This is true. Here's the problem I have when we talk about the "abandoning the identity things"... it doesn't always materialize into losses. It's pretty clear that our run/pass distribution in both Cincinnati games was nowhere close to what we wanted it to be. I'm not saying we "got away from ourselves", but I think far too often we just assume that if we're not "balanced" or even run heavy, that Lamar starts sucking. He was fantastic in both of those games. He was very good against Cleveland.
I struggle with this idea that when we "abandon our identity" it means Lamar has to suck. He deserves a LOT of blame for some of these PIT and KC losses. Not all of it, and maybe not most of it, but a lot of it. He can simply play better. He gets paid to play better. He's expected to. It matters more to play well in this game than it does to throw 5 TDs in a blowout against Denver. It just does.
I don't buy for a second that this loss was about "abandoning who we are" from a run/pass distribution. We had 16 designed runs for Derrick Henry called by the end of 3rd quarter. That is NOT a low number by any stretch of the imagination. I'd argue its too high of a number over the course of a 17 game season.
Lamar gets less blame because of the penalties and the down/distance he had to deal with, and the missed kicks and the turnovers. He missed plenty of throws. He missed plenty of opportunities to extend plays with his legs. Coaching won't solve that. He needs to solve that. He's the expensive veteran. He is the measuring stick for these games.
At the end of the day, Lamar needs to go out there and make it extremely clear that he's the best player on the field in these games. He came pretty close to doing that against KC earlier this year, and that's why he caught less shit for that loss. He wasn't anywhere close to the best player yesterday, and hasn't been in really any PIT game he's played and very few KC games also.