Breaking Down Every Marcus Mariota Interception from 2017: #2
(at HOU) Marcus Mariota¡¯s second interception of 2017 came in Week 4 on the road
against another division
rival
Dennis
Kelly Jersey White , the Houston Texans. For the next article in this
series, we¡¯ll take a closer look at that play.If you missed the previous
articles, I suggest reading them first before continuing:Breaking Down Every
Marcus Mariota Interception from 2017: IntroductionBreaking Down Every Marcus
Mariota Interception from 2017: #1 (at JAX)The SituationComing off of
consecutive weeks of ¡°slow starts¡± (6 first half points against Jacksonville, 9
first half points against Seattle), the Titans were looking to get things going
quickly in this Week 4 divisional matchup with Houston, sitting at 2-1 on the
season.Adoree Jackson¡¯s kickoff return gave the Titans a 1st-and-10 at their own
22-yard line to start the game. After his first-down pass was batted down at the
line, Mariota gained 4 yards on an RPO keeper to set up 3rd-and-6 with 14:10 to
play in the 1st quarter. What HappenedThe Texans showed a single-high defensive
look pre-snap. Mariota looked left and fired a pass for Delanie Walker...After
the snap, the Texans move to a Cover 2 shell. The Titans have a Cover 2-beater
play called. So why was the end result of this play a turnover?The PlaycallIn 11
personnel (1 back, 1 tight end), out of a shotgun trips bunch set, the Titans
give Mariota a three-level high-low read route combination.Rishard Matthews and
Taywan Taylor are essentially running curl routes, but because the formation is
so condensed, the route stems are angled towards the strongside sideline.Delanie
Walker has a flag (or corner) route, with Decker running a square-in (or deep
dig) on the backside of the play. DeMarco Murray holds in the backfield for a
moment, looking to pick up any blitzers, but leaks out after seeing the Texans
only bring 4 pass rushers.Meanwhile, the Texans are attempting to deceive Marcus
Mariota and the Titans offense by disguising their coverage before the snap.
They lined up with one deep safety and seven players at or near the line of
scrimmage.After the snap, the Texans dropped the entire weakside of the line
into coverage and only rushed 4. Look how much ground linebacker Zach Cunningham
(in the middle) has to cover. Despite the disguised coverage pre-snap, the
Titans called play should be effective in this situation with two corners
conflicted on the strong side of the field. The strongside curl/flat corner has
to decide whether to cover Taywan Taylor on the short route or drop back with
Rishard Matthews. The nickel corner has a similar conflict between Rishard
Matthews and Delanie Walker. Both corners choose to cover Matthews. This leaves
Delanie Walker open with the safety over the top. Mariota¡¯s reads progress high
to low, starting with Walker. If the cornerback drops to take away Walker, he
moves to Matthews. If the corner on Matthews had stayed in the flat zone,
Matthews is open. If not, he moves to Taylor. Excluding the safety, there¡¯s two
defenders to cover three receivers. In this instance, Taylor would be catching
the ball well short of the sticks with at least two defenders to beat before
picking up a first down, and the Texans know this. That¡¯s why he¡¯s left open.
According to the play design, Walker is the first read, and he is open. So
technically, Mariota makes the ¡°correct¡± decision.What Went WrongWhile the route
combination works in theory to beat this defense, the routes are very
compressed
Dion
Lewis Jersey White , which makes for an extremely limited window for
Mariota to throw to. After diagnosing where to go with the ball, it¡¯s on Mariota
to deliver an accurate pass into this very condensed window - the throw must
travel over the heads of the cornerbacks but drop before it reaches the closing
safety. Although it¡¯s a very difficult pass to complete, it is actually a throw
we¡¯ve seen Mariota make countless times in his career.This beautiful throw from
2016 demonstrates Mariota¡¯s pinpoint accuracy and ability to drop the ball into
a spot.Unfortunately, with J.J. Watt and Marcus Gilchrist collapsing the pocket,
Mariota doesn¡¯t step into his throw, and the pass sails. So a throw that needed
to be extremely accurate to be completed ended up traveling too high for its
intended target, and Andre Hal tracked the ball to snag the interception. The
overthrown ball is the ultimate reason that this pass is intercepted. It¡¯s not a
bad read, and it wasn¡¯t the fault of his receiver. It is, however, an example of
the offensive design requiring Mariota to be perfect in order to function. What
Mariota Should Have DoneIn this instance, Mariota could¡¯ve done things a bit
differently to avoid this interception.The obvious improvement is to just
deliver an accurate pass to his target. The throw isn¡¯t off by much, but the
margin for error is too slim to allow for any wiggle room.The alternative option
was to not attempt this extremely tight-window throw. That area of the field was
pretty congested to begin with, and I suppose it¡¯s possible that Mariota didn¡¯t
see the deep safety coming across (although I¡¯m of the opinion that he did see
the safety and simply threw an off-target pass).If Mariota had determined the
left side of the field was too crowded, he likely would¡¯ve slid to his right to
buy more time in the pocket. That¡¯s when he would¡¯ve (and should¡¯ve) found
DeMarco Murray leaking out of the backfield.The offensive routes against this
Tampa 2 defense pulls all of the linebackers and corners away from the short
middle of the field, which leaves a huge opening for Murray. He likely would¡¯ve
picked up the first down even with no elusiveness or yards gained after contact.
Taywan Taylor¡¯s route really bothers me. It¡¯s completely useless. The Texans
know they can leave him there in the flat with full confidence that they can
tackle him before he gains the first down, so he isn¡¯t providing anything on
this play. His route doesn¡¯t even work to free up other players.Had Taylor
instead been given a ¡°divide¡± route assignment up the seam (turning this
three-level read into a Smash-Divide route combo), he likely would¡¯ve occupied
the attention of the safety who picked off Mariota. The ¡°divide¡± route run out
of the trips bunch is especially effective against Cover 2 (remember that for
the next article breakdown).This image from the Smart Football article (linked
in the above paragraph) diagrams a Smash-Divide concept, with the inside-most
receiver running down the seam.If Matthews had run his route a tad shorter
(stopping at the first down marker), and Taylor had run up the seam, there
would¡¯ve been much more space for Mariota to find Walker. Further, this route
combination out of such a condensed formation is very counterproductive and
makes life easier for the defense. This type of formation should be used to
stress the defense laterally. Having two players sprint towards the sideline and
then stop on these curl routes takes away any horizontal spacing advantage.
Lining up Matthews and Walker so close together (rather than splitting Matthews
out wide) further condenses an already tight window, as it briefly allows the
corner to cover two players as he retreats to his zone.But regardless of the
play design, Mariota needs to make a better pass. His mechanics were bad (not
stepping into the throw) and it was a risky proposition to begin with.As we saw
with the last article, the open checkdown option was ultimately the best place
to go with this play. Defenses are going to be very conflicted trying to stop
this offense when that¡¯s Dion Lewis leaking out of the backfield... Once Mariota
learns to take the checkdown, watch out, folks. Again, I expect that to be a
huge point of emphasis this offseason.To be continued in the next
article...Taylor Lewan skips Titans mandatory mini-camp The Titans open their
mandatory veteran mini-camp today without Taylor Lewan in attendance. Lewan is
currently in the 5th year of his rookie contract but wants a long-term deal.
Here is the statement from Jon Robinson about Lewan skipping:This move comes as
a little bit of a surprise because Lewan has been in attendance at all of the
voluntary OTAs to this point. Apparently he was waiting until everyone had to be
there before not showing up.He has proven over the last couple of years that he
is one of the most talented players at the position. The only question that we
really ever had about him was his ability to keep his composure on the field,
but he has made drastic strides in that department as well. There is no doubt in
my mind that the two sides will work out an agreement that ends up with Lewan
being the highest paid offensive lineman in the league.