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HuskerWisdom

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  1. You are correct. He really has freakish ability and speed. He was the fastest kid at NU's camp prior to his senior year. Unfortunately, he then blew out his knee going into his senior year, and then hurt his knee again when he got to campus as a walk-on. Yesterday he looked like he had his speed back and just showed great natural quickness and a feel for running the ball. I think he can do big things as a change-of-pace back in this offense. Of course, he can also catch the ball a bit, giving Beck a lot of options for getting him the ball in space and letting him create.
  2. I believe he had a hamstring pull. For an UDFA trying to make a camp, that is the end of that chance. It's unfortunate, because the Bucs were apparently giving him reps and giving him a real chance. Best case scenario for him would be to find someone who wanted him on their practice squad this year. First, he needs to get healthy, and then he needs to figure out where he might have that opportunity. I still think he can make it. His measurables aren't incredible, but they are well within the NFL range for a safety.
  3. Either that, or he's scouting out schools for Jr. to transfer to after Texas Tech fans run them out of town after getting Leach sacked. God forbid, I really doubt his kid could play for Bo. In any case, it doesn't matter what he says about us anymore, getting rid of Leach was a gift enough to us
  4. May had a groin injury that will require surgery after the season and had problems with pinched nerves in his shoulder all year. When healthy he'll compete to start. Holt played as a true frosh and will be in the mix - at the very least he's a valuable situational guy due to his ability to move and cover in space.
  5. Caputo will start and will be a stud - he's better at the point of attack than Hickman was this year and I think he'll be an engine for our interior running game. Thorson is the likely backup - another walk-on, he's an excellent run blocker with good quickness and technique in side. He's a RS Frosh this year. Ash is competing with Thorson for the backup job. I think Thorson is a bit ahead, but both have the potential to be nice players. According to what I was told, he needed a year of S&C. He was one of the award winning scout team guys this year. Not sure about anyone behind that for the center position - if they weren't practicing at center this fall, then I wouldn't be optimistic about them playing next fall. Center takes a while to learn.
  6. He got moved from DT to OG earlier in they year, but he was beaten out for the 105 man roster by Choi and Thorson IIRC. He did have a lot to learn about playing OG and did need a full year of S&C after his shoulder injury last year. I haven't heard much, but we'll know more in the spring.
  7. Smith was really banged up this year, ankles and back and really would have taken time off to heal except for the fact that we didn't have anyone else there - I think the injuries hurt his run blockign more than his pass blocking, although he wasn't nearly the player he could be because of the injuries. He could use another 10 lbs (remember, he's a DE convert), but has built himself up to probably be one of the stonger guys on the OL during winter testing last year - unfortunately the injuries didn't allow him to show it this year. In terms of protecting the blind side, he's the best guy we have right now, and the only tackle who we can leave w/o a TE covering. He is the only guy we havre right now with the athleticism and experience at LT. Another year, some good health and another 10 lbs will make Smith look pretty good. Hardrick is a guy who a lot of people think should only a RT. I don't want to go into a season with an inexperienced guy playing LT. In my scenario, I see him getting snaps as the backup at LT to learn the position for 2011. Thompson got moved to OG, but then was moved back to OT (from what I heard). I probably should have listed him as one of the backup OG's, but am not really sure where he'll fit right now.
  8. We should be much better next year - maybe not where we want to be evantually, but much deeper and improved from this year. Even with Hardrick I think Smith is the best LT on the roster next year - I think Hardrick may be a LT someday, but this year I want to see him at RT. Injuries and an utter lack of depth killed us this year. With Burkes, our depth is excellent, without him we had no RT that we could depend on, and with MJones as our backup LT the injuries to Smith and MJones were crushing. As it was, Williams played with a torn pec (not a great season, but he was hurting), smith had ankle and back injuries and could have used about 2 weeks off to heal, but never got them, Caputo will likely have surgery off season, MJones had numerous injuries, and Hickman was banged up a lot also. I see: LT: Smith; Hardrick/MJones/Sirles or Coffey LG: Williams/Qvale; Choi C: Caputo; Thorson/Ash RG: Henry/Qvale; DJ Jones RT: Hardrick; MJones/Sirles or Coffey
  9. The fastest back we've ever had was Keith "End Zone" Jones who ran 4.33 electronic on the old astroturf. Ahman Green ran 4.35, IIRC. It is a bit more difficult for the kids now because of the field turf which is slower than astroturf was back in the day. A standard measure is that a hand to electronic conversion is .15 - that works almost perfectly for Green who reportedly ran a 4.19 hand-timed in a workout which was about .16 off from his electronic NU time. Most of the "fastest" times recorded above are pretty much BS.. .sorry. Ginn, for instance, ran a 4.38 hand timed at OSU (they have a notoriously fast track), Combine times are somewhat electronic, but misleading. 3 times are taken. 2 are hand times and 1 is electronic. It varies which ones are released to the public, some teams want the hand times, some want the electronic, others do their own times. So there is often confusion around the times at the combine. Johnnie Lee Higgens, for instance, ran a hand-timed 4.19 at UTEP, but then ran a 4.43 or 4.48 at the combine, depending on who you talked to - I think someone else reported a 4.34 and 4.39 - Pretty much the only numbers I trust are Nebraska Electronic numbers.
  10. A couple of quick notes on Reeves, he's a big kid obviously, but is also an excellent athlete and one who has great technique for his age (his father played OL and coaches OL). IIRC, he also went down to a camp in Texas and was one of the best kids there. He's the real deal and projects as an interior lineman. Expect to see him ranked highly on a national scale as well.
  11. I did some quick numbers on this and it isn't entirely off the wall: If we assume 21 scholarships a year, and 25 walk-ons per year. Add in attrittion of 4 scholarhips players per year and 12 walk ons. That equation gives us a 150 person roster over a 5 year period. If we assume that 23 out of 25 walk-ons are from Nebraska and assume that 6 our of 21 scholarships are from Nebraska we end up with 63% of each incoming class being from Nebraska. That is IF we assume that none of the walk-ons move to scholarship to take roster spaces for non-NE players who leave the program. If we assume the scholarhip ratio is 8 NE players per year, we see get 67%. The actual number of kids from NE who deserve scholarships is probably between 5-7 (about what Osborne used to offer). . But we get those percentages w/o calculating the effect of attrition: If we assume an attrition of 4 scholarship players per year (could be higher, but some walk-ons might move to scholarship), assume an attrition of 12 walk-ons per year). Because the walk-ons will leave at a higher rate than scholarship players, and because they are made up of more NE kids, that will push the percentages lower. - If we assume 6 scholarship kids per year from NE that puts us near 57% of the roster being NE. If we assume 8 scholarship kids per year from NE that puts us at 63%. So with those assumptions we are below 2/3, but if we assume 2-3 kids a year move from walk-on to scholarship and that they are likely NE kids, we get pretty close to 2/3 number. It's probably a little high, but tt's actually not bad for an off-hand comment about the roster.
  12. I think the difference is that most programs recruit within 200 miles of their home and up to 500 miles - about the distance a player's parents can drive to see the game. All of the schools you list have rosters that recruit enormous recruiting bases in their own backyard. Virtually all of USC's roster is within driving distance. Michigan has their homestate kids and the big Ohio base nearby. We aren't limiting ourselves so much as understanding that we can't build relationships with coaches all over the country. So we start nearby and then extend outward. Outside of that region we have to pick 1 or 2 key areas (Texas and maybe Ohio) to concentrate on, otherwise we are spread way too thin and will have inconsistent results.
  13. I think they looked at the current roster, and at the commits they have + the walk-on commits and decided they had enough for this year. One of the things I think Bo wants to do is to get more for less from the OL, that means fewer scholarships than Cally spent on the OL, but with better results - part of this is moving to shorter, quicker offensive linemen who can be recruited as walk-ons to augment depth and even get starters from that program. As others pointed out, Thorson and a couple of the other walk-on recruits can play there and develop.
  14. I don't think we will do radical changes next year. Keeping people comfortable with what they are doing is the most important thing. Take what we had toward the end, but add in more running and more consistent committment to the running game and some play action passing and you have what I expect for next year. I think that Bo would sacrifice a few points for more consistency game-to-game with the offense and the ability to get the tough yards when they count on short yardage. Longer term, I think a hybrid offense that fully utilizes a dual threat QB is where we are headed - a bit of power, a bit of option, a bit of spread and short passing to balance it out. As others have hinted at, calling something a spread, or spread-option, or even WCO doesn't really describe what the team is doing anymore given that there are so many variants of those offenses.
  15. C. It's great to be a top 5-10 class but it isn't a necessity, same with top 15. However anyone who still has this misconception that T.O. won NCs without top 15 recruiting classes is out of their minds and needs to get there head out of their collected arses. You have to have talent to win and the truth of the matter is there was less than 3 team that had more talent in the mid 90's than what nebraska had. Callahans great recruiting and mediocre results have some people solified on this idea that Nebraska can do great things with nothing, and that stars don't mean anything but it isn't really true. You can find a lot of diamonds in the rough but not enough to build a high caliber team. If Nebraska happens to return to dominance we need to be steady in the top 20 at the very least. Actually, you might want to tell SuperPrep to "get their head out of their collected arses". They ranked the averages of the classes leading up to the '94 and '95 championship teams at around 18th to 19th. There were a few top 15's in there, but not exclusively. We had great talent, but it wasn't necessarily talent that would be recognized under today's Rivals ratings nor was it entirely recognized by the services at the time.
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