BlitzFirst said:There ya go Mav...so you don't have to go back and read.
Yeah, those aren't the same thing. Despite how much you may want them to be or think they are.
BlitzFirst said:There ya go Mav...so you don't have to go back and read.
BlitzFirst said:He quoted the QBR...what was I supposed to 'want them to be'?
Do you think I'm some kind of moron that has no clue? You're treating me like I am.
Tommy Armstrong didn't really progress or regress. Either two different coaches and OCs didn't know how to coach him up or use him properly, or Tommy simply came in with his own skillset and operated to the ceiling of his abilities.
Now that I think about it, both could be true at the same time.
The problem with your thinking Blitz, is that stats don't always tell the story. Tommy Armstrong finished his career as the Total Offense Leader at Nebraska, but virtually no one would pick him as our best quarterback. Just as nobody is going to remember his 3,000 yard passing season as a high point in anything.
Armstrong's passing yards per game increased under Langsdorf, mainly because he passed the ball more. His yards per completion and yards per attempt declined in 2015, and he threw 4 more interceptions. Taking all those factors into account, he was pretty much the same QB he was under Langsdorf that he was under Beck. I'm not trying to say that Beck or Langsdorf was better, I'm just saying that there wasn't significant improvement under Langsdorf, which many thought would happen, given the fact that Langsdorf would be TA's dedicated QB coach, and based on Langsdorf's resume.BlitzFirst said:You gotta be kidding me. You're accusing me of making a big show out of pointing out how people's dead horse arguments don't have legs with logic?
I just don't get it man...and if that's what you think I'm doing, you don't get it either.
There were posts saying Tommy regressed...might not have been yours but they were there.
I said Tommy had his best year ever. His output was higher than other years. That's a fact. Langs was his coach when this happened.
Anything else you guys are arguing semantics, trying to catch me in logical fallacies since I "make a show" of posting about them, and purely badgering me.
I agree that there are definitely challenges to improving guys in college, especially given the limits that coaches can spend with players.BlitzFirst said:I can understand that argument.
Just the same, I think kids are not equal to NFL QB's. So expecting a vast improvement in 1 year is probably not plausible for college QB's.
Tom Herman will gladly disagree with you along with a lot of other coaches in the buisness.MichiganDad3 said:We all knows Langs is a QB coach. We also know Langs is a BAD QB coach.
I don't think anybody expects college kids to be NFL QB's. I think people expect to see reasonable growth in important metrics and, when those things don't happen, there's certainly reason to question the players and coaches.BlitzFirst said:I can understand that argument.
Just the same, I think kids are not equal to NFL QB's. So expecting a vast improvement in 1 year is probably not plausible for college QB's.
And Fyfe played against BIG teams. Lee has only faced scrubs so far.Incidentally, this discussion made me think of a different comparison to make.
Tanner Lee under Langsdorf: 76/146, 52.1%, 898 yards, 6.2 ypa, 7 TDs, 9 INTs
Ryker Fyfe under Langsdorf: 82/154, 53.2%, 998 yards, 6.5 ypa, 9 TDs, 6 INTs
So apparently our current QB is statistically worse than the guy who everyone insisted wasn't good enough to play ahead of an injured Tommy Armstrong last year.
Let that play into the "POB must not be good enough to play" conversation however you like.
I agree with you. I think Gebbia is a gamer and has intangibles you can't teach or see on film.Here's where things get totally subjective:
Watching the Spring Game it seemed clear to me that Tristan Gebbia had better instincts and baller attitude than the two QBs ahead of him.
That's the stuff you can't coach, and it's the stuff that wins games regardless of the stat line.
If my job was on the line I'd throw him into the fire and get the Tristan Gebbia era started.