carlfense
Heisman Trophy Winner
http://nebraska.statepaper.com/vnews/displ...T/49df6727e70f2
Another great article by Sam McKewon.
"And let me be blunt: Nebraska’s opening five games in 2009 look a lot like those opening five in 2002. Three winnable home games mixed in with two difficult road games at Virginia Tech and Missouri. Zac Lee, not unlike Jammal Lord, will be tested, and Watson and head coach Bo Pelini have high standards. It’s Lee’s job to lose - don’t doubt that - but the quarterback competition more or less renews when the season begins and Lee faces live bullets. To Lee’s credit, he knows it and practices like it.
But two terrific comeback wins over Colorado and Clemson to end 2008 gave some NU fans a false sense of security entering 2009. Alex Henery saved the Huskers’ hides in one game, while Bo Pelini and Co. badly outcoached Dabo Swinney’s bunch in the second half of the other. The presumption that Nebraska’s offense – or defense, for that matter – will waltz into next fall without skipping a beat doesn’t match up with what we’ve seen and heard this spring.
NU is talented, but raw. Gifted, but inexperienced. Lee is going to be counted on to rescue drives the way Joe Ganz did, and that’ll be a tall order for a kid who doesn’t get to spend the first month and a half playing home games. And Kody Spano, savvy as he may be, has a “Stuntz” look about his play thus far. Not bad. But not Cody Green."
Another great article by Sam McKewon.
"And let me be blunt: Nebraska’s opening five games in 2009 look a lot like those opening five in 2002. Three winnable home games mixed in with two difficult road games at Virginia Tech and Missouri. Zac Lee, not unlike Jammal Lord, will be tested, and Watson and head coach Bo Pelini have high standards. It’s Lee’s job to lose - don’t doubt that - but the quarterback competition more or less renews when the season begins and Lee faces live bullets. To Lee’s credit, he knows it and practices like it.
But two terrific comeback wins over Colorado and Clemson to end 2008 gave some NU fans a false sense of security entering 2009. Alex Henery saved the Huskers’ hides in one game, while Bo Pelini and Co. badly outcoached Dabo Swinney’s bunch in the second half of the other. The presumption that Nebraska’s offense – or defense, for that matter – will waltz into next fall without skipping a beat doesn’t match up with what we’ve seen and heard this spring.
NU is talented, but raw. Gifted, but inexperienced. Lee is going to be counted on to rescue drives the way Joe Ganz did, and that’ll be a tall order for a kid who doesn’t get to spend the first month and a half playing home games. And Kody Spano, savvy as he may be, has a “Stuntz” look about his play thus far. Not bad. But not Cody Green."