He is pretty much what I expected him to be. He is like one notch above average.
With a higher than normal ceiling. Tanner Lee is a good example of why I'm a big proponent for dedicated QB coaches rather than offensive coordinators doubling up.
He is pretty much what I expected him to be. He is like one notch above average.
That has way more to do with the team around him and the play calling than him.
...and putting this receiver out onto the field instead of a tight end. I'd like to see him throwing to three wideouts and a slot receiver with no tight end in more of a spread formation with Ozigbo blocking once in a while.I'd like to see what Lee could do with just one more go-to receiver, and let's make him 6' 2" or taller while we're at it.
We've got some speedy and exciting receivers, but I think we miss rangier WRs like Alonzo Moore and Brandon Riley.
Landlord said:He's obviously getting more comfortable in the offense, but personally, I'm one who didn't think his play earlier in the season was as bad as it was made out to be. His poor numbers/performance were much more attributed to unlucky tips, a pourous O-Line and receivers who A) can't get separation and B) have been dropping a lot of balls, more than to him playing poorly, imo.
BigRedBuster said:That has way more to do with the team around him and the play calling than him.
Mavric said:I'm sure that's the easy way to explain it. Not sure if that's the right way or not.
Last series of downs on each possession against Purdue:
From the Purdue 18 - run for no gain, incomplete pass, complete pass for 2 yards (holding penalty), run for 1, FG
From the NU 28 - run for -1, false start, pass for 7, sacked for -2, punt
From the NU 17 - incomplete pass, run for 4, incomplete pass
From the NU 36 - incomplete pass, incomplete pass, pass for 9, punt
From the Purdue 4 - run for 0, incomplete pass, incomplete pass, FG
From the Purdue 48 - pass for 4, run for 4 (holding penalty), pass for 8, incomplete pass
From the Purdue 25 - run for 1, pass for 6, incomplete pass, FG
From the Purdue 9 - run for 4, run for 3, incomplete pass, FG
From the Purdue 27 - passing TD
From the NU 48 - run for 1, incomplete pass, sack, punt
From the Purdue 19 - run for 0, run for 4, incomplete pass, incomplete pass
From the Purdue 19 - pass for 6, incomplete pass, TD pass
So Lee's stats on the drives where we didn't score a TD were 6/17 (35.3%) for 36 yards, 2.1 yards per attempt, 2 sacks for -14 yards, 22 yards net on 19 passing plays. So I think it's fair to say he contributed his share to the struggles.
Many times, yes. But, let me clarify, the first 4 games were horrible for Lee and he should take all criticism that is appropriate for those games.Did Taylor Martinez and/or Tommy Armstrong get this great benefit of the doubt?
To determine that, I would need to see from these drives, how many of those were drops, how often was he rushed because of bad pass pro, how many of those sacs were because of bad pass pro, how many of those bad running plays were because of totally pathetic run blocking......all of that plays into if the offense is successful which can make a good QB look bad.
That is what I based my first comments on.I would have thought you would already had to have done that to make such a definitive statement such as "That has way more to do with the team around him and the play calling than him"
It's a fair question.Did Taylor Martinez and/or Tommy Armstrong get this great benefit of the doubt?
Lumping those 4 games together might not tell the entire story.
ILLINOIS: 17/24 (71%), 246 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT, 94.9 QBR.
tOSU: 23/38, 303 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT, 50.1 QBR.
But in the first half, versus tOSU's starters: 12/24 (50%), 96 yards, only 4 First Downs, 1 Turnover on Downs, 0 points.
WISCONSIN: 16/32 (50%), 262 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT (Red Zone pick-six), 45.5 QBR.
PURDUE: 32/50 (64%), 431 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT, 65.0 QBR.
Before the last 3 possessions: 17/30 (57%), 257 yards, 0 TD.
Thankfully, Purdue appeared to play Prevent the last 3 possessions: 15/20 (75%), 174 yards, 2 TD. Great comeback win!