Dr. Strangelove Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 Teams like USC and UCLA tend to get very early commits at the QB position. Offering a kid like POB, who came on late and is having a strong senior season, sends a bad message to the kid currently committed to your school. I personally think he has the size, mobility and throwing ability to be one of the better QBs Nebraska has had in a long time. Quote Link to comment
GBRedneck Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 POB doesn't fit in every teams system. While he will run if necessary he is pretty much a thread the needle/ hit the receiver in stride passer as opposed to a run first/ lob the ball in the general direction and hope the receiver runs under it before the DB does. All of the big boys already have at least one if not two QB's recruited. His soph and Jr years he focused on baseball as much as football and this past summer hired a top QB coach so he could commit fully to being a great QB. His efforts are showing in this his senior year. Riley and Langsdorf found him early and got him onboard. Oh yeah, that QB coach would Steve Calhoun, the same coach that helped Martinez with his improvement between his sophomore and junior seasons. I had lunch with a Steve Calhoun and a former Husker the day before Pelini's first spring game. Really sharp guy. Quote Link to comment
ScottyIce Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 POB doesn't fit in every teams system. While he will run if necessary he is pretty much a thread the needle/ hit the receiver in stride passer as opposed to a run first/ lob the ball in the general direction and hope the receiver runs under it before the DB does. All of the big boys already have at least one if not two QB's recruited. His soph and Jr years he focused on baseball as much as football and this past summer hired a top QB coach so he could commit fully to being a great QB. His efforts are showing in this his senior year. Riley and Langsdorf found him early and got him onboard. Oh yeah, that QB coach would Steve Calhoun, the same coach that helped Martinez with his improvement between his sophomore and junior seasons. I had lunch with a Steve Calhoun and a former Husker the day before Pelini's first spring game. Really sharp guy. Let me guess, one of your model friends was with you also? 1 Quote Link to comment
GBRedneck Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 BTW, Feragamo got sacked alot. I would not be surprised to check his career stats and see he finished his two years at Nebraska as our all time WORST rusher with about 500 negative 'net' rushing yards in a career (sacks). He was a statue basically. Wasn't quite that bad. He had -3 yards net in '76 and positive 31 yards in '75. Quote Link to comment
GBRedneck Posted October 20, 2015 Share Posted October 20, 2015 POB doesn't fit in every teams system. While he will run if necessary he is pretty much a thread the needle/ hit the receiver in stride passer as opposed to a run first/ lob the ball in the general direction and hope the receiver runs under it before the DB does. All of the big boys already have at least one if not two QB's recruited. His soph and Jr years he focused on baseball as much as football and this past summer hired a top QB coach so he could commit fully to being a great QB. His efforts are showing in this his senior year. Riley and Langsdorf found him early and got him onboard. Oh yeah, that QB coach would Steve Calhoun, the same coach that helped Martinez with his improvement between his sophomore and junior seasons. I had lunch with a Steve Calhoun and a former Husker the day before Pelini's first spring game. Really sharp guy. Let me guess, one of your model friends was with you also? No, but your jealousy is showing. One of these days I'll post a video for you, Matty. Quote Link to comment
Tomhusker64 Posted October 22, 2015 Share Posted October 22, 2015 Maybe he doesn't want to be a college coach. He can stay in California, have people pay him good money to be a QB guru, and not have to worry about the crazy hours of being a college football coach. Maybe he has kids or family that he wants to stay near. My younger brother is a position "Coaching Guru" with his own clinics and clients. He turned down two offers from big schools over the summer. His reasoning is just as you say. He can live where he is, no high pressure, long hour days and make a decent income on the side. I don't blame him. I'd probably do the same. Quote Link to comment
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