Rosier working on balance heading into Toledo

Rosier working on balance heading into Toledo

Stefan Adams

Comments (129)

Here's the only kind of balance I want to see Rosier working on...
0903c180-265-335-coloured-balance-benches-1.jpg
 
While he’s throwing in accurate balls all day that receivers bail him out on. Ok strawberry

Is he blaming his receivers for dropping his accurate passes here?
 
Rosier's inability to accept responsibility for his ****** play is astounding. If I were Corch Rick, I would've sent his garbage *** packing to the left most corner of the bench the moment he started deflecting liability

Bytch *** Chokzier

U complaining about Rozier and our Qb coach told him to fix it himself. Unbelievable richt jr thats what we paying u for
 
There is a very common technique used to help people perform under pressure. Some, ususally golfers, keep repeating music in their head. Others force themselves to "finish" in the same spot for a good shot or swing. You see this in baseball with the exagerated follow through. Perhaps the staff is trying to get MR to stop "thinking" and just play with balance................
 
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After looking at the tape of his bounce back performance against Savannah State, Miami starting QB Malik Rosier knows he still missed some throws and is working to correct some mechanical things this week.

“One thing we kind of figured out is sometimes when I miss I’m just a little off balance and that’s like the biggest thing,” Rosier said. “I think you saw it, and [quarterbacks] coach Jon [Richt] really harped on the really good ball that I had, was one across the middle to Jeff (Thomas).

“And he was like, ‘just look at your balance, look how your feet are set, and look how your body is in position to throw.’ And he was like, ‘when you are like that, you’re accurate. When you are all off balance, you’re not.’ He said as simple as that. Coach Jon is kind of just telling me it is up to me to fix myself. And if I’m conscious about it and I work on it, then my accuracy is going to go up.”

How does he work on that in practice?

“It’s a little harder in practice because you don’t get that live rush,” Rosier said. “We do the best we can versus our one’s and two’s when we do go 11-on-11. There was a throw today, I hit Evidence [Njoku] on and I had [senior defensive back] Jaquan Johnson running in my face. So those are when you kind of got to take your fundamentals to the game. But, in scout teams sometimes it’s just hard, because sometimes you don’t have that rush in your face. So the couple of times we get it in 11-on-11, is really big.”

The Canes have an “accuracy percentage goal” every week, which Rosier hit with his 8/12 (67%) passing day against Savannah State last week.

“Even since Brad [Kaaya’s] been here, we kind of have a thing that the goal is 65-percent or better,” Rosier said. “Accuracy and completion are two totally different things. So, like, you can throw an accurate ball, receiver drops, but it is still accuracy if it is not a completion.”

In heading up to Toledo to take on the Rockets this week, Rosier compared the game to what the team faced against Appalachian State two years back.

“It’s the same thing as Appalachian State. You know, I’m going in there and before we even got to the stadium, three or four hours before the game, the fans were literally waiting outside, hundreds of people. For us, it’s just going in there and winning, no matter if there’s a hundred fans there, a million fans. To us, it’s just 120 yards and football. So we are trying to go there and do our job, and we can’t let their atmosphere affect how we play.

“I think we did a great job versus Appalachian State. We had that first big run by Mark Walton, and it kind of killed the crowd. And so I feel like if we go out and we execute and we have a couple of good drives, I think the crowd will be taken out of it. And that’s our job, to take the crowd out by putting points on the board. They are going to be amped up because it’s versus Miami and everyone loves playing us.”

It's the same ol' same ol' with Rozier. He's a fifth-year senior, and his passing nuances won't change that much.
 
at first it was because the receiver ran to fast that they covered themselves
now its balance

this is a 5th year starting qb at a major power 5 team with over a year of starting experience
I can't think of another ranked power 5 team with a 5th year qb with as many fundamental flaws as our qb

Voila! It's too late in the game for Rozier to make any IMMENSE changes in his passing and what not.
 
You're right. I think it has a lot to do with his baseball background. As ridiculous as it may sound, throwing a baseball is different than throwing a football. I coached high school ball for years and the baseball quarterbacks always had mechanical issues. Some guys can adjust without issue, some cant. Remember Jake Locker? He had issues. I dont think Malik ever focused on it until it became clear he could be named starter.

Bulls eye! He was an outfielder and that HINDERS his throwing " big time. " Heck, I haven't come across Cane fan mentioning that very much. Kudo's sir, for your insightful post!!!!!!!!
 
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Also, he probably needs to check with the equipment manager pre game and verify what color jerseys he should be aiming for.
 
After looking at the tape of his bounce back performance against Savannah State, Miami starting QB Malik Rosier

Geeeez Stef, thank goodness those were your words and not Rosier's...

Let me try to help you out here... Savannah State was a slump buster, not a bounce back. I've included some illustrations below to try and help you understand the difference.

Slump buster:
slumpbuster_astros.jpg

Bounce Back
slumpbuster_02.jpg
 
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There is a very common technique used to help people perform under pressure. Some, ususally golfers, keep repeating music in their head. Others force themselves to "finish" in the same spot for a good shot or swing. You see this in baseball with the exagerated follow through. Perhaps the staff is trying to get MR to stop "thinking" and just play with balance................

He is a 5th year senior too late for that bro. Next man up.
 
just more bullsht excuses to make you believe that he CAN actually correct the problems and that he CAN actually play the position worth a sht.

We all know the answer to both...NOPE HE SUXS.
 
The balance issue is real, it’s obvious he throws off kilter, but the issue is if they have enough time to make the necessary changes. And why they haven’t addressed this previously.

For those of you who have had physical therapy after an injury the concept is proprioception. And basically you can “rewire” your conceptual balance. Exercises from one leg; exercises from balance boards and bosu balls, and doing these exercises blind-folded/eyes closed (That video @Paranos posted yesterday on Whitfield exhibits some of those concepts in the training of his QBs).

How does it affect accuracy? By changing his perception of speed and distance (sometimes drills are done with sound) it may stop him from throwing to where an athlete WAS (behind) or to where he expects (over) instead of to where the athlete actually is (target).

If they’ve been doing this ... we can only hope that it finally clicks (doubtful, but ... hey, I’m a homer). If they haven’t? Then I ask why?
Good points, but you have to wonder why a fifth year senior doesn't have his mechanics down.
 
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at first it was because the receiver ran to fast that they covered themselves
now its balance

this is a 5th year starting qb at a major power 5 team with over a year of starting experience
I can't think of another ranked power 5 team with a 5th year qb with as many fundamental flaws as our qb
Notre dame. I think
 
If this is actually true-that the staff tracks ACCURACY and not completion %...there is ZERO justification for him to even talk about this with the a straight face to the media. Just the LSU game alone his accuracy percentage would probably be in the 20-30 range at best.
 
Bounce back performance? You mean the one where the first 2 drives stalled with him missing receivers & we scored a total of 7 points in the only quarter he played from start to finish - against future D2 Savannah State?

Please, tell me more.

To be fair, he did complete 6 or 7 passes in a row which is definitely an improvement.
 
Good ******* grief

Big difference between 65% and 45% completion, coach
 
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