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Guy Chamberlin

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Everything posted by Guy Chamberlin

  1. Just like when a "very good source" claimed Riley was getting fired mid-season? The wailing and gnashing of teeth when the true frosh QB isn't some miracle worker will be deafening. 10 months ago I -- and a lot of other folks -- were positive the fire underneath Tommy Armstrong was Johnny Stanton.
  2. First time I heard this it was Todd Blackledge and he was talking about Taylor Martinez. I believe the phrasing was: "Taylor Martinez has the unique ability to keep both teams in the game" and it was uttered during one of those games.
  3. Yes 2013 was one of, if not his worst. And while subjective, 2014 was one of his better, but if we're using QBR, it was his 3rd best. So, it's not like Eli was hot garbage before 2014. And I'm not sure why he was so bad in 2013, injury, bad year, system change, etc, but the sample size isn't enough to contribute it specifically to a QB coach. I guess the point was simply that if the New York Giants of the NFL thought Danny Langsdorf was professional, experienced and competent enough to hire as their Quarterbacks Coach, then he shouldn't be considered hot garbage when hired by the University of Nebraska. Unless of course that's just the starting point for anything attached to the hiring of Mike Riley.
  4. Is Manning have a good/bad year this year in the NFL? I have no clue because he was not on my fantasy team...but is he doing fine without Langahalloffamercoach? I just looked...looks like he is on pace to do a considerable about better than last year...My guess is he is probably texting Langsahan for advice before each game. Manning had the best completion % of his career last night, but the Giants look kinda awful this year. Kinda awful for a few years now. Not sure Tom Coughlin survives if they miss the playoffs in the horrible NFC East. But man.....Odell Beckham Jr. can sure jack up your fantasy stats.
  5. This is most likely true but has more to do with type 2 diabetes and heart attacks due to the size of the bodies than being concussed. No doubt. But it's also part of the commitment to football. Teenage bodies are bulked up by diet -- and worse -- for the purpose of playing high-level football. Once you retire, that body doesn't make much sense and it's hard to maintain. I think today's athletes are generally smarter about their health than the NFL vets who retired to a life of golf, drinking and selling insurance.
  6. Isn't it also the case that Eli Manning followed up one of his worst statistical years with one of his best statistical years under the tutelage of Fat Dan? Whatever. Dan's resume would seem to fit the bill for "experienced, professional and competent" but if every facet of the Riley hire is a disaster we might as well go with the flow.
  7. I'm glad he got the money, but the recognition that comes with that contract will probably work against his legacy. Miami clearly needs a lot of other good players, and Suh will constantly be evaluated on whether his massive payday was worth it for the team. The second half of MNF wasn't as kind to him. The camera started finding Suh on every play where he didn't contribute, or looked gassed. It's not so much a witchhunt, it's the superstar treatment. Suh is the team's only superstar. He needs more support, and a bit of the spotlight off him.
  8. We obviously look through things with a Nebraska lens, but Westerkamp really has broken out into the national football consciousness. ESPN loves him. He's the closest thing college football has to Odell Beckham, Jr.
  9. I would have supported and rooted for Turner Gill as head coach when the opportunity first presented itself. No AD would have been criticized for giving the job to Turner Gill. It would have been the safest fan-friendly decision. But it may not have been the right choice. There's something a bit funky going on with Scott Frost's relationship with the University of Nebraska. I wouldn't bet on his return, but if the situation is right I'd still welcome it.
  10. Zac runs a WCO and played for Cally. That automatically discredits him from a large portion of the fan base. Those same folks would absolutely freak out if they saw the Chip Kelly/Scott Frost offense run with less skilled players.
  11. That's some pretty fair and savvy analysis, Brandon Cavanaugh. I'm on the side that says a Tommy Armstrong who makes half the bad decisions and completes 5% more passes makes all the difference in the world. But I really wanted to see that this year. His third year as a starter. Instead Tommy looked determined to prove his doubters wrong by sticking with his bad footwork and over-dramatic choices. I love that he's such a dangerous offensive weapon, but not so much that he's dangerous to both teams. There are a lot of ways for a quarterback to beat the other team with his legs. Big lumbering quarterbacks like Ben Rothleisberger and Brett Favre have pocket smarts, and know how taking a few small steps can buy the crucial extra second to complete a pass. There are a lot more quarterbacks these days willing to take off running when a play breaks down and the yards are there for the taking. They don't have to be called dual threats to hurt you with their legs. The ranks of Regional Sales Managers are filled with high school phenoms who couldn't make the transition of big time college football, so it's ridiculous to hand it to Patrick O'Brien now, replacing the guy who's poised to become the Career Total Offense leader at the University of Nebraska. But Tommy Armstrong's recent social media posts suggest he's worried about the starting job. Good. Because he needs to get better. I have no reason to assume POB will get the job, but I'm wide open to him replacing Tommy if he brings the goods.
  12. On a sidenote, do you know what it usually means when someone resorts to personal attacks like you do? That they're tired of condescending, one-note posters passing their bullsh#t off as knowledge? Nope, it means they've lost the argument. Are you calling me a loser? Pretty sure that's a TOS violation. Anyway, I have five posts on this page of this thread. I suspected they would be a complete waste of time but tried to compose them for maximum comprehension. So please: point to something in my posts that isn't true. And if you or CM or my old pal TheSker isn't too busy, feel free to answer any of the incredibly relevant questions you've been choosing to avoid.
  13. On a sidenote, do you know what it usually means when someone resorts to personal attacks like you do? That they're tired of condescending, one-note posters passing their bullsh#t off as knowledge?
  14. Nobody runs the WCO anymore. At the same time, everybody runs the WCO. After 35 years, coaches have picked up the WCO elements they like and bring in their own pieces, as coaches have done forever. For some reason they don't get obsessed with naming it. If you see teams that swap a few safe running plays for high percentage short and mid-range passing plays that spread the field, you're watching WCO principals at work. It revolutionized football to the point where it's taken for granted. I can't name the specific philosophy of what Riley and Langs are trying to do from one play to the next, but again, they are among the Top 3 in the Big 10 in Total Offense, Scoring Offense, Third Down Conversion and Time of Possession, so your premise that it's merely random and clueless only plays to your dislike of Nebraska's coaching hire. Are you suggesting that the WCO is a "pick a play out of the bag" system? Jesus, you don't know football. As I recall, your premise is that the WCO is dying, which is why Nebraska needs to run an offense more like Navy's. For some reason you don't delve into the dying popularity of run-first offenses, which is far more traceable than the history of the WCO, an offense you clearly don't understand. And the original post tries to connect a single interception of Matt Ryan's to the difficulty elite pros, much less college players have, making basic reads in these scary and complicated passing schemes. You're really off the rails at this point. There are four elite teams left in this college football season. You wouldn't call any of them pass-happy, and god-forbid you'd credit the WCO influence, but Clemson averaged 34 pass attempts a game, Oklahoma averaged 33 pass attempts a game, and MSU and Alabama both averaged 30 pass attempts a game. These are teams that can pass and run and bring multiple weapons to both approaches, and who knows what play Saban or Swinney will pull out of his bag? The name of their offensive philosophy is Winning. They are run by college quarterbacks who make basic reads and have since they were playing Pop Warner, because the forward pass is not the enemy of football. The good quarterbacks also throw fewer interceptions than our quarterback, and enjoy defenses that hold the opponent to less than 28 points a game.
  15. Bill Callahan and his staff showed they could recruit here so I think the whole idea that we're at a disadvantage is something that is overstated quite a bit. IMO our disadvantage is not based on geography alone but because Nebraska is not the household name it used to be. Riley is onto something perhaps by sticking with his 500 mile radius recruiting territory. I agree Nebraska has to get blue collared athletes who bring their lunch pail every day. They can do this by grabbing the best players in the Midwest year in and year out and pluck a few players who fly under the radar like Abdullah did. Roy Helu is a better example (one of my favorite Huskers) He wasn't heavily recruited and was a 2-star athlete coming out of HS but Nebraska offered and the kid worked his tail off to earn the job. We need guys who will bust their rear ends to get playing time. Competition and challenges improves the entire roster. Oh I think we can get good players here, and I think the Husker legacy still has some lingering pull (even if it's with the player's dad) but there's going to be a tendency for today's marquee recruits to go to today's marquee programs and/or the closer, possibly warmer university, especially all the sun belt recruits. Some will be superstars but a lot of the 4 and 5 stars will be busts. Especially the natural athletes for whom everything came easy, who don't make the psychological adjustment when things don't go their way. Maybe for the first time in their lives. There's a world of hard working, under the radar guys out there (Helu another great example, pulled from San Francisco City College) but you gotta have a network of high school coaches and scouts tipping you off. The advantage of our famously run-oriented offense was that we made offensive linemen stars and gave dual threat high school QBs the chance to stay at quarterback when other schools wanted to convert them to DB, RB and WR. But the dual threat QB isn't a novelty anymore, and they really need to hold up the passing end of the threat these days. But I think if you make a conscious effort to recruit the biggest, smartest, baddest ass offensive linemen in the country -- treat THEM like superstars -- then every QB and RB will want to line up behind them.
  16. Good Lord, man. I already said your comment was among the stupidest ever posted. Why are you doubling down? Which part is stupider, the assumption that professional quarterbacks don't successfully complete most of their basic reads, and that Matt Ryan's recent interception is indicative of anything? That college and high school quarterbacks can't complete basic reads, despite sh#tloads of evidence to the contrary? That this particular interception thrown by this particular QB came on a uniquely "WCO" play? Or that the same logic would suggest a running back who fumbles is evidence that the running game is too risky to pull off? I'm going to vote for your apparent belief that any forward pass is evidence of a West Coast Offense.
  17. I do find it amusing when people attack me on the issue of me not understanding the offenses. There are plenty of examples, but statements like the one below make hard to believe you understand the game of football at all. I think the WCO has more upside when it can be run properly. I think limitations at the college level prevent that. Why do you think most dynamic offenses at the college level have moved away from WCO principles? The best teams in college football have both good offenses and good defenses. Those good offenses run the ball well and pass the ball well, and don't have to rely on a single facet or "one thing they do well" when the opposing defense makes adjustments. These good offenses will run more if you let them. With less parity in college, a dominant offensive line lets you run the ball more than in the NFL. Against better defenses, a good college offense will pass a bit more. But they will lower the risk of the passing game with a high percentage short game that spreads the field with RB screens, sideline curls, and quick crossing patterns to the tight end. Every now and then they test the tightening defense with a deep throw. If they get a defense on its heels in the fourth quarter, the between the tackles running game can bust open, too. 40 years ago, a good college quarterback completed 50% of his passes and lived with a 50/50 TD/INT ratio. Today good college quarterbacks regularly complete 65% of their passes and interceptions are way down. It's the same pattern throughout the NFL. And high school football, too. High percentage, ball control offense. What's not to love? That IS the legacy of WCO principles. It's very much alive. Even with teams that run the ball. You just have to understand the game of football. If you see a team indiscriminately flinging deep passes, they aren't playing WCO. Saying Matt Ryan threw an interception thus proving that passing is scary is among the stupidest things ever written on this board.
  18. It's unavoidably clear that years of playing football is shaving years off the lives of former players, and a lot of those final years are marked with dementia and depression. The problem was blown UNDER proportion for years. It's at a more accurate proportion now. Some of the most badass football players the game has ever seen are among the most concerned. 20 years ago, long before the concussion issues or much publicity at all, I saw a small newspaper article that mentioned the average lifespan of an NFL lineman was 15 years below the national average. But I agree: you can't have UFC and MMA on the rise while you try to tear football down.
  19. I saw a few running plays I really liked, and most of them had Janovich's name attached. Glad he got some carries his Senior year. Wish I could have seen more.
  20. I do find it amusing when people attack me on the issue of me not understanding the offenses. There are plenty of examples, but statements like the one below make hard to believe you understand the game of football at all.
  21. I guess we'll just have to watch the next few seasons of Husker football and see how it turns out.
  22. When Mike Ditka says he wouldn't let his son play football, knowing what he knows, we may have turned a corner. Unless Mike Ditka's just a big pu&&y. But as long as Ed Cunningham is drawing a paycheck, he's walking a hypocritical line. And Christian McCaffrey definitely deserves the Heisman.
  23. Nobody worked harder to make himself better than Ameer Abdullah. He took absolutely nothing for granted. He was told he was too small to play running back in D1 (much less the NFL) so he abandoned his dream of playing in his home state of Alabama when Nebraska gave him the chance to prove himself at RB. I do think Nebraska is at a recruiting disadvantage, so we need to be grabbing these diamond in the rough guys and creating a culture where a player willing to work his ass off can be a hero to an entire state, and hear 90,000 fans cheering for him. You don't get that everywhere. So that should be our thing.
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