knapplc
International Man of Mystery
Alex Lantz from the Lincoln JournalStar has a piece up today wherein an offensive lineman comments on why things went so wrong in Madison:
But that isn't the case. Forget the fans complaining, forget the twitter and the message boards and Biff the Blogger's comments. That's just white noise that should have no impact on this team, and it's nothing that other teams don't deal with.
Fact is, every O Line has to do what Cotton describes. Every play, every game. And for the most part, they don't seem to have too much trouble doing it - at least not the teams who should be Nebraska's peers, top-15 teams with a miles-long pedigree.
With apologies to the JournalStar, I took the liberty of bringing the photo accompanying Lantz' article to this post. I can't imagine a sadder picture for the O Line. And we've seen it for years.
I'd like to have some kind of insightful commentary on what actually is wrong, and how to fix it... but this is just so depressing to read, I've got nothing. It's almost as if the article, and by his comments Cotton himself, is saying the O Line deals with things that other teams don't.Jake Cotton paused before answering the question.
It was a complex inquiry, one about Nebraska's alarming habit of committing unforced errors... in high-profile games, specifically on the road.
When he finally responded, Cotton offered a fair point about what the offensive line faces in games such as Nebraska's 59-24 loss at Wisconsin last Saturday.
"You're just so dialed-in to what you're going to do during the play," he said of Nebraska's five false-start penalties. "You gotta take this footwork, you gotta do this, you gotta do that. And so I think when you're thinking about all that stuff, you kind of get tunnel vision, and that's when it hurts you.
"The lack of concentration isn't that we were just thinking about class or girls or anything like that. It's that we were thinking about the play and should have been more dialed-in to the snap count."
But that isn't the case. Forget the fans complaining, forget the twitter and the message boards and Biff the Blogger's comments. That's just white noise that should have no impact on this team, and it's nothing that other teams don't deal with.
Fact is, every O Line has to do what Cotton describes. Every play, every game. And for the most part, they don't seem to have too much trouble doing it - at least not the teams who should be Nebraska's peers, top-15 teams with a miles-long pedigree.
With apologies to the JournalStar, I took the liberty of bringing the photo accompanying Lantz' article to this post. I can't imagine a sadder picture for the O Line. And we've seen it for years.
