This is exactly what I was saying Saturday, this idea that Rees is a brain dead play caller is so off base from the main things he should be criticized for. Literally all other issues are bigger. He bares significantly more responsibility on how Pyne played than any the calls made.
They knew Mayer was getting bracketed, so they cooked up a bunch of 1-1s for damn near every WR on the roster. Pyne didn’t make the throws. The stake through Rees’ job is the development and recruiting not the calls.
I still blame Rees for the BK-esque near delay-of-game on the first offensive play, which resulted in a Patterson false start. We can blame Patterson for the 1st-and-15 to start the drive, but I think he was anticipating a snap with the play-clock expiring, because it looked like Alt was kind of leaning over with him. This was like the BK and Denbrock era, where the call came in wayyyyy too late from the sideline. That's on Rees to start the drive.
I also blame him for getting too cute with the playcalling in general. Scheming up plays to counter Mayer getting bracketed is great!... but what's NOT great is refusing to attack the edges of a defense that is undersized and undermanned at DE. Even if it's not super successful, you're at least wearing out the two decent pass rushers they have on the roster... instead, Herron was fresh and rushing with increasing effectiveness as the game wore on. At best, you get your RB's going earlier, and help your QB settle back in for another high-percentage day.
I ALSO blame him for continuing to rely on Braden Lenzy in his play calling. Lenzy hasn't been faster than anyone since 2019. He hasn't won a contested catch since Cincinnati last year, and that was probably a fluke itself. If you're going to use Lenzy, keep making the hitch a weapon in the playbook, instead of a just a play you call once per game. Or let the kid run a slant in short yardage. He's not out-running anyone with his stride these days, but he does still run decent routes in short bursts.
And I don't care if Merriweather being on the field is a signal to the safety that he needs to cover a fade and/or post... he should've been getting 2-3 chances to run that play in every game this year, regardless of the rest of his knowledge. If a kid knows how to run straight and catch a jump ball, let him run straight and catch a jump ball. If the defense sees him on the field and bails out to defend it, you open up other opportunities. This isn't Daniel Smith jogging onto the field to run block for an outside zone play... this is a kid that can be a legit weapon, so let him go out and do it.