Sean McDermott Has Worst Take On The Tush Push Yet
We have been inundated with bad Tush Push takes all year. Honestly, we have been dealing with them for years now. But Sean McDermott just took the prize for the worst take. Not only did it make him look dumb, but it kind of made him look like a bad person.
No Proof The Tush Push Is Dangerous
First, let’s get this out of the way: the Tush push is not a dangerous play. We have three years of the Eagles spamming that play call every 3rd and 1, 4th and 1, or every goal-line play, and there is no data to suggest it is dangerous.
If it was any more dangerous than your average run up the middle, there would be some data to back it up. The Eagles O-Linemen would have missed significant time. Jalen Hurts would have missed time. Players defending it would have been injured. None of that has happened. In fact, the Eagles have been one of the healthiest teams for the past 3 seasons.
So right off the bat, Sean McDermott is just wrong. But that is not what makes this take so bad. Because the question becomes, if he truly thinks it is such a dangerous play to the point that it needs to be banned, why does his team run it so much?
Sean McDermott Is A Hypocrite
The Eagles run the play more than anyone. But the Bills come in as a close second. They ran their version of the Tush Push, sometimes called the Snow Plow, 26 times between the regular season and the playoffs. They converted 23 of them but were stopped twice vs the Chiefs.
So why did McDermott try to get his players hurt 26 times? He does not call the plays on offense, but surely if he thought a play was dangerous, he could tell Joe Brady to stop running it. Brady is not the Jim Washburn of Offensive Coordinators who overrules what his Head Coach wants. McDermott gave full approval to run a play he thinks is incredibly dangerous 26 times.
So either he is lying, and doesn’t think it is dangerous, or he genuinely thinks it is dangerous, and still lets his players run it nearly twice a game. Either way, not a great look for Sean McDermott.
Sirianni is on record saying he does not think it is any more dangerous than your average plays.
“We’ve looked into it too. There weren’t a lot of injuries there. I think its a little made up, to be honest. The numbers will tell the truth.. But I can’t remember 1 injury we had, and we run it more than anyone else.”
So for Sirianni, it makes sense to run it as much as it does. But if McDermott truly believes that it is a dangerous play, it calls his ethics as a coach into question.
Is he trying to get his players hurt? Does he just not care about their safety enough? The truth is that it is in no way a dangerous play, but he thinks it is one. So either he is a liar, or he is someone who does not care about his players’ health. Whichever he is, a truly embarrassing moment for the Bills Head Coach.