Stuff
©️
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2015
- Messages
- 2,731
- Reaction score
- 2,119
- Points
- 113
Maybe if this is going to turn out to be a "rebuilding year" we should see what the young guns can do.Are we going to bench Tanner Morgan?
Maybe if this is going to turn out to be a "rebuilding year" we should see what the young guns can do.Are we going to bench Tanner Morgan?
So receivers are not catching the passes he is throwing rather than he is not throwing poor passes?Why would we bench him when he's been the best player on the field today?
Only down by 3 and we get the ball first next half. We are still in this game - they have GOT to let Morgan throw and win this game -- I just hope we have receivers that can catch the damn ball!
That’s too bad- he’s actually played remarkably better the last couple weeks.Didn't look like he had his helmet, not good for #55
Failure is growthHas anyone brought this up in one of PJ's pressers? Would love to see how he reacts to that.
Like a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.Anyone excited about a Georgia Alabama national championship game?
I was just telling you how the receiver needs to block the defender in order to avoid a penalty in that situation.How is that play any different than a defenseless receiver taking a blindside shoulder in the chest while making a catch? That’s not a penalty. See Walley’s hit a few weeks ago.
Yes. Bell dropped 2 very catchable balls that would have been big gains. Morgan is playing just fine.So receivers are not catching the passes he is throwing rather than he is not throwing poor passes?
So receivers are not catching the passes he is throwing rather than he is not throwing poor passes?
I was just telling you how the receiver needs to block the defender in order to avoid a penalty in that situation.
As far as the difference in the two scenarios: The scenario described here involves a defender attempting to break up a reception by a wr as well as making a tackle.
The penalty involved a wr making a crack back block; not a tackle. CFB has taken a strong stance on crack back blocks because a defender can really get injured with crack back blocks. That's why the wr has to put his hands out in order to lessen the blow to the defender.
On PUs TD drive, they were 2/2 on 3rd and 10, and 1/1 on 3rd and 8.Wow. Look at the 3rd down efficiency gap and resulting TOP gap. The receivers need to step the eff up catch the damn ball. RBs need to break a tackle.
Agreed. That one is so stupid I can't stand it. I feel the same way about 99% of Geico commercials...they try so hard to be funny but are beyond stupid. I'd never buy Geico simply because I hate their commercials.SIDE NOTE: I really hate the Liberty Mutual "I Look Like My Dog" commercial. Enough to never consider LM insurance.
There has to be a change in the rule such that the only options aren’t to either curtsy and let the defender maul your teammate with the ball or stand passively in his way and get trucked yourselfI was just telling you how the receiver needs to block the defender in order to avoid a penalty in that situation.
As far as the difference in the two scenarios: The scenario described here involves a defender attempting to break up a reception by a wr as well as making a tackle.
The penalty involved a wr making a crack back block; not a tackle. CFB has taken a strong stance on crack back blocks because a defender can really get injured with crack back blocks. That's why the wr has to put his hands out in order to lessen the blow to the defender.
He makes Mike Zimmer look like Don Coryell.PJ would rather go to halftime than get the ball back with a minute left.... That says a lot.
There has to be a change in the rule such that the only options aren’t to either curtsy and let the defender maul your teammate with the ball or stand passively in his way and get trucked yourself
I feel like it's a failure by the press to not throw that stat at him at every possible opportunity.Failure is growth
Me too.SIDE NOTE: I really hate the Liberty Mutual "I Look Like My Dog" commercial. Enough to never consider LM insurance.
Receivers have been horrible todaySo receivers are not catching the passes he is throwing rather than he is not throwing poor passes?
I understand what you’re saying, but if the rule is for a player safety reason, then those two scenarios aren’t different from a safety perspective. It’s a bad rule/call as I don’t know the verbiage of the rule. It was a great FOOTBALL play.I was just telling you how the receiver needs to block the defender in order to avoid a penalty in that situation.
As far as the difference in the two scenarios: The scenario described here involves a defender attempting to break up a reception by a wr as well as making a tackle.
The penalty involved a wr making a crack back block; not a tackle. CFB has taken a strong stance on crack back blocks because a defender can really get injured with crack back blocks. That's why the wr has to put his hands out in order to lessen the blow to the defender.