HANC
New member
I agree with you, but for guys like Coleman and Lloyd, it has to start in HS. Many of these guys can just run themselves open without concepts or any type of defensive recognition. Once they get into college, a lot of things need to be read at the los, and even post snap coverage. Cuts and breaks depend on coverage and DB positioning. This can be extremely difficult and frustrating for kids who have not had to do this, and actually causes them to play slower, thus taking away their biggest assets. I am not saying this is the case, but it is common for athletes/track guys to adjust, regardless of coaching. Can take a few years, and in the meantime, the team must go on. I don’t chalk this up to coaching.Coleman & LLoyd both got recruited over and pushed to the side. It can happen, but I also think there was a problem with the super-young position coach. It's not like you have to have 4 year vets that played ball to be your starters when it's your job to get the young guys improving week to week, summer to summer, season to season.
At some point, we have got to stop recruiting skill position players with experience. Take the high school studs you recruited and coveted when you got them to sign, coach and work with them to play as if it's your job to do so.
Linemen (Off & Def), pass rushers and inside LBs should still be a consideration for transfer portal because of size, age and playing experience.
WR/RB/DBs are everywhere and even the Huskers have 30 defensive backs on the roster after the Iowa game ended. 30 DBs!
Can't anyone coach anymore?
Like, how many skill position players do you need to have at these spots? And 10 tight ends? Really?
It's not like you need 4 running backs to play and get the job done. You need 4 or 5 in case of injuries, and that's kind of rare. More than 5 in a room is too much.
Okay I got off on a tangent lolol... I could go on and on and we don't want that here lol... forgive me.![]()
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