Rexandthecity posted this today and I thought it deserved it's own thread. Awesome read about our QB and our top receivers: http://m.nydailynews.com/sports/foo...rick-hit-mark-jet-receivers-article-1.2365346 "Newborn Eric Thomas Decker II was probably slobbering, sleeping or screaming when the text message popped into his dad’s phone on a recent day off. Pop’s bearded co-worker had more questions. Ryan Fitzpatrick’s pursuit of perfection is an around-the-clock operation that includes texting video clips to Eric Decker and Brandon Marshall whenever an idea pops into his brain. “Any time, any day,” Marshall told the Daily News with a smile. “It’s all a test.” Fitzpatrick’s mastery of Chan Gailey’s offense has prompted impromptu texts to his top two pass-catching weapons as part of his new-age mind-meld that he hopes will give the Jets an edge on game days. Decker and Marshall’s smart phones are filled with short video clips covering the spectrum of plays that the veteran believes could be useful in a given week. Fitzpatrick might capture a play from years ago that worked for him in Buffalo or a more recent defensive look from the upcoming opponent. Decker might be with his wife and two infant children when a text arrives. Marshall recently got one while doing a segment on his TV show in the city. “If I see something that I want to make sure we get communicated, I’ll just snap it,” Fitzpatrick told The News. “I’m not calling them in here and being like, ‘Alright, come watch three hours of film with me.’ I’m saying, ‘Hey, take 15 seconds out of your day and take a look.’ But they like it.” The dialogue typically begins with a question from the quarterback with the accompanying video: What would you do if you had a choice route in the slot here? Don’t worry about the outcome of the play. “It’s energizing,” said Marshall, scrolling through recent clips on his phone. “It’s something I’ve been waiting for for the past five or six years… to play with a quarterback who approaches the game that way. I always want to communicate and talk. I trust what he sees and what he’s doing.” Decker attacks these pop quizzes with his own questions to get a better sense of the big picture. He’ll ask Fitzpatrick for details on the full route combination. What are the responsibilities of the receivers on the back side? What’s the down and distance? How much time is left in the game? tzpatrick, Marshall and Decker have each been around long enough to know that the realities on fall Sundays don’t necessarily mirror what’s taught in the classroom. “On paper, a slant route is a slant route, a corner route is a corner route,” Decker told The News. “But in a game it’s not really that way. You have to be creative. You gotta get around people and run it at different angles. (Fitzpatrick) wants to know when he’s got four big dudes running at him, where he can release the football? If you’re on the same page and you trust one another, it makes the percentage of completions that much higher.” Fitzpatrick’s routine is designed to “get into their minds and understand what they’re thinking.” No hours are off limits. The lessons via text give the trio a head start for the weekly game plan installation during Wednesday’s practice. Fitzpatrick will have a working knowledge of Marshall and Decker’s route preferences against specific defensive coverages that the upcoming opponent has shown before the three of them walk on the practice field that week. It’s an efficient and smart approach that has been a welcomed case of deja vu for Decker, who was exposed to Peyton Manning’s brain power in Denver. “He just wants see how we look at the game and how we feel the situation,” Decker said of Fitzpatrick. “That’s awesome. It reminds me a lot of Peyton. Peyton would do the same thing. When you see the game the same way and when you can feel it the same way, the trust just goes to another level. That’s what separates teams from being okay to being good to being great.” In a league filled with talented players, chemistry often gives teams an edge. (See: Aaron Rodgers and James Jones last week.) Fitzpatrick’s chemistry with Decker and Marshall netted a pair of touchdowns in the season opener against the Browns. The quarterback is mindful of Decker and Marshall’s personal and family responsibilities on off days, but points out that, “We’re in football season… and I have five kids.” “They can even fake listen if they want,” Fitzpatrick joked. “Maybe they’ll think they’ll get more passes if they fake being attentive.” They’re building trust one after-hours text at a time."
Saw this yesterday and was very happy about it. Finally some useful info from Manish. People wonder how average QBs like Fitz stay around for so long? Well this is it. Commitment to the job and getting better. No way Geno would be doing this and that's the difference Fitz makes.
Sounds like Marshall took a big steaming dump right on Jay Cutler's chest. “It’s energizing,” said Marshall, scrolling through recent clips on his phone. “It’s something I’ve been waiting for for the past five or six years… to play with a quarterback who approaches the game that way. I always want to communicate and talk. I trustwhat he sees and what he’sdoing.” _
Pretty cool read! They just better be careful come week 7 since an unknown hacker group called Kraftnonymous are probably licking their lips after that read. Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk
Wow a QB studying film and getting input from his receivers and what their thoughts are rather than playing catch in a parking lot in shorts. Meanwhile right after a loss Geno goes home and watches his recorded episodes of the Kardashians then gets so tired he's late to the meeting the next morning. Just knowing Rex would let him take a nap with the other guys during film study. IMO Genos problem was not his talent it is his brain rolling around like a bee-bee in a beer can that is his problem. You can't fix stupid.
I bet there aren't too many clips of 70-yard bombs into the end zone on Fitz's smartphone. Mind you, I don't think Geno has managed to get the shrink wrap off his phone yet.
RF may not be a "great" QB but personally, I think he may just be the QB this team needs. I said it in the thread about last weeks game, the QB & WR's looked like they had been working together for years. Now I can see why.
Some guys have the ability to relate to people and some guys don't. The truly elite quarterbacks in the NFL have the physical and mental tools to be successful. From everything I've seen, Geno has the physical tools but lacks the ability to lead men. Fitz is the polar opposite. I'd rather have the Fitz/penny type all day long the a Browning Nagel/Geno guy. It's evident that Geno doesn't have anybody's respect in that locker room to me; he hasn't EARNED it. It's also a generational issue with early 20 something's that haven't ever endured and overcame adversity outside of their talent. Fitz has his receivers bought in.