The VT QB

Twodocs

Special Teams Player
Bo says we made lots of mistakes last year but we are much better on execution this year. Can we keep VT QB in the pocket with our personel? The prediction is for rain does this help us?

Good article by Brian Rosenthal in LJS

http://www.huskerextra.com/articles/2009/0...12469552952.txt

"Taylor ran for 87 yards and threw for 171 in Virginia Tech’s 35-30 victory against Nebraska last season in Lincoln. He finished the season with 1,036 passing yards and 738 rushing yards, including three 100-yard rushing games.

“He’s a great athlete,” Nebraska defensive coordinator Carl Pelini said. “But like always, we’ve just got to worry about what we do. We’re just going to play our stuff. That’s it.”

Seeing Leonard break containment Saturday gave coaches something to point to on film and work to improve. But Pelini points out that quarterbacks will sometimes get loose, regardless. They’ll find a seam against a strong pass rush and scamper into open field.

“You’ve got to try to limit those, and the big thing is, you’ve got to cover for each other,” Pelini said. “If an end takes a counter, my tackle has to see that and wrap. If my tackle counters in the ‘A’ gap, my nose has to get over the top and wrap and cover for him. And if the three technique takes a wide rush, my end has to cover for him back inside.”

Such teamwork up front is something Nebraska improved on throughout last season, Pelini said.

“The longer we’re together,” he said, “the better off we’re going to be working as a team like that in our pass rush.”

Nebraska sacked Leonard four times — a significant total considering Arkansas State had only 20 other passing attempts. And Virginia Tech, which has attempted 39 passes (36 by Taylor), has surrendered eight sacks through two games.

Five sacks contributed to Taylor’s minus 26 rushing yards against Alabama. Taylor had 58 rushing yards against Marshall.

“The biggest challenge is the quarterback run game,” Lawrence said. “We have to respect Tyrod Taylor and all he can do. Contain him on passes. Make sure he can’t run around and throw the ball when coverage breaks down.”"

 
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I don't think shutting him down totally is going to be possible. He's going to do damage, and it'll come down to how well we can limit that damage.

 
He's going to be spending a lot of time on his back staring at the sky. The question is how many sacks can he survive before being carted off the field?

 
Let me rephrase that.....He BETTER be spending a lot of time on his back staring at the sky, or else we are going to have 1) An absolute shootout or 2) A big problem.

Is it Saturday yet? LET"S GET IT ON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 
i would guess Pelini will come after him early and often.....no sense in letting him establish a rhythm from the start....make him find one...

 
I think we need to flush him out of the pocket with nowhere to run. Limit his options where he feels footsteps and throws dead ducks. Knock him on his @$$ every chance we get. I wonder how things will look up for the QB when he's flat on his back?

 
I would prefer collapsing the pocket on him rather than flushing him out. Flushing him out is where he is most dangerous.

 
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