This speaks to a shortcoming of giving individual position grades.
Few DBs can cover when the QB has all day. Also, without looking at the all-22, sometimes it can be hard to tell whether or not a DB (or LB) was truly out of position to make the play due to bad technique and/or decisions, or due to a bad defensive play call.
Same issue on offense. How many of our failures in our run game were on the RBs vs the OL? Sometimes it’s both. How many incomplete passes were due to bad throws, or WR running the route poorly?
Are all these factors included in the position grades?
PFF uses all 22 views. They may be wrong on the responsibilities, though.
We are not getting an amazing pass rush, but I'm not seeing the QB having a massive amount of time before throwing. We’re getting some pressure. There is about a 5 count before he has to scramble, but he’s having to scramble. Tyler Shough is almost always taking his first read and passing to his primary receiver. He doesn’t even have to go through progressions—He’s going back and throwing.
The “pass interference play” at the end of the 3rd is awful—Amari Harvey is beaten badly, never looks, interferes, stops covering after he knows the flag is coming, and gives up a TD.
Most of the Louisville hot receivers have their DB beaten from the snap. The GT defensive linemen would need to go nearly unblocked to stop some of the passes.
I’m not saying the front 6 had a great game—they didn’t. There were tons of missed tackles. But key members of the secondary had terrible games and lost their matchups—either in zone or man-to-man. Efford isn’t great in man-to-man coverage, but he’s a reliable tackler.
On the offensive side, King has a great quick release, and he needed it—our line was POROUS. He was getting the ball out in 2 or 3 seconds. We have some talented receivers. King can still be late on his throws. I think he has plenty of arm strength, but he lofts some deep throws and throws them late—if he throws them earlier, they’re walk-in TDs. Jamal Haynes overcame or dodged tackles in the backfield to get yards.
Our plays looked really interesting in retrospect—but we had multiple blockers missing assignments. Not one—MULTIPLE. The GT offensive line had a terrible day. On some plays, I was seeing runners dodging multiple tacklers to get to the line of scrimmage—and on some plays, the third tackler got them in the backfield.