it. And you know, for me, you

0:28:59.400 --> 0:29:00.800
<v Speaker 2>know still.

0:29:02.560 --> 0:29:03.640
<v Speaker 4>Best bang for your buck.

0:29:04.240 --> 0:29:07.800
<v Speaker 3>He was the most intimate sports figure of my time

0:29:08.840 --> 0:29:10.480
<v Speaker 3>at five ten.

0:29:11.120 --> 0:29:13.360
<v Speaker 4>Coming in, I realize that he's a little man.

0:29:13.560 --> 0:29:18.720
<v Speaker 3>Coming in there with the black trunks, the black high tops.

0:29:19.200 --> 0:29:22.200
<v Speaker 4>No, the white top that's cut.

0:29:22.480 --> 0:29:24.840
<v Speaker 2>They cut the triangles to the side, and he put

0:29:24.880 --> 0:29:26.720
<v Speaker 2>it over like a like a cape.

0:29:28.200 --> 0:29:30.560
<v Speaker 1>That's what I want to see from the Jets on Sunday.

0:29:30.680 --> 0:29:33.640
<v Speaker 3>Just come out, come out of that tunnel and get

0:29:33.680 --> 0:29:35.080
<v Speaker 3>after him.

0:29:35.360 --> 0:29:37.520
<v Speaker 4>You got no choice, man, because they will boo you

0:29:37.600 --> 0:29:38.360
<v Speaker 4>off the stage.

0:29:38.360 --> 0:29:40.880
<v Speaker 2>You gotta you gotta bring everything, man at this point,

0:29:41.240 --> 0:29:46.280
<v Speaker 2>like fans I think are gauging effort, and one thing

0:29:46.280 --> 0:29:48.160
<v Speaker 2>you can't do is show him that you mailed it in.

0:29:48.800 --> 0:29:51.400
<v Speaker 2>You gotta play hard, man, hard than you've ever played. Like,

0:29:51.440 --> 0:29:54.640
<v Speaker 2>whinning in this league isn't easy. You shouldn't expect it

0:29:54.680 --> 0:29:57.480
<v Speaker 2>to be, but man, like, when you look at your

0:29:57.560 --> 0:29:59.160
<v Speaker 2>left and right, you're like, man, that dude next to

0:29:59.160 --> 0:30:01.080
<v Speaker 2>me is is a be but is he giving you

0:30:01.120 --> 0:30:03.920
<v Speaker 2>everything he got? So that's what you have to do

0:30:04.000 --> 0:30:07.200
<v Speaker 2>as leaders. And you know it's hard because CJ. Molesey

0:30:07.240 --> 0:30:10.360
<v Speaker 2>has been hurt all year. It's hard because these young

0:30:10.400 --> 0:30:12.080
<v Speaker 2>guys are trying the best they can, but I don't

0:30:12.080 --> 0:30:15.000
<v Speaker 2>know if they really know how to lead and what

0:30:15.040 --> 0:30:17.800
<v Speaker 2>the accountability of holding each other accountable during the week

0:30:17.920 --> 0:30:20.720
<v Speaker 2>is all about. And then when it's not going right

0:30:20.760 --> 0:30:24.920
<v Speaker 2>on the field, being able to have the respect to

0:30:25.000 --> 0:30:29.000
<v Speaker 2>hold people accountable, starting with yourself first saying that this

0:30:29.160 --> 0:30:32.240
<v Speaker 2>is below our standard, is not going this way, do

0:30:32.400 --> 0:30:35.360
<v Speaker 2>your job, and holding guys accountable to do their job.