The new NFL is all about exciting 90 second game-winning drives, but I'll never get purposely milking the clock as you're still outside the red zone. Sometimes it's possible because you drove down to the 1 yard line too quickly but usually you need to first worry about scoring. Unless your defense is so piss poor it can't prevent the other team from answering back.
Or not accepting you made that obvious mistake and claiming you saw the DB and felt you could beat him one on one. If he saw the game film of that play, there's just no way you could defend it. And when he later hit the sideline play, it wasn't the same thing at all. He threw a nice ball into a soft spot in the zone coverage.
The game-ending pick was costly because it sure felt like they were about to score, but I can only fault Kap for throwing at Richard Sherman. The throw itself was on target, and having your #1 receiver in single coverage against a scrambling defense usually is a good situation. Sherman had to make a fantastic play and if it's not picked off after a controlled deflection, the Niners still have a couple more chances. I'm still wondering why it was a linebacker who was there to secure the INT.
I'm not sure what's worse here. Being locked in on your primary and throwing that awful 1st INT.SF vs Seattle was pretty intense. I saw a little bit of Kaep's press conference on our local 49er station. I always assumed he didn't see the dbs on some of his risky pass attempts, but it seems he actually does and just has supreme confidence in his skills. On his first int, he said he saw the db and just didnt think he could get it. And he's not just talking crap, because the exact same play came up on the last drive and he did the same thing, and it was successful. On his last int, he saw Crabtree with single coverage and just said he was going to him. I think in both cases if he was playing against a different team with regular sized dbs, he would have made completions. Anyways, I dont think people should be too hard on him. Confidence can be managed. If he doesnt run for 130 yards I dont think SF scores at all.
Or not accepting you made that obvious mistake and claiming you saw the DB and felt you could beat him one on one. If he saw the game film of that play, there's just no way you could defend it. And when he later hit the sideline play, it wasn't the same thing at all. He threw a nice ball into a soft spot in the zone coverage.
The game-ending pick was costly because it sure felt like they were about to score, but I can only fault Kap for throwing at Richard Sherman. The throw itself was on target, and having your #1 receiver in single coverage against a scrambling defense usually is a good situation. Sherman had to make a fantastic play and if it's not picked off after a controlled deflection, the Niners still have a couple more chances. I'm still wondering why it was a linebacker who was there to secure the INT.
