HuskerNation1
All-American
I do think Riley and his staff are more concerned about developing players for the NFL than they are about developing a plan to win games on the field.
I have said this multiple times, but I can't get over how small our current WR's are. They look as small as the WR's that Osborne had in the 90's. Those guys were basically blockers, who might catch 1 or 2 passes a game, and would run a reverse.Pelini's guys were far better receivers. The guys we have now are athletes and can return a punt with the best of them.....so-so receivers.
NFL scouts may love his arm and size, but if they take one look at how he makes poor decisions, he won't sniff the NFL.Dude still had a few close/iffy passes last night that would have easily been picks in the league.
Forcing the ball and lack of vision have been his main problems. I think pro scouts see his raw talent/accuracy/arm strength, and think it's an easy fix.Dude still had a few close/iffy passes last night that would have easily been picks in the league.
If he is having trouble making quick decisions in the college game, how is he going to succeed in the NFL?Forcing the ball and lack of vision have been his main problems. I think pro scouts see his raw talent/accuracy/arm strength, and think it's an easy fix.
NFL scouts may love his arm and size, but if they take one look at how he makes poor decisions, he won't sniff the NFL.
Because they think they can fix that and he does far better with good protection. That's what I think they think. We're talking about two completely different games. Joe Ganz-great college QB....Pros- forget it.If he is having trouble making quick decisions in the college game, how is he going to succeed in the NFL?
1. Siemien starting is odd, but that's more due to Denver's strong D and them wanting a QB who will be smart and not make mistakes, even though Siemien doesn't play mistake free 100% of the time.Agree. Funny thing is you see a guy like Trevor Siemian starting in the league and you kind of shake your head. Regardlesd whether or not Lee gets a shot with an NFL team is not something I'm going to spend any time worrying about however. Definitely the least of my worries right now as far as the Huskers go.
He certainly has a lot of the intangibles you're looking for but he would have to go to a talented team with all of those things you mentioned in order to be successful.
Forcing the ball and lack of vision have been his main problems. I think pro scouts see his raw talent/accuracy/arm strength, and think it's an easy fix.
Yep, Lee looks great in shorts and a t-shirt and throwing against air. Once he gets on the real field during a game, he's a completely different QB.I think he has the tangible traits, but the intangibles? Zero
I was listing his accuracy as his biggest asset, the rest is questionable. After all the preseason hype I was thinking WTH?? But I can see now where a pro QB coach might see his throwing ability and think he can fix him. Clearly some of us don't think that will happen.Personally I think accuracy is reaaaally hard to fix especially if you're already playing at the college level. Decision making possibly slighty easier to improve upon but QB's who have bad tendencies in college have a strong chance of not drastically improving said bad tendencies imo.