IlliniHusker Posted July 1, 2005 Share Posted July 1, 2005 We know that our coaching staff can recruit, but they still haven't proven that they can coach. The primary goal for 2005 is re-establish NU as a rising national power because future recruiting classes will be affected by this year's success. As for Beck vs Taylor - Zac should start and play most of the games because his juco experience has to be a real plus for running the WCO. I can't believe that a high school QB can come in and run the WCO efficiently after seeing the playbook for a couple of months. Last year we must have heard a hundred times how complex the WCO is. If a QB right out of high school can master it, something doesn't add up. GO BIG RED. Quote Link to comment
bigredtoad Posted July 1, 2005 Share Posted July 1, 2005 Good points IllHus and welcome to the board!! How about a watered down version of the WCO. That possible? Quote Link to comment
Foppa Posted July 2, 2005 Share Posted July 2, 2005 I wonder how much the WCO fluctuated for Zac from Juco to NU? And how long has Beck had our playbook in his hands? Just curious about this, and trying out my first post! Quote Link to comment
bigredtoad Posted July 2, 2005 Share Posted July 2, 2005 I wonder how much the WCO fluctuated for Zac from Juco to NU? And how long has Beck had our playbook in his hands? Just curious about this, and trying out my first post! Good question, and welcome aboard to U2 Foppa! I believe Beck had a version of our playbook in his possession as soon as he committed. But Im sure it was more of a "dummed down version" just for show. Sure it wasnt next years plays anyway. The biz is a dirty one cant trust that he wouldnt defect and share with the wrong people. Quote Link to comment
DaveH Posted July 2, 2005 Share Posted July 2, 2005 I wonder how much the WCO fluctuated for Zac from Juco to NU? And how long has Beck had our playbook in his hands? Just curious about this, and trying out my first post! Good question, and welcome aboard to U2 Foppa! I believe Beck had a version of our playbook in his possession as soon as he committed. But Im sure it was more of a "dummed down version" just for show. Sure it wasnt next years plays anyway. The biz is a dirty one cant trust that he wouldnt defect and share with the wrong people. He did recieve a chunk of it. Not necessarily dumbed down. Â Besides, you should be so good that even if the defense knew what you were doing, they could not stop you. Quote Link to comment
Eric the Red Posted July 6, 2005 Share Posted July 6, 2005 QB's wild ride from Norman to Lincoln  Ex-Sooners fan Taylor might be key to Callahan's job security at Nebraska College football  COMMENTARY By Matt Hayes  Updated: 3:04 a.m. ET July 6, 2005 Matt Hayes  It's a funny game, all right. One minute you're buried on the depth chart at Wake Forest, the next you're the key to Bill Callahan's job security at Nebraska.  One minute you're standing on the sideline carrying a clipboard in a half-full stadium, the next you're practicing in front of 60,000 fans.  One minute you're as significant as a no smoking sign in Winston-Salem, the next you're the savior of a stale program that not long ago won three national titles in four years.  "It's been a wild ride," Zac Taylor says.  You think?  Say this much for Taylor: At least he's not Joe Dailey. You remember Dailey, the quarterback who put up crazy numbers in the Nebraska spring game, circa 2004. He was supposed to provide a quick transition from a gazillion years of Crawl Ball to the sleek, slick West Coast offense.  There was only one teensy, weensy problem: Dailey ran off the field in spring 2004 with his index finger held high after lighting up a patchwork defense of scrubs. We know the rest of the story, including Dailey's transfer to North Carolina after a 5-6 season in Lincoln. So guess whom Taylor torched in spring 2005, throwing for 357 yards in one half.  "It wasn't our ones," Callahan says. It wasn't their twos, either.  But before we bury Taylor -- and, in the process, pull the noose tighter around Callahan, who has gutted the program -- understand that Dailey, who was recruited to run the option, couldn't grasp the offense. Of course, he even had trouble with former coach Frank Solich's scheme (hand it to the fullback, pitch it or keep it).  Taylor, meanwhile, is a classic pocket passer -- you know, the five steps, the progressions, the release. After the 2003 season, he left Wake Forest, where he wasn't a good fit because the Deacons don't throw the ball 30 times per game. But Butler County (Kan.) Community College did, and Taylor led the Grizzlies to the junior college championship game last year.  In other words, cover 2 and man mustang and umbrella blitzes don't look like graffiti on a subway car to Taylor as they did to Dailey. And Taylor won't crumble under the pressure of having to perform -- and having to stay one step ahead of the guy behind him. Dailey always was worried about his job security, and it showed in the way he played, even though there wasn't a soul behind him who could strike fear in a Pop Warner defense. Quote Link to comment
hoyamannn Posted July 6, 2005 Share Posted July 6, 2005 In other words, cover 2 and man mustang and umbrella blitzes don't look like graffiti on a subway car to Taylor as they did to Dailey. Graffiti on a subway car? I'm a "soft" Midwesterner, could someone please explain to me what that means? Quote Link to comment
AR Husker Fan Posted July 6, 2005 Share Posted July 6, 2005 In other words, cover 2 and man mustang and umbrella blitzes don't look like graffiti on a subway car to Taylor as they did to Dailey. Graffiti on a subway car? I'm a "soft" Midwesterner, could someone please explain to me what that means? If you try and read the graffiti on a subway car as it passes, it's just an incomprehensible blur... Quote Link to comment
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