![]() |
Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
We already have two or three Orakpo threads circulating, so if my judgment is off here, please merge with an existing thread.
Link [URL="http://www.footballoutsiders.com/cover-3/2009/cover-3-another-brick-rookie-wall"]here[/URL]. [QUOTE]After they lost the Mark Sanchez derby, the Washington Redskins took a different tack with the 13th overall pick and selected Texas defensive end Brian Orakpo. In 2008, Washington had the fewest sacks in the NFC with 24, and posted one of the worst Adjusted Sack Rate totals in the NFL for the third straight year. This despite bringing six or more pass rushers 14.4 percent of the time in 2008, third-highest in the NFL. Orakpo was the second part of a front four overhaul that began when the Redskins signed [URL="http://www.footballoutsiders.com/player/16073/albert-haynesworth"]Albert Haynesworth[/URL] and gave him the gross national product of France to soak up double- and triple-teams. Having Haynesworth on board will help veterans like [URL="http://www.footballoutsiders.com/player/15689/phillip-daniels"]Phillip Daniels[/URL] and [URL="http://www.footballoutsiders.com/player/15566/andre-carter"]Andre Carter[/URL], but more was needed. Orakpo put up 23.0 sacks in his 21 college starts, exploding for 11.5 takedowns and 15 quarterback pressures in his senior season. The Redskins slotted him in as a strong-side linebacker, but his primary task right now is to become the edge-rush threat his team desperately needs. If his effort against the Steelers is any indication, Washington made the right choice. The Steelers started their first drive at their own 29 with 8:08 left in the first quarter. Charlie Batch was in at quarterback, and four-fifths of the starting offensive line was in there (Doug Legursky standing in for Chris Kemoeatu at left guard). The Redskins started out in a 5-2-4 look, with Daniels at left defensive end and Orakpo filling the left B-gap. The steelers put two tight ends right to deal with that threat, but left tackle Max Starks didn't have an answer for Carter, who blew right by him and deflected Batch's pass. To add insult to injury, Starks was flagged for holding, and Haynesworth erased Legursky and center Justin Hartwig on his way to the quarterback -- he just got there after Daniels. The "yes, it's against Pittsburgh's line" qualifier is in full effect, but you start to see what kind of line the Redskins could have this year if Haynesworth stays healthy. Orakpo showed his closing speed to the quarterback on the next play, a first-and-20 from the Pittsburgh 19. Motioning over from weak side to strong side blitz off the edge (the Washington line was moving around like crazy presnap), he had a clear path to Batch as the tight end released and right tackle Willie Colon set inside to help with Daniels. Batch got the ball off incomplete, and Orakpo blew up the play. A few plays later, on third-and-12 from the Pittsburgh 35 with 5:23 left in the quarter, Orakpo lined up on the right edge, stunted inside, and got another clear path to Batch, who bailed out to his right and threw what was first called a 47-yard completion to Santonio Holmes, but was reversed on replay. Orakpo got through because of his own speed, but also because Starks had to stay inside to help Legursky with Haynesworth. By the time Starks peeled off, Orakpo was already past him. Pittsburgh began their next drive at the 50-yard line with 4:03 left in the first quarter. Orakpo blitzed off the left edge, and Hines Ward motioned left to right to help Heath Miller with the blocking on that side. The Steelers engaged in a nice bit of influence blocking out of an offset-I, with Ward bunching inside and Orakpo following his lead, The handoff to Willie Parker went to Orakpo's side, but Parker bounced outside and Orakpo couldn't recover in time to make the tackle. Blitzing off the left edge on the next play as well, Orakpo seemed to get the advantage on Miller to start, until Miller used his own momentum against him and pushed him out of the way of Batch, who was dropping back after play-action. This is a pretty common theme among rookie edge-rushers –- they tend to be one-direction missiles, and they have to learn that pro football is a 360-degree game (You'll see the same thing in Aaron Curry to start). By the end of their second drive, the Steelers had to commit excessive resources to the Haynesworth/Orakpo combination, putting the center/guard on Haynesworth, and Starks/Miller on Orakpo. After Orakpo sacked Dennis Dixon to end Pittsburgh's third drive, and Haynesworth came out of the game healthy, Pittsburgh moved to a "check with me" system between their tackles and running backs re: blocking Orakpo. The focus is understandable because of the things that Orakpo can do. He's not just an extremely effective pass-rusher off the edge; he also closes a gap with amazing quickness out of the linebacker spot. What he hasn't done, and what he'll have to learn, is the coverage aspect of the linebacker position. He seems lost in space at this point, but that's understandable. What I didn't see was any of the hesitation that puts some rookie ends behind the 8-ball. More than once, I saw Orakpo making sure his teammates were lined up in defensive motion sets before he put his hand down. The Redskins are asking a lot of Orakpo to be an effective edge rusher and strong-side linebacker, but early indications tell me that he's up to the challenge.[/QUOTE] |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Good read!
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Hell yeah good read! stuff i already knew but still a good read.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Excellent read, GTripp. To my untrained eye Farrar was a little wrong about Rak - he has seemed to me sometimes lost in coverage but sometimes spot on - but on the whole that was a fine (and inspiring!) analysis.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Definitely nice read!
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Good stuff. Orakpo doesn't look totally lost to me. He definitely has a good amount of work to do though. Blache explained it well. Po still has to use his eyes and swivel his head a lot to locate threats rather than using experience to flow with the playa nd feel the players moving into his zones. That is simply something he'll learn. He's never done it before but he has the physical talent to do it and seems to have the head for it. He's gonna be good as long as he can stay healthy.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Good stuff! Orakpo has really surprised me with how quick he picks things up and I think he'll be a force this year and for many years to come. I'm glad we have him!
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Some may disagree but I think that Orakpo will be what we expected LaVar to be...
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=Redskins8588;580367]Some may disagree but I think that Orakpo will be what we expected LaVar to be...[/quote]
If he is Lavar, but with discipline, we struck gold. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
LaVar? Nah, he'll be our DeMarcus Ware.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=Redskins8588;580367]Some may disagree but I think that Orakpo will be what we expected LaVar to be...[/quote]
lavar who? |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=saden1;580381]LaVar? Nah, he'll be our DeMarcus Ware.[/quote]
Well this is weird. I totally agree with Saden1. Cheers! :) |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
How bout, he will be our Brian Orakpo his own Monster where others have to respect what he brings.
F**K D.WARE |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Orakpo is fate giving us a second chance at a Shawn Merriman/Demarcus Ware type player.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Funny how people don't give the FO praise for picking Orakpo. Most people will say "well they didn't get Sanchez so they settled for Orakpo." Orakpo is going to be a pro bowler and this was a great pick up by our FO. I do hope that this success we're seeing in the preseason carries on to the regular season. We struck gold (and it was about damn time).
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=Redskins8588;580367]Some may disagree but I think that Orakpo will be what we expected LaVar to be...[/quote]
agreed..I haven't been as excited about a defensive draft pick since Arrington, even Taylor (rip). |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=Ruhskins;580449]Funny how people don't give the FO praise for picking Orakpo. Most people will say "well they didn't get Sanchez so they settled for Orakpo." Orakpo is going to be a pro bowler and this was a great pick up by our FO. I do hope that this success we're seeing in the preseason carries on to the regular season. We struck gold (and it was about damn time).[/quote]Well, what we have here is a case of the front office going out of their way to EARN their lack of credit.
Every indication says that they actively tried to trade the pick that they used on Orakpo and simply failed. Mark Sanchez would have to be a pretty good player to be better than Orakpo, and he might be, but while we don't know what the team's final offer was to move up, we know it's something that likely would have done the trick had there been no competition. Now remember, if I had been the one in charge of the draft, we would have had Oher instead of Orakpo. I had them rated about equally, and the offensive player would have been my preference, but Orakpo certainly appears to be the rare, scheme-neutral defensive player I was talking about. So in that light, if Orakpo ends up defensive ROY, and the Ravens OL has to swallow it's ups and downs, kudos to the FO. Until then, they are sort of to blame for making it [I]look[/I] like they lucked into a pick that other teams simply passed on. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
We can if and or but this thing all day, bottom line is they drafted Orakpo. Let's give them some credit for what they did, and not take away from it because of what they might have done.
It does seem funny that every good pick gets written off as luck, or no-brainers. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
There's an element of luck involved when the guy you want is available. There is no luck involved when you actually pick the guy you want. The front office has done a great job the last few years in the first few rounds. They could do even better if they retain their picks instead of trading for the likes of Jason Taylor.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Orakpo will be his own man. He will most likely be compared to a D. Ware simply because of the connection with the NFC east and the Redskins / Cowboys rivalry. The fact that the FO never gets credit is because of all the stuff that goes along with our draft and FA moves. We are always present whenever any of the experts are talking about a prize free agent, a prized offensive weapon in the draft, or a player to be traded. Think of how many times the Mike Vick thing came up. Last year it was Jason Taylor. Before that we were going to make a move for Calvin Johnson. And you could go on and on about this guy or that guy that was going to be picked up or drafted by the Skin. Even before FA started AH was already being penciled in as a Redskin by alot of the guys in the media. We will never get any credit for making good moves until we have a solid playoff perrennial football team.
All that aside. Rak will be a good one. The FO won't get credit until we win. Then if we did alot of guys would flip flop and you'd hear guys who always bash singing our praises and talking about how smart some of the moves were. This they would preface by stating that they really didn't know what our FO was doing and they ( they being the media anlaysts ) some would come up with the idea that it was all smoke and mirrors. Sorry to get off on a rant, but I get fed up with the media at times when the Redskins and our FO are trying to build a Great football team for us the fans, players, coaches, and FO people to be proud of. The guys up stairs really do try to give us what we want guys: a great football team. Nobody has ever accused Danny boy of not trying to build a winner. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Skins know what they are doing when they draft defensively in the first round in this decade alone: bailey, landry, taylor, arrington (kind of a bust), rogers, orakpo, offensively not so much, save Chris Samuels. Even when Cooke was here. Our first round offensive picks have pretty much sucked since Art Monk, all the bum qbs and wideouts.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
He could be a perennial all pro. What a beast.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
He's like Robert McCune and Ade Jimoh combined into one player. The second coming of the MEAST!!!
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
All I gotta say is thank you Buffalo!
They took a big risk with Maybin at#11. He is very fast and athletic, but he just isn't anywhere close to having NFL strength. Orakpo is already well above average in that category and still remains very fluid. So excited about this guy. I think the rest of the league is already noticing that Orakpo is going to be a major handful starting from day 1. Twelve teams passing on him is pretty amazing. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=DIRTEE;580630]He's like Robert McCune and Ade Jimoh combined into one player. The second coming of the MEAST!!![/quote]
DUDE WTF iS UR proBLEM DON'T JINX IT :madani: Stupidhed. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
[quote=Dirtbag359;580650]DUDE WTF iS UR proBLEM DON'T JINX IT :madani: Stupidhed.[/quote]
C'mon he's a helluva player. Trust me, I was just joking. Relax. |
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
I think Rak will be playing with a chip on his shoulder he will be mad at the first 12 teams for not picking him and mad at the last 19 teams for not trading up to get him, either way they better watch out.
|
Re: Doug Farrar on Brian Orakpo
Orakpo is a legend, bottom line!
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:11 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
We have no official affiliation with the Washington Commanders or the NFL.