Hilltop
Active member
33 minutes ago, floridacorn said:
Depends on the game but YouTube is my go to. For this game so far all I have been able to do is cobble through film breakdowns of those who have better film.
33 minutes ago, floridacorn said:
40 minutes ago, floridacorn said:
I don’t take any personal offense don’t worry lol, nice drop of stats. I did comment post game, pretty often, I got tired of fans calling out the 2-5 record, we would’ve gotten smoked by their schedule as well.Please don't take offense to this personally but this is what's wrong with our fan base imo. We look at a team's record and make a lot of assumptions. UCLA has had a great run defense this season and is only allowing 100 yards a game- essentially the same as Nebraska. We have struggled to run the ball. Some would say putting your best foot forward makes sense against a team ranked very good in run defense.
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He was looking immediately after clearing the linebackers... he was wide open. The site isn't letting me post the pic for some reason- unknown error?
I don’t understand why raiola tends to always go the floater route. Is it to make it look pretty and flex his throwing capability? I know some qb coaches coach up the floater for deeper passes as it’s harder for a corner/secondary to track defensively, but some of these are just unnecessary decisions that raise the difficulty of the completionAgainst popular opinion, It was a great call by the OC Satt. Fidone was the 1st read (deep route). #15 admitted that he took his eyes off him to soon and looked to Banks (2nd read). #15 didn't give his first read a chance (Fidone).
That is a decision making problem by the QB, not a play call problem.
And he threw a floater. Into double coverage. Nearly triple coverage.
What I've noticed since game 2 or 3 is that he is a wrist flicker. He doesn't use shoulder and hips and doesn't drive the ball with his arm and rarely has solid footing. That's why most of his throws are off his back foot and many of his passes are high lob/soft touch passes. Relies too much on wrist and elbow. That will affect timing and accuracy too. Even the short screens are soft and slow. It's possible he never had to change his way in HS.I don’t understand why raiola tends to always go the floater route. Is it to make it look pretty and flex his throwing capability? I know some qb coaches coach up the floater for deeper passes as it’s harder for a corner/secondary to track defensively, but some of these are just unnecessary decisions that raise the difficulty of the completion
In last games he missed 2 throws for TDs against Ohio state that woulda been a TD with a simple basic throw, same with the end of the Illinois game.
hes got a strong arm, why isn’t he letting it rip more often?
Get your base squared, Plant your feet, use upper body torque and fire the ball. On those open throws he is just flicking it up in the air with mostly his wrist. Like tossing an orange. That can all be changed easily. Wrist throws are good at times when running out of the pocket to your right.I don’t understand why raiola tends to always go the floater route. Is it to make it look pretty and flex his throwing capability? I know some qb coaches coach up the floater for deeper passes as it’s harder for a corner/secondary to track defensively, but some of these are just unnecessary decisions that raise the difficulty of the completion
In last games he missed 2 throws for TDs against Ohio state that woulda been a TD with a simple basic throw, same with the end of the Illinois game.
hes got a strong arm, why isn’t he letting it rip more often?
I’ve def noticed the suspect foundation setting/falling-back tendency. Someone brought up a solid point a few weeks back if that rumored ankle injury was a culprit to not driving- but then the way he was running against tosu made it seem like the ankle was a non issue.What I've noticed since game 2 or 3 is that he is a wrist flicker. He doesn't use shoulder and hips and doesn't drive the ball with his arm and rarely has solid footing. That's why most of his throws are off his back foot and many of his passes are high lob/soft touch passes. Relies too much on wrist and elbow. That will affect timing and accuracy too. Even the short screens are soft and slow. It's possible he never had to change his way in HS.
I don't think I am wrong here, but if I am, my apologies.
He was looking immediately after clearing the linebackers... he was wide open. The site isn't letting me post the pic for some reason- unknown error?
When the camera picks him up on the main play view he is actually in the process of turning the other way. It may not have been a touchdown but was an easy first down.
That's actually pretty crazy. The difference between 1st and 13th is 30 yards or .76 yards per play. And, we are tied for 4th in TDs allowed. That's not as big of difference as I would expect.Please don't take offense to this personally but this is what's wrong with our fan base imo. We look at a team's record and make a lot of assumptions. UCLA has had a great run defense this season and is only allowing 100 yards a game- essentially the same as Nebraska. We have struggled to run the ball. Some would say putting your best foot forward makes sense against a team ranked very good in run defense.
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7 hours ago, floridacorn said:
My guess is they are taught to get the spot the route says they are supposed to run vs run your route but have an option to sit in space like most 21st century offenses do.On the 4th and goal shown after that play, why does Bullock run to the corner into coverage and not just sit wide open in the end zone? Won't say anything about how piss poor the routes he and Nelson run look.