The Broncos are not playing towards Russell Wilson's strengths
Why Jets QB Zach Wilson is underperforming
Guest: Mark Sanchez
Thanks for listening to The Herd podcast. Be sure to catch us live every weekday from twelve to three eastern nine to noon Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and FS one. Find your local station for The Herd at Fox Sports Radio dot com, or stream us live every day on the iHeartRadio app by searching Herd. You're listening to Fox Sports Radio. Boot the losing team, go with a winner. Go to Consumer Cellular switch right now talk Tex Data twenty bucks a month limited time offer. They'll give you twenty five bucks off if you start Consumer Cilo dot com. Slash the Herd promo code. The Herd things are great, you know them? Do we have that? Guys? Oh? Okay, So Richard Sherman, we're all confused about Denver, right, nobody can figure it out. And I've said earlier today is that when you there's no precedent for like being really a good quarterback. I mean, if you go to the passer rating of Russell Wilson, it was like one hundred and five one hundred, six hundred and six. Whether you think he was regressing a little, he's not the worst quarterback in the league. Suddenly, So a lot of us are saying you know, there's no precedent for it must be Nathaniel Hackett. Richard Sherman was on a podcast, The Vaughn Cast Von Miller's, and he talked about, you know, his former teammate in Seattle, why he's struggling in Denver. You can't just put anybody in any scheme and think, oh, well, I'm just gonna make him fit my scheme like you gotta. It's almost like they didn't even watch tape of him in Seattle and say, hey, okay, this is what he likes to do, this and stuffy. If you have Russell Wilson running the plays that he's run and had success with, he will be the guy you expect him to be. But when you run him, have him run offense he has not run in the ten years he's played. Expect him to struggle until he figures it out. It's just like acting. The great actors they get scripts, they pick the scripts they think work for them. Lamar Jackson tom Brady couldn't run that offense. But Lamar may not be able to run the tom Brady offense. Even for the most talented people like Lamar Jackson tom Brady. For the most talented people, you have to build stuff around him. You can take the best actors. There's a reason why great actors are in movies that bomb. The script's not good enough, they don't play to their strengths. The audience doesn't buy into the role. And that's for the best actors. So it's you know, it's like, at some point, if Denver's using the Green Bay Aaron Rodgers offense that Nathaniel Hackett coached, well, Aaron's going to be better on that offense because they tailored it for years around Aaron strength. You know people Aaron Rodgers, for instance, doesn't like motion in the offense. That's something that's understood in football. Albert Brier talked about it this week. Aaron doesn't like a lot of motion. Aaron doesn't like young receivers, likes guys that he trusts. Brady was the same way. Brady does like motion. Peyton Manning didn't like motion in his offense. So if you have a coach and he's got motion everywhere, and you know Kyle Shanahan's got motion everywhere, well Peyton Manning would be like, hey, I don't want that to be part of the offense. So this idea that you know, everybody, Lebron James can't win with this Laker team because they don't have enough shooters. And at this point in his career, one of Lebron's great assets, he's a great distributors, one of them. He's probably he and Larry Bird are the best big men passers, while Yokich is good or Vitas Sabonis was good. But I mean Lebron for a six nine forwards, an unbelievable ball handler and passer. That's why the teams like like pat Riley and Eric Spoelstra and Miami got that. They got him Battier, they got him Mike Miller, they got him Ray Allen because they knew Dave d Wade wasn't a great three ball shooter. So the smartest people in the league arguably are Spoelstra and pat Riley. What did they get Lebron? They identified Lebron very quickly. Chris Bosh always had even for a big, beautiful baseline jumper. Chris is a beautiful touch. I'd vote him in for the Hall of Fame. Mike Miller, Shane Batty, Ray Allen, they got him shooters, and that's Lebron so Lebron wasn't winning the first seven years in Cleveland. He didn't have enough good shooters. Even the best people, the best actors, quarterback gotta play to their strengths, and I this offense doesn't look like it's doing that with Russell Wilson. Be sure to catch live editions of The Herd weekdays in noon Easter nine am Pacific on Fox Sports Radio FS one and the iHeart Radio app Jmack with the News. No, no, turn on the news. This is the Herd Line News. Do you like how you're playing to my strengths on here? Like gambling, gambling? Basketball? You like hits? Well, you like your gambling. I do. And you like arguing, and I like you and I like arguing. So that's who we both like. Oh, I love it. I like winning arguments. Yes, you hear Mark Sanchez laughing. AFS. I like the argument. He just likes the winning. One. Can bring some good stuff here in a minute. All right, let's start with the best player in the NBA, Luca don Che. Yes, that is correct. He's the best. Scored at least thirty points in each of the MAV's first seven games, first to do that since this guy named Wilt Chamberlain. Wow, Um, Lucas averaging thirty six a night tops in the league. That's the third highest through seven games in the last sixty years, behind this guy named Michael Jordan and James Harden Colin, are you getting on board Luca the best player in the NBA? Well, he's the best scorer. I you're not gonna get much on the defensive end. Well, okay, So Jannis you think is the best player. Yes, okay, So let's say you swap Jannis to the MAVs and Luca to the Bucks. I think the MAVs would be better and the Bucks wouldn't be as good. Oh. I think Luca just makes everybody around him better. Unbelievable vision in passing can be ball dominant. Yannis is the best player at any given moment in every game. He plays on both ends. Okay, this guy is great on the offensive end. He is. The teams attacked him in the playoffs. They attacked him, So I mean, you know, you forget. Michael Jordan was a great defensive players in his prime. Kobe was Jabbar Kareem was an unbelievable defensive player. Lebron d Wade usually the great. That's why Carmelo's not the greatest players in the game. Kevin Durant will d you up on the defensive end. He's not great, but he puts the effort in and he's long in the history of the league. You generally to be the best player in the league, you gotta give a little bit of an effort. Now, Kobe wasn't at the end, but Kobe and his prime would d you up. But good offense always beats good That's why. So it's like the NFL. We know the league's about seventy percent offense, but you can't have a terrible Detroit Lion defense. We know the NBA is seventy percent offense. You can't be a lia bill. I mean, Steph Curry tries, and they also surround him with Draymond Wiggins and Clay but Steph puts the effort out. He's just not He's not big. I'm not sure Lucas giving you a great effort on that side. He didn't last year at the end. Correct, he came in a little overweight. But we've talked a little bit too much about Luca. Let's move on to the Raiders. One of the most underachieving teams in the NFL. I'm pushing this Josh McDaniel's narrative. Things don't seem good there, Colin. Listen, they made the playoffs last year with an interim coach. Now they got a new GM, new head coach, a new number one receiver, two and five start, and now the GM okay, now the GM. Dave Ziegler understands why everybody's so ticked off at the Raiders. The frustration from the fan base is totally warranted, and I can appreciate their passion. And for me and for Josh and for the organization, there's nothing more than we want than to win football games and to see this fan base get what they you know, get what they deserve, which is a consistent winner for us. Up to this point, it hasn't gone as quick as we would have liked it to go. But we're not wavering in our approach, and we're going to keep, you know, stay with our stick with our plan, improve it as we go along, and again we're confident the results will come. That's what you always have to say. As a GM. I appreciate the fans passion because you can't bang on the fans for railing on you, so you have to there's certain things you have to say. That's what you have to say. I appreciate the fans passion. The truth is fans overreact to new coach and new staff. It takes time. It's you know, you got the Chiefs and the Division Chargers pretty good. The schedule is not easy for them. Hey, who's winning an argument over a player? Dave Ziggler that guy or Josh McDaniels when he goes to the owner says, I want this guy. Well, you're paying the coach a lot more so. They often have a little Daniel. He's done a couple of things in the NFL. By the way, I like the Raiders this weekend in Jacksonville. Remember teams that get shut out? What do they do the following week? Score? Thank you. Finally, Week nine of the NFL kicks off tonight. We've talked a little about this. Eagles going to Houston Philly seven and oh so far, choping to keep the undefeated streak alive. No Brandon Cooks, no Nico Collins. I don't know who Davis Mills is throwing too. According to Fox Bet, the Eagles are a massive fourteen point favorite. Now, Colin, you know long term, you cannot win in the NFL betting double digit favorites, especially on the road. That being said, in this one off scenario, are you unloading on the Eagles side? Well, I just I think Philadelphia is gonna win the game. But these are pro athletes, they're men. When you're playing a home game and or a two touchdown underdog, watch Houston probably give a very very spirited effort tonight. Players don't want to be embarrassed. These are pros, and Houston's got plenty of guys who were All Conference and All Americans. And I mean I again this, I'm not gonna bet fourteen point games. I'm just telling you Philadelphia should win in roll my guesses they will, But keep your lind Houston give it a very spirited first half effort. Trick plays maybe, and they're gonna empty the playboo Because Colin, if you watched any of that game against the Titans last week, Malik Willis is the starting quarterback. You know he's not throwing. It's Derrick Henry, Derrick Henry, Derrick Henry, and they couldn't stop it. Like that's embarrassing. Yeah, j Maack with the news. Well that's the news, and thanks for stopping by the herd line. Mark Sanchez a decade in the NFL, bring him on. We get Mark Sanchez for a half hour. Like it. We love it, Mark Sanchez half hour. You're even uh no, we're bringing you up by the way. You got you got the Seahawks and Gino Smith. It's I saw stat and again I'm flying through stuff in the morning, but I saw stat like Geno Smith is the blankety blank most accurate quarterback on deep balls or something. I'm just like, wow, wow, wow. So you talked a little bit about this last time, the Geno you know in the Gino. Now let's talk a little bit about First of all, DK, Metcalfe Lockett, Kenneth Walker. What is they're obviously building an offense around Gino strengths. When if I had never seen the Seahawks play, what is that offense? Define it for me? First and second down you're getting runs, run action, nakeds throws out of the pocket in quick game, third down, game plan specific with DK and Lockett either one or two in the read, sprinkling some tight end stuff, sprinkling some halfback stuff, third end. You know, eight plus incredibly conservative. You know, if you can hit one of five of those, you're doing just fine. Yeah, you know what I mean. That's essentially what they are. And that's kind of Pete mindset, is no doubt, and that's that old school West Coast mindset. It's keep the quarterback on track, and quarterback, keep the offense on track, ahead of the sticks. You know, get him on the move. If he can throw on the run, let's do it. Marry up. I love what they do. They marry up either the zone read runs or any kind of runs from under center with their play action game. So the exact same motions, the exact same personnels. You got a run out of it or two runs out of it, you know, some sort of downhill gap trap run, and then maybe some sort of zone outside you know, designer type run for a specific defense. And then you have the exact same formation, exact same action whatever it is by the quarterback turns his back to the defense, puts it in his belly, flips around, snaps his head around, boom, and now surveys the defense. And a lot of times on those ten times they run run action, they'll dump it down to the back because there's nothing wrong with that because those guys can really go after they get the ball in their hands. It's an extended version of the run game. It all looks, feels, and sounds the same. It's a great plan right now. And Waldron's really done them up. So let's talk Giants. They had a rough afternoon, didn't do much. You know, we've said this about Daniel Jones. Obviously he's a big time I mean, he's a pro quarterback. We know he's talented. But in this league, the way it works, Marked, at the end of your first contract, you either get the bag or they're not extending you. Yeah, there's no middle ground. Blake Bortles was the very rare we'll be a couple of years twenty right, So it's bag or it's not. And once you go to the big money, now we can't have that second great corner. We can't have an off ball linebacker. So what happens is in that second contract, Mark, as you know, now you've got to have a little special in yet because the roster's not going to look like Baker's roster on his rookie contract or goff. But you know, right, right, So that's the question with Daniel, not that he can quarterback, but these are the years you got to make Hay, is he a ten year I mean, what do I think? He's shown plenty. I think if you wanted to structure it in a way where he's got to perform, you know, have more of a performance based contract. I'm sure the team's going to push for that because they're gonna make that same argument to his agent. And the agent has one job, right rep the player get him as much money in that bag as you can, so I understand his argument, but the team is gonna be like, dude, we still got a lot of holes to fill, namely wide receiver. And what he's shown me with this group, his ability to make the right decisions and learn how to win with this group as banged up as they are, giving away fourteen points on special teams by fumbling two punts, not even muffing the punts. But like you've secured the ball and now you just cough it up. I mean, you can't win like that. It's almost impossible. And he still took care of the football. He's got to be thrown to the tightest windows in the game right now and I mean, my man's doing it like like it's just automatic. So I think I've seen enough me personally. The team's gonna have to decide on that one. But between him and Barkley, they gotta they gotta figure it out. And most importantly for those guys, like if you want to win moving forward, would you potentially take a little bit less both of you like go to the table together almost like all right, dude, we're doing this. It's you and me, it's the big Apple. Let's get as many good players as possible. You know that that's one way to approach it. But that's obviously having a lot of good faith in everybody that everybody's gonna get taken care of and all that. So it's, uh, that's that's the worst part about this deal. But they'll get it. They'll get it figured out. Okay, he's playing his butt off though. So it was funny the other day in our morning meeting, which lasts about an hour and a half, I was doing a Bears thing. So I wrote down some names and I put Chase Claypool. I said, if I was the Bears I wanted, I thought he would go to the Giants. Well, I said, I would draft Jordan Addison if I was the Bears on my first pick, and I would go get Chase Claypool. And so during the show, it broke these guys as my witness nice. So I was like, because we thought it made sense. He's an insider trading. No, no, he's a Mooney's small, he's a big yeah. Oh yeah. And so it's like they need a differn yep, so they needed a different body type. So you tell me, So they're throwing this in to Justin Fields, it's it's Luke gets He's doing a good job. But what should I expect this weekend? Will he be in the game shot? Uh, he'll definitely be in the game plan. We actually have their game in two weeks. But it's almost like, um, when we brought in Braylin my rookie year. Yes, we brought him in like week four. Yeah, I think he came in week four. He's gonna be able to run big ins. He's gonna be able to run Goes goal line stuff. He's gonna be pack everybody in tight. He'll be the single receiver you won on one on one. Just throw him a fade and we'll have a run called with it. But um, you know, stuff on the backside of routes, it's just like bang eid or easy, you know, the the twelve twelve yard posts and stuff that he's really good at. That big body guys are really good at out Now, if it's like, you know, third and six and we need a designer route inside and read this guy and feel that guy probably not what you want to major in this week. Give him some basic a to beat, like straight line, easy stuff, and just let it happen because he's gonna demand respect, right, He's gonna command respect from the defense. So now you just remind justin you haven't had this before, maybe in college, but now every time he's on the backside of like a three by one set, right, just check him. What's that backside safety doing? Is he helping or is he one on one? And if he's one on one, be ready to make you know, cut that thing loose over there to the big guy. So I just think you can really simplify the game that way for a couple of weeks as you catch him up in the game plan, you know. But it's a little easier for somebody like McCaffrey or somebody who makes a big transition like that. I mean, there's just such an ensemble cast. It's like he probably feels a little bit of relief, like I don't have to tote the rock forty times a game and catch twelve balls and do the and return punt. Like no, you're okay, Yeah good, I want to talk about this. So there's a lot of theories out there why Russell's so bad. I don't believe he's washed. I don't think you go from a B plus quarterback to terrible. So a lot of people say Denver wanted Aaron Rodgers, that's why they hired Hackett. So they got Hackett in. Aaron didn't come, so they settled for Russell. And Hackett's like, well, this is my offense. It's the Aaron offense. Now now it's Jason pushed back and said, come on, you should have more than one offense. You should be But there are like Kyle Shanahan's got his scheme. Mcvay's got his scheme. I can tweak off it. But this is what I largely do you, I mean, maybe we're wrong. You tell me is what if Hackett was expecting Aaron got Russell and he has a base foundational belief system and this is what it is. Our coordinators like that. There are I think those guys are being phased out. Okay because because you have to adapt the playbooks. This big. But we can only run this based on our personnel, certain teams. You can only run this. Wow, good lord, we need picks. We need to trade like we got a lot of work. Well, as the thing grows, and you gotta imagine instead of the offense being like this lifeless book with a bunch of names, numbers and drawings in, it's a it's a breathing, living thing that evolves over time. That's what consistency and having same coaches, same players over time, the Kelsey's and Mahomes and Andy Reid and the enemy. It starts to grow. Now there's counters off of your counter and a counter off of that, and it just becomes more than it ever was. But it has to start somewhere, and a lot of times the infancy, and you know, beginning stages of these offenses are ugly. They're ugly. When Tom Brady went to the Bucks for seven weeks, it was rough. Yeah, right, there were four and three at the break whatever. Matt Stafford last year. I mean it's a transitional deal, new quarterback, new offense. Now, some of the stuff that they're missing carries over no matter what offense you're on, right, no matter what offense you're in. Certain certain mistakes that Russ has made outside the pocket where he's the best, those can't happen. I don't care who's calling the place. You know, if you're calling your own place, that can't happen, right, same thing with Zach Wilson to some of those mistakes will get into them, but it's the offense has to be curtailed to your players. You have some concepts that you want to teach those players, but at the same time, you gotta adapt to what you have or it's just not gonna work. All right, He's gonna break down a play. I want to show it to you next, but I'm gonna take a break first and be back with Mark Sanchez. We love having them on. Be sure to catch live editions of The Herd weekdays in noon Easter nine a Empacific on Fox Sports Radio FS one and the iHeart Radio app. Hey it's me Rob Parker. Check out my weekly MLB podcast, Inside the Parker for twenty two minutes of piping hot baseball talk featuring the biggest name the newsmakers in the sport. Whether you believe in analytics or the eye test, We've got all the bases cover. New episodes drop every Thursday, So do your soap a favor and listen to Inside the Parker with Rob Parker on the iHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcast. All right, m drive check it out. Text her to fifty five thousand messaging data rates apply five bucks. You're in twenty five percent off. Mark Sanchez, former Jet decade in the NFL. All right, I want a deep dive on Zach Wilson. I didn't like him before the draft. I thought he was Johnny Manziel with a better arm. I'm always capable of being wrong. It happens daily, three hours a day. But you're gonna show us some film. You've played this game, you love the Jets, you still have friends there. Let's talk about some stuff you're seeing. Yeah, I think I've talked to him before. I've talked to Zach. I've seen plenty of his film, and he's shown me flashes of being able to handle this position and make the right reads. But what's his first play touchdown to Conklin. This is Conklin one on one. He's number one out of your screen and Zach hits his back foot. Number one's open and nails it. That's a tight window right at the pylon. Tight spiral money. The kid was like nails to start this game right, he's on fire. Well, once you get past your opening script, I need a little help here. These third downs show the next play. He's treating these third downs like it's fourth down in the games on the line. So right here, it's the shallow cross to Conklin again. The backer just blitzed and vacated. Conklin has to go slam on the brakes right at that hash mark and Zach as he's retreating, needs to throw a bullet right at the guy. Not a little lollipop. And part of that he got tricked by the receiver by Conklin. Conklin, don't give me your eyes. I want you to run to your spot and then turn around, reveal yourself, show me your hands, show me your numbers. Not kind of tiptoe through the tulips here waiting. Oh, I wonder if I'm getting the ball. I don't know what's tricking the quarterback. Okay, show that again. That doesn't look like a difficult NFL throw. No, but Zach's confused on where to go here. He's got pressure and he's waiting for number one. Right, number one, it's gonna be open, but number one asked to help him. He's got to run to a spot, slam on the brakes, not keep trotting. So basically, if you're looking at the quarterback on a shallow cross, that means you're running. If you're not giving him your eyes, that means you're gonna run to your spot, slam on the brakes, turn around, and reveal yourself to be open. He could have easily hit him right there and done it properly. But that's partially the receiver. And just because the receiver's wrong doesn't give the quarterback, you know, leniency to be wrong as well. Don't drive up to an intersection with a you know, fender benner and go run into them eighty miles an hour. You don't do that. So your escape plan there is you got a back flaring out to the side, dump it over his head in the third row. This next one we're talking about dumping it over his head in the third row he gets outside the pocket. It's a naked number one new rule, no sacks, no turnovers on nakeds for him. And when you're throwing this ball out of bounds, I need to outside that white border around like no question. This was like the kid in junior high high school that writes like true and false test test, right, and you put like a T with like a little bit of an F in there, and you're like, yeah, that's that's what it is. What was the answer? Oh, it's true. Yeah, it was a te you know what I mean. There's there's no great area here. Okay, boots, you can boot number one on naked's first second down, No sacks, no turnovers. That is like a cardinal sin for quarterbacks. Right. Secondly, and trust me, I've done it, dude. I've made a given coaches plenty of gray hairs about this kind of stuff. So I understand. But nothing is more important than the football. And I don't know if he knows that right now, right, think about this third downs. Let's just look at it like from a global perspective, ye, from a from a bird's eye view, you're gonna get anywhere from ten on a really low game to sixteen maybe let's call it like twelve thirteen, fourteen third downs a game, right, if you hit seven of them seven, you're balling seven. So the other seven plays I need really good decisions and potentially throwaways and check downs. That's it. So games become those seven or eight. And it sounds so easy, it's easy to say. In this nice cushy chair in a suit. Right right in the game, you can see him get like so worked up, like I gotta get rid of this football. I gotta get rid of this football. And in some of these situations, dude, even take the sack is fine, Even take the sack, but anything but give them the ball. Don't give him anything, not an inch, right, And then this final one, he's outside the pocket again. You're gonna see it. This one. Number one's open again. Get up in the pocket, don't escape if you don't have to, and dump into your shallow cross runner who's got everybody out leverage underneath. And I think it's Conklin again. But if you're gonna set up out there in between the numbers and the sideline and you're gonna stop, that is like dead man zone. Okay, if you're gonna stop because everybody's running chase behind you, So number one, you're gonna get your head taken off. And number two, you better have a high IQ. As that play gets longer, you have to get smarter. And right now, his IQ's dropping as these plays extend, and he threw it into a defensive team meeting even in that position, throw it out a bounce, so fall down right, and it's it's once again, it's really I'm oversimplifying some of this stuff, but it's no. I think you're describing it well. And here's the other thing. Right, if you're gonna run only twenty past plays a game and that's it, that's fine. If that's your formula to win defense, special teams and limited offense, run game Briefhall goes down. That's a huge hit if you're running twenty plays and that drive concept, the drive the basic which is a ten to twelve yard en route arc release to give spacing and time so you can get spacing an oblique stretch on those linebackers. Right, run that play nine million times in practice, because if you're gonna run it five times a game and you only throw twenty times. That's twenty percent of your offense. You better know that play like the back of your hand. Man. I want drive, basic back, drive, basic back, drive, basic back. It's like you know the Mighty Ducks. I will not quack at the teacher. I will not quack at the teacher. Like ride it out a million times until you do it. And then the other thing. I love what Chip Kelly did and some other offensive coordinators, but we go of ten to twenty plays in OTAs and even in training camp, we would run Drive the same exact play versus every single defense versus every formation we got it out of. Start switching, interchanging tight ends, wide receivers, running backs. Everybody needs to run this play and know exactly what to do. Don't trick the quarterbacks. Sit down when it's time to sit down in a vacant zone. If it's man to man, stare step him over the ball, basically give him a quick little move and run away from the guy. Give the quarterback your eyes, but nothing happens to you cross the ball. Then the basic you gotta know whin to slow down, when to speed up, when to find your quarterback in the window. And then no matter what, Number three is always the back. It's always going to be a two by two checkdown or some sort of flare opposite to drive, and he's got to have that contingency plan. Right I drop back on drive, basic checkdown. I know this play like nobody's business. Boom, there's a problem immediately. I know exactly where to go with the ball right away. I watch here. First of all, that's as good as anything I've seen you do. That's fantastic, because I wanted I wanted to No, no, man, I'm like, you know a thousand times more than I when I watched that. That's a player issue, not a coaching issue. That stuff is well listen, some of it's open, some of it there's blamed to go around. I'm not saying it's just the coaches or just Zach. That's it's everybody. But bottom line, like you're either coaching it or you're allowing it to happen. And that's both of them. That's Zach and the coaching study, and it's these things are fixable, especially if you eliminate two of them. And you just have to screw up on drive. Okay, fine, it's a miscommunication player and receiver quarterback receiver. Fine, those are gonna happen. Now, the throwaways, the stuff outside the pocket, all this other stuff like that's where it can't happen. And you could tell the pressures they're running stuff that New England did. Belichick was just waiting, just waiting, like let him do it. Go ahead, He's gonna throw this one. And once he throws this one, they're like grapes. They come in bunches, you know what I mean, Like, you know what I'm saying. And that's not just Zach. That's a lot of Corvette. I've been there. I threw I put lee bottom in the damn Pro Bowl. Like the guy bought me a drink at Super Bowl whatever and he gave me like a what up from across the bar. I was like, thanks, dude, you're my number one receiver that day. Awesome. By the way, Now, now how did this land for you? I would like to do this every week since breaking down New York Jets offensive film is gonna kill me. But I'll tell you, I think that the audience, if you're a Jets fan, that's really helpful because it's you know, what I see is they're giving him easy outlets. They're giving him like when you roll a quarterback out. First of all, Zach can move, It's okay to just keep moving, get six sliding, you're out, and only when you got a move on obviously a designed rollout. Yes, you're on the move, you're outside the pocket, but don't move unless you have to when number one is open, buddy, it ain't easier than that, Like two, three, four and five. That's hard stuff. When number one's open, take it. Force them to take number one away. I mean, I remember Shoddy telling me that a million times. If he's there, rip it and don't even think twice. Mark Sanchez, let's hear it for Mark Sanchez, even very critical of the Jets. I thought that was an excellent performance. It's all right in front of them. They can still they can still make. So is this ad which I have to read but don't have time, Mark Sanchez, yourble Thursday's done, game tonight, first day's first next