Throws for 398 yards in a 52 - 7 win over Central Florida.
It was again Western Carolina, not Central Florida.
It was again Western Carolina, not Central Florida.
IMO, PN is a much better passer than ML - better arm, better at reading defenses, more accurate, more consistent. What PN was not good at was being mentally strong when faced with adversity and this showed when he was pulled for ML. Instead of stepping it up and putting in the hard work he sulked and pouted. Better pure passer than ML but nowhere near the leader that ML is. He could have been a really good Qb at MN with his physical abilities. Unfortunately he was not mentally strong and not the leader we had all hoped for.Just to point out - that does NOT mean Mr. Nelson would have put up the same stats playing for the Gophers. Different coaches, different system, different opponents, etc. Nelson has talent - and he had a chance to lay claim to the #1 job in MN - but he was inconsistent enough to make it a competition with Leidner.
Also - food for thought - maybe Nelson has learned something from his experiences, and he is a (hopefully) more mature QB with a different attitude at his current school.
And - final thought - put Mitch Leidner in the same system and same game plan, and he just might be able to put up similar statistics.
I was excited to see what the Gophs would do with a new offensive coordinator, but I'm starting to think that the MN coaches - for whatever reason - keep their QB's under too tight a leash. Just once I'd like to see what would happen if the Gopher coaches really let it fly.
And - final thought - put Mitch Leidner in the same system and same game plan, and he just might be able to put up similar statistics.
I was excited to see what the Gophs would do with a new offensive coordinator, but I'm starting to think that the MN coaches - for whatever reason - keep their QB's under too tight a leash. Just once I'd like to see what would happen if the Gopher coaches really let it fly.
Throws for 398 yards in a 52 - 7 win over Central Florida.
You're understating the performance by a lot. Not only did he have almost 400 passing yards, he was 28-32, with 5 TD's and 0 Ints. Love him, hate him, or somewhere in the middle, you have to admit those are VERY impressive numbers.
Just to point out - that does NOT mean Mr. Nelson would have put up the same stats playing for the Gophers. Different coaches, different system, different opponents, etc. Nelson has talent - and he had a chance to lay claim to the #1 job in MN - but he was inconsistent enough to make it a competition with Leidner.
Also - food for thought - maybe Nelson has learned something from his experiences, and he is a (hopefully) more mature QB with a different attitude at his current school.
And - final thought - put Mitch Leidner in the same system and same game plan, and he just might be able to put up similar statistics.
I was excited to see what the Gophs would do with a new offensive coordinator, but I'm starting to think that the MN coaches - for whatever reason - keep their QB's under too tight a leash. Just once I'd like to see what would happen if the Gopher coaches really let it fly.
- Agree 100%. There's no way Nelson would be getting mention of being a day 1, NFL draft pick had he played in our system, like Mitch is. The under center, pro-style is perfect for Mitch and his big, durable frame. It was a terrible fit for the shorter Nelson and his gunslinger mentality.
- Not a chance, imo. Just as Nelson wasn't built for the pro-style, Mitch isn't built for a pass happy, shotgun offense.
- Comparing these two QB's is like trying to compare a pick-up truck and a sports car. The sports car is faster and better handling, but the pick-up truck can haul a boat or carry a payload of firewood. They're both automobiles, but they're not the same. Which one is better? Depends on the job at hand.
- This is what many Nelson bashers refuse to grasp. Nelson was recruited to play out of the shotgun, in a spread offense where he'd get to sling the ball some. He's a sports car. When the coaches changed the offense to a ball control, pro-style offense with the QB under center, the new offense was a perfect fit for Mitch. He's a pick-up. To say the pick-up is better at hauling a boat, thus the truck is the superior automobile isn't a fair comparison. Nelson wanted to go to a place where he could be what he is, a sports car. This is why Nelson left, not because he's a quitter or couldn't handle competition. My 0.02
Good first week for both Nelson and Streveler. (The Streveler stats were in some other thread. Threw and ran well.)
I was excited to see what the Gophs would do with a new offensive coordinator, but I'm starting to think that the MN coaches - for whatever reason - keep their QB's under too tight a leash. Just once I'd like to see what would happen if the Gopher coaches really let it fly.
If you moved this thread then you'd have to move every Jerry Kill threadHow does this OT stuff get on here?!?
Yeah and it's Philip not Phillip.
Really hard to judge after one game but it seemed like their wasn't an appreciable difference in the ML from this year to last year. Perhaps the real problem is we don't have the receivers more than a scheme problem. And with the next opponent we probably won't see anything new from the playbook. I am assuming that we really won't open the playbook till Conference play.
Or ML7 is THE problem. Just sayin it IS possible......
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ya think?
Who does this Nelson play for? What is his connection to the Minnesota football program? Any info would be great.
Not in the way you do, but I do think that everyone on here looks for reasons the offense fails without wanting to blame ML7. Limey, WRs, Injuries, he is tough tho, etc. He is the one common denominator in all the struggles we have had recently and that is hard to deny.
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1) East Carolina.
2) He has a direct connection to the University of Minnesota. He was a top recruit and former starting QB for the Golden Gophers.
3) If you are not interested in anything related to Philip Nelson, the easy thing would be don't click on the thread that clearly states his name.
Not in the way you do, but I do think that everyone on here looks for reasons the offense fails without wanting to blame ML7. Limey, WRs, Injuries, he is tough tho, etc. He is the one common denominator in all the struggles we have had recently and that is hard to deny.
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For a team that wants to run the ball our linemen didn't get much push, at least early on. Combine that with their defense cheating a man into the box and you've got #problems. R. Smith and his nifty running saved our butts. Versus one of the worst run Ds in the nation last year, it's concerning. Did we run any screens or other constraint plays?
This. OL got very little push, which was surprising given what I saw in the spring game. That said, I'm assuming most teams that gashed OSU last year didn't line up and try to bang zone into 8 man boxes repeatedly. I'm guessing they mixed run and pass effectively enough to keep them off balance, therefore allowing for opportunities to occasionally run into 6 or 7 man boxes and find the second level. But again, just guessing...For a team that wants to run the ball our linemen didn't get much push, at least early on. Combine that with their defense cheating a man into the box and you've got #problems. R. Smith and his nifty running saved our butts. Versus one of the worst run Ds in the nation last year, it's concerning. Did we run any screens or other constraint plays?