zoogs
Assistant Coach
http://nebraska.statepaper.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2011/04/16/4daa39678cac9
Here's more from Sam:
An interesting angle and context to the struggles of Taylor and Cody today, and a slight pew-pew on the feel goodness I think most of us had from the offensive barnburner that happened.In the CIA, DEA, FBI, NATO, UN and even the PTA, secrecy has its comforting virtues. A purpose.
But it didn't do Nebraska's football team many favors in Saturday's Red/White Spring Game. Especially NU's top two quarterbacks, Taylor Martinez and Cody Green, who sputtered in an bland-as-a-plain-bagel offense specifically designed to limit them so Big Ten opponents next fall couldn't ferret out any clues of coordinator Tim Beck's top-secret attack.
While third-stringer Brion Carnes steadied himself in the pocket and fired at will to relatively wide-open targets that included the electric Jamal Turner, Martinez and Green were seemingly stuck in the Shawn Watson era. Mini-slants to Brandon Kinnie. Tight end curl and flat routes run by Ben Cotton, J.T Kerr and the stupendously tall Robert Barry. These routes, and others, were slow to emerge. Same stuff from last year. None of the verve and energy Beck and his players have crowed about.
Here's more from Sam:
It seems the name of the game is still secrecy right now. Hopefully the prelude to taking the Big Ten completely by storm.Couple things:
*Carnes did not face as good of a defense. People will argue this with me or point to some anecdotal moment, but it's accurate.
*Beck admitted in the postgame that he was too conservative early in the game and opened up the playbook just a little after awhile.
*The play that favors Martinez most - the zone read - was not run as it normally would be. The open, 4-and-5 wide sets that favor Green were not run much, either.
If you put Green in a 5WR and a shotgun and you tell him to sling it, I'm telling you, he's comfortable in that. If you tell him to run shortside speed option into Eric Martin working against a true freshman, he's not going to do much.
Should he fumble the ball? No.
But Beck wouldn't call that in a real game. He called it later on third-and-goal from the 10 with Carnes running it. Carnes didn't get anything either.
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