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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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I think peat was drafted as a tackle, well tackle failed and he still pouting like a 2 year old if u ask me Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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You are asking a question that for a lineman, especially pass blocking is not just about improvement. Peat's battle will be with his physics and his health. When Peat was good, he was good. This is what my limited time playing line (7 years both side of the ball, T and G) tells me about Peat. - He is stronger on run plays, in particular screen and trap blocking.Losing 15 pounds last off season helped his speed. - Pass blocking for him has become a liability and for a team that is either heavy pass or balanced that means you have a liability on the line for at least 50% of your plays. Losing 15 pounds last off season really hurt him here, this is where the physics plays in. What happened is that losing weight made him more 'moveable' and he knows this so he leans in to offset the mass reduction which puts him off balance and easier to swim by. This is why he looks like he misses blocks or is laying on the ground a good bit. Peat has an odd injury history for a lineman as he doesn't seem to have joint issues, but rather bone breakage issues and muscle tears. Broken fingers are common for linemen but forearms on an offensive lineman are definitely not, pair that with broken leg, torn pectoral and it looks like his body can handle the impact, just not the stress. I suspect the weight loss was to minimize the risk of future broken legs and high ankle sprains. Peat has not played in more than 13 games since 2017 reinforcing that he has more physical limitations than skill limitations. I know that there are some fans that always want to see their preferred players on the field but outside of that I believe that fans generally want a player to not only meet his contract value but exceed it because that is where the value is. Peat has played Guard in the NFL for 6 years and made the Pro bowl for three of them so I don't see how what he played in college matters. Lineman in the NFL can be fairly universal fit with the exception of C and DE. :bng: |
Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
The first problem for many PAC10 players is that they get a later start into their pro-careers than other players; yes, we've remarkable times of late that've made that mute...
But at the time Peat came in, he was suppose to be our LT for ten years; as Armstead had a jump on him... Believe his personality type (yes, I'm saying that) is that he's lost his confidence because things haven't happened as he was probably told by Sean... This is not a new phenomena as they're other players who've been promised, or at least led to believe, certain plans by Sean Payton and turned out false... Get the market options were crap, but he shouldn't have been re-signed to that kind of money, we'd been better had we let him rejuvenate his career elsewhere... |
Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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Oh, he stinks at pass protection because he is always on the ground unless he's moving to throw a block. His only good trait is that he is a good pulling guard and blocks fairly well in space. His problem is that for a guard he doesn't win a fist fight in the phone booth.(limited space) |
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Re: Honest Question about Peat.
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As far as Peat goes showing up in shape would be a good start. It would help his balance, ability to keep pass rushers off balance, and could possibly help him stay healthy. All in all Peat gets a bad wrap. His worse games come when players like Armstead go down. His fat contract just adds fuel to the hate Fire. |
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