Thanks_Tom RR Posted May 2, 2018 Share Posted May 2, 2018 Arriving to campus on May 22nd. 2 Quote Link to comment
ScottyIce Posted May 2, 2018 Share Posted May 2, 2018 Great news. Hopefully now Walters can really focus on landing two great WR prospects in this class. what number is he gonna wear? Stan didn’t leave. Quote Link to comment
Warrior10 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Let's see teams disrespect our vertical threat ability now. 2 Quote Link to comment
Treand3 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 1 hour ago, Warrior10 said: Let's see teams disrespect our vertical threat ability now. Been going on for far too long. 1 Quote Link to comment
brophog Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 The vertical threat wasn't being disrespected....it's just not hard to cover when you only release 2 receivers, the routes take 25 seconds to develop, and the 8 man protection scheme can't block 4 rushers. To be fair, 2 of the 8 were slot receivers that motioned back towards the formation. 2 Quote Link to comment
Warrior10 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 14 minutes ago, brophog said: The vertical threat wasn't being disrespected....it's just not hard to cover when you only release 2 receivers, the routes take 25 seconds to develop, and the 8 man protection scheme can't block 4 rushers. To be fair, 2 of the 8 were slot receivers that motioned back towards the formation. WCO. Quote Link to comment
brophog Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 41 minutes ago, Warrior10 said: WCO. We are going way off topic now, but I find your response to my (only slightly) exaggerated explanation funny in the context of what the actual (before it was homogenized into nothingness) defining characteristics of the west coast offense. I don't know what to call Riley's assault on offensive football, but read this and tell me it describes his offense. Below is a quote that definitely describes his Nebraska QBs. http://smartfootball.com/gameplanning/can-the-west-coast-offense-work-anywhere-besides-the-nfl Quote Walsh’s quarterbacks became great by what they didn’t do: they didn’t throw incompletions (Walsh’s quarterbacks consistently completed over 60% of their passes, and occasionally closer to 70%), they didn’t throw interceptions (the interception rate per pass attempt went way down) ; and they didn’t take sacks, owing to Walsh’s meticulousness about their not holding on to the ball too long. Quote Link to comment
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