We gotta talk...Treadwell
Sad to say but right now he's making Troy Williamson look like Randy Moss
He can't seperate. Its why the QB isn't looking for him, he's almost always covered. Floyd will come back from suspension after next week's game and they can park his ass back on the bench where it belongs. Wright should be getting more snaps than Treadless.
When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often.
@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often.Yeah I don't think you can blame Treadwell too much when Thielen and Diggs are so open so often that they are ranked #2 and #3 in the receiving rankings and are trending towards 1600 yard a piece seasons so far, and are sucking 200 yards a game out of the total passing yardage.
@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often.Yesterday was a prime example of how hard it is to crack this WR group for reps. Take Diggs away, Adams open. Take Adam away Diggs is open. Take them both away, Jarius, a RB or a TE is open.
Hard to get reps in when the corps is clicking like that.
SKOL
@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often.
This...still way early...I like the little I have seen from Treadwell so far...seems to be moving far better...
It's pretty awesome that there are so many options at wide receiver. He needs to keep working.
Sticky is right. He never gets open. He's like Patterson without the speed. He doesn't get open in practice or games. We'd be better off using a receiver who isn't playing their normal position (receivers X, Y, and Z). Treadwell truly offers nothing. Rather see Wright, Coley or Adams get the reps. The too can get at least 1 catch for 1 yard each week.
its not injuries, it is skill. We reached big time on this guy
@"Tom Moore" said: Sticky is right. He never gets open. He's like Patterson without the speed. He doesn't get open in practice or games. We'd be better off using a receiver who isn't playing their normal position (receivers X, Y, and Z). Treadwell truly offers nothing. Rather see Wright, Coley or Adams get the reps. The too can get at least 1 catch for 1 yard each week.its not injuries, it is skill. We reached big time on this guy
Patterson was targeted twice yesterday, had 1 catch for 7 yards. The Raiders talked non-stop about what a weapon he would be in Oakland, but he's had 3 catches for 15 yards so far this season. He's just not consistent and he doesn't have good NFL awareness or intelligence.
Treadwell is going to be on the bubble during the 2018 training camp/preseason. Guaranteed. Stacy Coley is a talented dude that knows how to play WRer, give him the reps and watch him progress.
I think LT already looks better than last year. Having a guy like him on the bench might prove valuable at some point. Guys get dinged up all the time, so Tready still might get his opportunity to prove his worth.
@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often.Rudolph was ignored as well. 1 catch. Diggs and thielen attacked the outside deep. Cook ran the ball well, so the possession type of WR wasn't needed much.
That said, he certainly isn't lighting the world on fire.
@"greediron" said:@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often. Rudolph was ignored as well. 1 catch. Diggs and thielen attacked the outside deep. Cook ran the ball well, so the possession type of WR wasn't needed much.That said, he certainly isn't lighting the world on fire.
I just don't think Treadwell is intended to be a possession receiver. I think he was going to be the deep threat who ran good routes and could leap. He is just such a non-factor. He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.I believe that once Floyd is back, you will see little of Treadwell outside of special teams.
@"Tom Moore" said:@"greediron" said:@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often. Rudolph was ignored as well. 1 catch. Diggs and thielen attacked the outside deep. Cook ran the ball well, so the possession type of WR wasn't needed much.That said, he certainly isn't lighting the world on fire.
I just don't think Treadwell is intended to be a possession receiver. I think he was going to be the deep threat who ran good routes and could leap. He is just such a non-factor. He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.I believe that once Floyd is back, you will see little of Treadwell outside of special teams.
I disagree, if that was the intent then who ever wanted him needs to be looking for a job. Treadwells game never was going to translate to a deep vert receiver, he is a big bodied guy with a huge range and iffy top end in terms of speed. He is best suited at slants, curls, back shoulder throws and other routes that allow him to use that wide frame to sheild away a defender. He is going to succeed or fail on the trustworthyness of his hand and his ability to make crisp cuts on precision routes.
@"Tom Moore" said:I think that is an underrated point and something the coaching staff has always valued. With Treadwell, you can run three WR sets and still have a very good blocker out there. Wright is a better receiver but when Wright is out there the defense knows it is less likely to be a run play. Treadwell and Rudolph share certain qualities in that they have a large catch radius but don't get separation. The big difference is Rudolph has earned trust in catching the ball and being in the right place. However, because the Vikings now have two receivers who excel at running routes and getting open, you are seeing a drop off in targeting Rudolph, let alone Treadwell. Moreover, in the area where it is harder to get open (the redzone) and where Rudolph and Treadwell should be targeted more, Diggs has truly excelled at contested catches. Why throw to Rudolph/Treadwell when Diggs has been so dominate in the red zone? Now, this may change when teams start to cover Diggs differently in the red zone, but for now why throw if anywhere else?He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.
Does anyone really know who is covering Treadwell? I think you’d want your best defenders on
Thielen and Diggs, but at the same time your best CBs are probably going to be the
outside CB more often than not. Are teams
moving their CBs around to cover Diggs and Thielen or are they just staying in
their normal left, right, slot CB positions?
@"VikingOracle" said:Great points Oracle. And I wonder too, is it part of the game plan. Obviously our offensive plan was to attack the outside deep against TB. Week 1, Rudolph had an impact, 3 catches and good yardage. Week 2, he was second high on the team in catches with 4.@"Tom Moore" said:I think that is an underrated point and something the coaching staff has always valued. With Treadwell, you can run three WR sets and still have a very good blocker out there. Wright is a better receiver but when Wright is out there the defense knows it is less likely to be a run play. Treadwell and Rudolph share certain qualities in that they have a large catch radius but don't get separation. The big difference is Rudolph has earned trust in catching the ball and being in the right place. However, because the Vikings now have two receivers who excel at running routes and getting open, you are seeing a drop off in targeting Rudolph, let alone Treadwell. Moreover, in the area where it is harder to get open (the redzone) and where Rudolph and Treadwell should be targeted more, Diggs has truly excelled at contested catches. Why throw to Rudolph/Treadwell when Diggs has been so dominate in the red zone? Now, this may change when teams start to cover Diggs differently in the red zone, but for now why throw if anywhere else?He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.I don't doubt that Rudolph and likely Treadwell will be utilized in future gameplans.
Could we get a 5th rounder for him in a trade? I'd do that deal today.
@"Tom Moore" said:I think many of us look at his triangle numbers - 6'2", 220, 4.6 - and think he could be like Cris Carter and Deandre Hopkins: physical possession receivers with superb hands and great route skills. But in college, his playing style was like Michael Irvin, a tall deep threat. He might be trying to redesign himself as a possession WR, but who knows if it will work.I just don't think Treadwell is intended to be a possession receiver. I think he was going to be the deep threat who ran good routes and could leap. He is just such a non-factor. He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.I believe that once Floyd is back, you will see little of Treadwell outside of special teams.Did the Vikings' scouts just have faith he would heal and be fast enough to outrun NFL CBs? Big gamble.
@"JimmyinSD" said:@"Tom Moore" said:@"greediron" said:@"twgerber" said: When you have Diggs and Theilen you don't need to look elsewhere very often. Rudolph was ignored as well. 1 catch. Diggs and thielen attacked the outside deep. Cook ran the ball well, so the possession type of WR wasn't needed much.That said, he certainly isn't lighting the world on fire.
I just don't think Treadwell is intended to be a possession receiver. I think he was going to be the deep threat who ran good routes and could leap. He is just such a non-factor. He is the best blocker of the receivers, so maybe that is it. But most passing games count on a pass catcher, not a blocker.I believe that once Floyd is back, you will see little of Treadwell outside of special teams.
I disagree, if that was the intent then who ever wanted him needs to be looking for a job. Treadwells game never was going to translate to a deep vert receiver, he is a big bodied guy with a huge range and iffy top end in terms of speed. He is best suited at slants, curls, back shoulder throws and other routes that allow him to use that wide frame to sheild away a defender. He is going to succeed or fail on the trustworthyness of his hand and his ability to make crisp cuts on precision routes.
Agree. He was pretty good at going deep in college, but you could tell that he didn't have the "juice" to do that on the next level. It wasn't just poor speed, it was almost ZERO athleticism. I had hoped that was due to lingering injury issues, but I'm not so sure anymore. He still has a chance, but it will be as a physical, Bolden-like possession receiver. And with a player like Floyd, who can be that AND a deep threat, coming back soon, Treadwell might just get lost in the numbers. Might want to consider trading this guy while he still has some of that first-round shine.
Edit Post (mod action — author will see a notice)
Warn Poster
Suspend User (3 days)
The user will be suspended for 3 days and will receive an email with the reason and information about how to appeal.