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brophog

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Posts posted by brophog

  1. 7 hours ago, Decked said:

    The NCAA is truly useless. 

     

    The professional leagues can impose the rules they do because the athletes are employees who have collective bargained those conditions. Neither of those are true in the case of collegiate athletics.

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  2. 3 hours ago, teachercd said:

    I am starting to think he knows exactly what he is doing.

     

    Even by that logic, naw man. :D

     

    If Deion was smart, he'd leverage a year or two of quality play at Colorado for a real school, in a real conference, where you get paid real money, but he aint doing that because he'd rather sit at home acting like he's playing fantasy football instead of being a real football coach. He just sitting there buying and selling guys like he don't even know them.

    • Haha 1
  3. I want Colorado to fail, not because it is Colorado and not because of Deion, but because I don't want to see this become the dominant method for team building. Colorado is the case study on how extreme you can take this method.

     

    That said, this wasn't that bad of a day for Colorado. A couple of these guys may have been contributors but it's mostly the group they expected to leave and Colorado will be very active in the portal this spring.

  4. On 4/12/2024 at 9:55 AM, Red Five said:

    Now what we did with those punt returns was pretty much dog poop and needs to improve greatly.  We averaged 3 yards/return, good for 124th.

     

    It's even worse than that sounds. Our long on the year was 8, and no one other than Billy and Ethan had one longer than 1.

     

    The punt return game was similar to the offense. Billy was the returner, but he was hurt a lot. We weren't even trying to return punts with him much of the time, instead just being content that he was going to catch the ball. At some point we just didn't even bother with a return game and opted to try blocking punts.

     

    On 4/12/2024 at 10:15 AM, Husker in WI said:

    I know there's more to a punt return than pure speed, but I don't understand why Lloyd, Charles, Barney, or even Brice Turner aren't in the mix. Can they not catch a punt or something?

     

    Sounds like they're trying to develop some more options this year. The biggest thing you need in a punt returner, besides catching it, is the ability to make the first guy miss. Once that happens the blocking can develop and then you might have a chance at doing something.

  5. On 4/12/2024 at 9:47 AM, Red Five said:

    The vast majority of holds don't get called anymore, so I would basically be teaching how to get away with holding.  But I am also just a guy sitting on my couch.

     

    If I can explain why Donovan is calling it 'lazy blocking' maybe that can illustrate why that's a bad idea.

     

    Imagine you're an offensive lineman and you've got your hands on the inside of the defenders pads so you can disguise your holding. Now try to slide your feet left or right. Your feet are connected to your legs which connects to your upper body which connects to your hands which are currently attached to a 300 lb man who doesn't necessarily want to slide left or right. If you slide your feet, your upper body and head aren't going to move with them and you'll get unbalanced. So, the remedy is to keep a wider base, minimize lower body movement, keep your head above your feet and try to do everything with just your upper body.

     

    That's 'lazy blocking'. Not only is it hard to make something as large as a 300 lb man do what you want with just your upper body strength, there are a lot of times an offensive lineman needs to be able to move. Plus, if you're keeping your hands inside to prevent the holding from being called, the defender can still move his shoulders and arms.

     

    Holding has its place and don't believe anybody that tells you any offensive lineman is never going to hold. There is a lot of value to what Donovan is saying about teaching 'knuckles up' vs 'thumbs up', and that's easy to illustrate. Hold your hands out in front of you knuckles up and see how easily you can manipulate objects. Now, try that with your thumbs up. With thumbs up, its easier to grab things but it's harder to do just about anything else.

    18 hours ago, chainsaw said:

    Normal for us; NO tackles and an excess of guards.  They take the best guards and make mediocre tackles out of them!  then we have a poor line!

     

    Would you rather them convert the punters?

    • Fire 1
  6. 8 hours ago, Touchdown Tommie said:

    i predict that if young QBs look good during spring game, people will start to amp up the expectations for the season.

     

    I agree with that sentiment.

     

    Personally, I want to see Haarberg the most for the simple reason that his performance last year sets the baseline. I'm more interested in seeing how this passing game has improved than I am watching one guy throw everyone open. I guess I'm assuming if Haarberg can do it then the other two can, too, which isn't fair for me to say at all, but after seeing last year I don't think anyone would blame me.

  7. 58 minutes ago, lo country said:

    I seem to remember a comment from TO about his offense.  Limited number of plays from a multitude of formations and looks (window dressing).

     

    Even for the time his numbering system was very simple. Back/Hole/Action where every back had a number, every gap had a number, and the action was play type, i.e. dive, iso, trap, option, etc. So the whole play would be that preceded by the formation and then could tag it with a motion call or an alternate blocking call or whatever they needed.

     

    Believe it or not, early Air Raid was the same sorta thing. The idea is that it makes it seem simple for your guys, more complex for the other team, and then you just rep the snot out of everything until you got it perfected.

    • Oh Yeah! 1
  8. 1 hour ago, Undone said:

    The hardest part for these two QB's will probably be huge amount of pressure that could come if things don't go well during the first 4-5 games of the season, mainly from the fan base and the weight of expectations.

     

    Pre spring game are there really that high of expectations outside of that building? Seems like us fans are so beaten down over the years that we're afraid of even having expectations.

     

    From a neutral fan / national observer standpoint: Nebraska should be at the top of any sort of comeback / dark horse / breakout season....whatever you want to call it...list. There are several historically strong indicators to suggest this:

     

    Year 2 improvement

    5 losses by 3 points or in OT

    Turnovers regress to the mean

    Returning experience

     

    The reason Nebraska fans may not think that way: Nebraska has been the team that bucks those sorts of trends over the years.

    • Plus1 2
  9. 1 hour ago, MyBloodIsRed16 said:

    Found it interesting with all the talk about Loyd and Banks that Jeremiah Sirles believes Isiah Neyor will be the number one WR. 

     

    One of the reasons we've heard so much about Lloyd is he's with Dylan's group and he seems to be his preferred downfield target.

     

    But Barney and Neyor just got traded for one another, sending Barney to Danny's group and pairing up Neyor with Lloyd. That'll make this comparison more interesting, I think.

  10. 1 hour ago, BigRedBuster said:

    It's interesting that they showed so many incompletions for Raiola.  Which....means absolutely nothing with such a small sample size.  Just thought they would pick out some really good throws he made

     

    One of the reporters, and I dont recall which one, said they got to see 9 plays of Dylan during that session. They don't get to see very much.

  11. 13 hours ago, Undone said:

    Mike Minter, telling me what I want to hear!

     

    Danny isn't the generational talent that Dylan is, but he's right there in terms of the rest of that quote.

     

    The atypical part is really the coaches giving them the freedom at the line of scrimmage. The coaches could have talked about last year's poor performance and having to start a freshman qb this year and made that an excuse to lower expectations. They know there is a high probability that they're not only starting a true freshman but that his backup may also be a true freshman and they're trying their hardest to age those guys up. I think they're respecting the ability and intelligence of these guys by throwing the kitchen sink at them and letting them learn through their mistakes. The defense has gotten them a few times because of it but they've hit some passes that were damn near indefensible as well.

     

    I know there is a lot of talk about needing to work on the passing game because of how poor it was last year and how the running backs are a little banged up, but I think there is also a strong belief that given enough time, effort, and patience this passing game can get really, really good.

    • Plus1 2
  12. 22 hours ago, Mavric said:

     

     

    This will be the story at some point. If you parse together the videos yesterday from the OCs and QBs it's very apparent a lot of emphasis is being spent on RPOs and the quick game. At one point Raiola made mention of explosive plays and when a reporter followed that up assuming he was talking about deep balls he elaborated that he was referring to turning 5s into 25s.

     

    This offense sounds like it will use the short passing game and running game to control the safeties and then take calculated shots with the play action game. Not only with WRs but a myriad of TE looks, too.

    • Plus1 2
    • Oh Yeah! 1
  13. 1 hour ago, knapplc said:

    Is the current model "dead" or does it just not make enough money for certain people?

     

     

    The problem is the courts have been pretty clear that it's going to be a wild west out there without some sort of collective bargaining. Between that and Title IX concerns and all of that and it's sorta no win situation. Everyone agrees this current path is neither sustainable nor good for anyone.

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    • TBH 1
  14. At the end of the day I don't think I'd put much thought into this job title. It's not an atypical setup for Rhule. Unless Rhule announces differently, expect Satterfield to remain the primary play caller.

     

    What this does do, though, is bring a much needed veteran into the offensive staff because overall it's a very young and inexperienced gameday coaching staff. At the end of the day, Rhule is the final arbiter and he has a certain philosophy. That manifests itself differently at different stops. At Temple it was a bit more run centric, at Baylor a bit more pass centric, but there is a common philosphy in terms of how he wants to manage the game at both places and Glenn experienced that with him at both places. With Raiola coming in as almost certain starter, we are going to see that transition immediately and for the same reason we did between Temple and Baylor....the athletes changed.

     

    It was the expected hire and a good hire. If the offense doesn't see some significant improvement after all of this investment this year, then I'd expect some major changes.

    • Fire 1
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  15. The downside as an on the field coach is Holgorsen really hates recruiting.

     

    It would be an enormous shot in the arm for this offense though, as this staff desperately needs to completely restructure this passing game. Whatever role he takes, it'll be a big influence because the Air Raid brings a structured approach that, imo, Satterfield has always lacked.

     

    Some may be wondering how the Air Raid matches with Rhule's stated offensive philosophy, and to that I'll say to look at Michigan. A lot of their passing game is based on Air Raid concepts. You don't need 4 tiny wide receivers to utilize this approach it just started that way because the Air Raid, like most offensive systems, was designed to solve roster limitations at a school that didn't recruit the way the bigger schools did.

     

    Whatever role he ultimately takes, it will help solve the biggest problem this offense had last year: rhythm and timing. Our passing concepts had no sense of timing in their progressions and the QBs often held the ball, way, way longer than you can realistically expect to block. That's literally the problem the Air Raid was designed to solve.

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