TGHusker
Well-known member
Here is what concerns me if he is retained 1 more year or 10.....
When talking about 1 score games:
It(NU) has had an opportunity to drive to tie or win a game in the last four minutes 16 times under Frost and gone scoreless on 15 possessions.
https://hailvarsity.com/football/nebraska-scott-frost-are-running-out-of-time-to-find-the-answer/
Some realism here:
and hereBut Nebraska is 0-8 under Frost against the remaining teams on its schedule. It has never won three straight games at any point under Frost and endured three-game losing streaks three different times. Probabilistically, the most likely scenario now might be that Nebraska loses out and drops to 3-9, what would be the program’s worst season since 1957.
With a recruiting class that currently ranks last in the Big Ten and 77th nationally, an uphill battle trying to recruit on the heels of five straight losing season, and the impending departure of quite literally one of the most experienced defenses Nebraska will ever have, is there a better time to cut ties and start over? If you require the head man make wholesale changes to the staff, do you trust his ability to identify the right pieces to add or his ability to convince them to come aboard?
NU ran 27 plays. Yant is averaging 7.4 yards per rush attempt this year, nearly 3 yards more than any other back. Johnson has come on strong, but is it not possible to find opportunities for both? Nebraska wasn’t in a position where it had to abandon the run, especially not with a halftime lead against an average run defense.
This isn’t the first time Yant has been planted on the sideline for a mistake, and he’s not the only one in that position. What keeps Zavier Betts off the field? What keeps Alante Brown off the field? What happened to Oliver Martin? Some players can play with no fear of failure. Others, it seems, cannot.
Martin—one of two Husker receivers with a 100-yard receiving game this season—has five catches in the last four games. Samori Touré didn’t get his first catch Saturday until the game’s final six minutes after just one catch against Minnesota. Take away Yant’s 100-yard game against Northwestern and he has 21 total touches in the other eight. Stepp has 15 total touches since his 100-yard performance against Fordham. Betts’ 19 yards per touch this season is the best clip among Huskers with at least five touches; eight skill guys have more touches on offense than he does.
If guys are hurt to the point they’re unavailable, it would benefit Frost to be more forthcoming. In lieu of that, it looks like they’re just not being put on the field. Perhaps that’s a misrepresentation of the situation, but it’s one Frost could easily fix. If it is about consistency, then there are different standards different players are being held to.
and here:
and hereBut Frost’s unwillingness to engage in that discussion is also becoming a talking point. Not because he should, but because he has voluntarily painted himself into a corner. Nebraska doesn’t have an experienced quarterback to back up Martinez because Frost decided against adding one. And players who have proven capable of making plays are unable to stay on the field and watching other guys (not just the quarterback, to be clear) make mistakes to no consequences. Sometimes players don’t care about the context.
Scott Frost will have been fired 37 times over by the time you read this. Those preaching patience even up until Saturday seemed to feel like a 28-23 loss to Purdue was the beginning of the end. It remains to be seen what Husker Athletic Director Trev Alberts thinks. What we do know is Frost will get a chance, at the bare minimum, to coach out his team’s final three games. Maybe Nebraska catches fire. Maybe this all gets worse. If Alberts is still asking questions, it’s not a good sign that Frost seems out of answers.
“There (are) no new answers,” the Husker coach said after the game. “We’ll look for them. We’re always looking for more ways to get better.”