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floridacorn

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Posts posted by floridacorn

  1. 2 hours ago, Nebraska55fan said:

     

    And in the last 3 years we've rolled the dice with at least 3 very damaged RBs- Tompkins. Washington and Stepp.  With the thousands of RBs out there one would think we could find some guys who were not chronically injured- flawed. He's 0-3 with that strategy now, doesn't seem like it's working. 

     

    Give me another Ervin or Scott type any day, develop him and see what he can do. Or a Toure type on the receiver side. 

     

    Like Breece Hall?  

     

    I think the big back comp for Yant given the system is LeGarrette Blount.

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  2. 15 minutes ago, admo said:

    Those quick screens suck when they are over used and become predictable.  The efficiency in the RZ looks questionable at times.  Over all I am ok with the scheme and most of the play calling. 

     

    Quick screens in abundance are fine if the D is off.  Hopefully, this trio of WR's offers more of a downfield threat to open space for those plays and gives Frost the confidence of go downfield when they are tight or squatting on everything.  

     

    That's kind, the RZ efficiency under Frost has been a big problem. 

     

    My biggest criticism of play calling is that the run/pass games are often not tied together.  The short drop back passing game Frost often leans heavily on doesn't compliment the running game imo.  I thought the same thing when he was at UCF, but Milton bailed them out of a lot of plays by scrambling.  

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  3. Virtually all of CF is running some variation of spread, including Saban, who used to rail against it.  Even power teams like Stanford & Wisconsin are incorporating more spread into their offense every year.  So, I don't see how scheme is an issue.

     

    The purpose of spread is to put play makers in space and give them opportunities to make plays.  Frost hasn't gotten that at NU to the degree he's accustomed to & that missing element is going to expose some weaknesses in play calling that were often covered up by said big plays when Frost was at UCF.  

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  4. On 5/20/2021 at 10:48 AM, Warrior10 said:

    OV here June 11. Also OV'ing Miami, OhioSt, and possibly Bama in June. August decision. Cousin of Lynum. 

     

    I know this young man pretty well & have known him a while, never came up that he was related to Lynum, that's interesting, hope it plays in NU's favor.  

     

    3 hours ago, BigRedN said:

    I like his little "nasty" amidst his weight frame.  Imagine him at 190 doing that.  Nice 6.1"

     

    He definitely plays w/an edge and talks smack non-stop on the field.  

  5. LM is more tone deaf than William Hung.   He seriously expected to transfer to Louisville AFTER spring ball and be anointed the starter over a 2 year starter?   That's ridiculous even if he could throw a spiral.

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  6. Linebackers, Inside, & Outside.  This D is potentially legit, but it needs dramatically improved LB play in all phases to take the next step.

     

    Smothers - Lamar Jackson wouldn't impress anybody running 7 on 7's, but what does Smothers look like running the offense?  If his portion is live, I'm especially interested in seeing it.  

     

    Who's next level at the LOS?  NU has a lot of young talent, guys like Ty Robinson, & Turner Corcoran.  Who's actually progressing from holding their own to dominating?  Who's getting off blocks and making tackles for loss, who's getting movement on the O-line & reaching the 2nd level?  

     

     

  7. QB - I'll believe anything other than a Martinez, Smothers, Masker, Haarberg depth chart is beat writer driven speculation when I see it.  

     

    OL - Austin spoke of having 9 players ready to play, if NU had a game today, I think you'd see Sichterman starting at RG.  Banks & Bando as the primary back-ups at G & T, Hixon @ C w/Piper #3, & Nouili/MIller #9 & #10.

     

     

     

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  8. 11 hours ago, ColoradoHusk said:

    McKewon spent a minute or two in this week’s Pick 6 Podcast talking about Wright and Isaac Gifford being the backups to JoJo. Sam said that Wright is longer and more of the LB of the two, while Isaac would probably be better in coverage and more of a safety-type (and similar body type to JoJo). It will be an interesting competition for Domann’s backup and who may have the leg up for the starting spot in 2022. 

     

    I'm hoping they are actually capable backups at the S positions, cuz unless I'm missing somebody, they are it behind Farmer & NPG's next season.  Ideally, I would prefer to see NU utilize a situational mix of players at that position ranging from true OLB, S, to CB.  I think they are married to the idea of a hybrid Rover, but if Tannor returns next season, I wonder if they still envision him in that spot he was recruited to play?  If not, you got a lot of OLB's competing for PT what is actually 1 spot.

  9. 2 hours ago, uberism said:

    - viewed himself as a utility player

     

    - scouts wanted to see him run routs from the outside

     

    I harbor no ill will towards WR & couldn't care less that he transferred, but these quotes lack self awareness.  

     

    A utility player who doesn't want to be utilized as a returner or out of the backfield...that's new to me.

     

    A scout, let alone anyone who understands football shouldn't have to see tape of WR @ X or Z to know what that would look like & if there is a scout alive who actually expressed that, he should be grateful he's getting paid to do a job he's obviously poor at.

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  10. On 4/2/2021 at 12:08 PM, Mavric said:

    Ran a 10.66 100 meters at the McCook meet yesterday.  Also ran 22.16 in the 200 and won the long jump at 22-5.  Word is he barley scratched another long jump attempt but they measured it anyway and it was 24-4.  For comparison, Gayle Sayers held the Nebraska state long jump record for decades at 24-10 until Robert Rands broke it jumping 25-0 15 years ago.

     

    That's pretty impressive for a guy going 210 pounds.

    :zoom

     

    Yea, that's basically what Marcus Fleming ran.  These 100 meter times translate all over the place to the 40.  Nate Gerry ran a 10.3, but a 4.6+.  I have a kid right now that runs 10.8 & 4.4.  That almost defies logic, but fast & athletic is fast & athletic.  I will never understand why these kids w/futures in football continue to train 200+ though...

  11. 18 minutes ago, Mavric said:

    I don't know.  I think our overall team looks pretty slow in these videos...

     

     

     

    Interesting that Frost's throwing motion is much looser than when he played and all the QB's have more condensed mechanics similar to him when he played.  

     

    At least physically, Yant does not look like a true freshman, mid-year enrollee, walk-on.  

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  12. 15 hours ago, B.B. Hemingway said:

     

    I see Smothers going the way of McCaffrey.... The media, granted they did see much, were clearly not impressed from what they've said on 1620 appearances, and local podcasts.

     

    Unlike McCaffrey, Smothers throws a nice ball.  He doesn't have a strong arm, but neither did Milton.  I took in some of those UCF practices Frost's last season, I promise you these same individuals would not have been impressed w/Milton during 7 on 7's either.  If you watch his highlights from that season, you'll see him lofting balls into open spaces.  I doubt he had more than a couple completions as deep as Smothers' under thrown passes traveled in the air all season.  

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  13. 7 hours ago, Mavric said:

     

    But you are exploiting your tendencies if they start cheating up to defend the run and you throw a pass instead.

     

     

    RPOs are the most direct tie between the run and pass game there is.  You are literally running both of them on the same play.

     

    To your 2nd point, agree, no question.  But, when I referred to the short drop back game, I'm not referring to RPO's.  

     

    To your 1st point, fair enough, true in the sense you are exploiting a more favorable coverage on a run down.  Typically, you're talking about a switch from some type of 2 high structure to a 1 high structure like cover 3.  I would argue the effectiveness is still maximized in that situation w/a play fake, but that's not the point.    

     

    When I reference RUN/PASS conflict, I'm referencing the individual defender(s) in that bind, and the slot defender is naturally in that bind versus the spread.   W/o some form of play fake however, he's off the hook. 

     

    Example, in NU's D, Jo Jo is typically flexed out versus a #2 receiver.  He's not on the LOS, he's not playing over the #2 receiver, he's off the LOS between the end of the LOS & the #2.  He's likely got contain responsibility versus run, flat or curl/hook responsibility versus pass.  Play action forces him to read run and freezes him or even forces him to take false steps before he reads pass and gets to his coverage assignment.  That's specifically the conflict I'm referring to that the spread creates.

     

     

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  14. 1 hour ago, Mavric said:

     

    Because with RPOs they are creating a lot of the conflict before the snap and have already decided the best way to attack a particular look.  Very similar to what a play-action pass is doing but making the defense react to a formation instead of the first couple steps of the play.

     

    I get it, there are other ways to exploit the leverage of &/or put those same defenders in conflict w/pass game concepts.  Philosophically however, if you define yourself as a running team, your not exploiting your tendencies, & you're pushing closer to being an air raid offense.  

     

    I get that prob comes across as semantics, but there are times when NU's play calling is really disjointed, & grab baggish.  I feel it's because their run game and pass game aren't always tied together.  

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  15. 15 minutes ago, TGHusker said:

    “What’s a defense going to do?” offensive coordinator Matt Lubick said. “Are they going to take a corner and put him inside and now he has to play the run? Or are they going to play a linebacker, and then you have to split him outside and play man-to-man? If you have a guy who can be physical at the point of attack but still run routes, it just gives you a lot of options.”

     

     

     

    The RUN/PASS conflict the spread creates w/slot defenders is unquestionably it's primary schematic advantage.  That's why I've always had difficulty understanding the lack of play action passing in this offense and the frequency of short drop back passing.  

  16. A coach I have the utmost respect for (Zack Darlington's father) once said you have to be better or different.  This is a guy who won 3 8A state titles in Florida running the single wing.

     

    I think Frost long ago fell in love w/the notion of Oregon @ NU.  Unfortunately, by the time he got there, that was no longer unique.  He's not alone, Kelly & Malzahn have struggled recently & it hasn't been that long since each were in NC games w/QB's who could barely throw the ball.  But, nothing stays new forever, the spread isn't the holy grail, & optimizing it for this program & this conference is obviously vital to his future.   

     

     

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