Rosier working on balance heading into Toledo

Rosier working on balance heading into Toledo

Stefan Adams

Comments (129)

“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.”

This is D1 level QB Day 1 stuff. Let’s even be generous, midway through Year 1 stuff.

With regards to Miami’s QB development program, this is a serious indictment something is either missing or has gone very wrong.

Now, has it gone missing/wrong for just Rosier or are QB2-4 not being developed at pace/on track to be “elite” and successful at the P5D1 level?
 
That 'squat' and 'happy feet' pocket presence thing you see on QB's like Peyton Manning (who had some of the best fundamental mechanics ever) or even little BRAD KAYAA (who really had polished fundamentals coming out of high school) is coached into their DNA either at a very young age or when they arrive at college. Malik is a **** baseball player after all, it's just not in him at this point. He can have some good games here and there where he's more focused on it and the defense he's facing isn't giving him trouble. But at the end of the day, he's not a natural QB.

No heat taken of off Jon Richt, Jr though. Where is the hands-on work done on fundamentals to fix poor mechanics? You're just going to tell him how to do it? Are we leaving it up to the high school coaches to teach better QB fundamentals and only recruit the polished guys? How's that going this recruiting cycle? The 2019 play at the QB position is going to be a make or break year for Richt Jr.

Do some designed drills or even get some resistance bands tied from a belt to his heels and have the kid drilling every waking minute possible. Tennis players drill like this all the time to teach them to move in an area much like a pocket while also staying low and balanced. Malik obviously wasn't one of those blonde Cali kids groomed for the position but you can shape almost any young athlete to improve through the right conditioning. It'll be hard and they'll be having nightmares about it but it will change them.

Either the staff never tried with Malik when they got here, didn't know how, or gave up on him because he wasn't their guy, or all three.
 
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Is he blaming his receivers for dropping his accurate passes here?

No, no, good sir. The latest excuse is....get this.....they run too fassssst! Hahahahahahahahaha! They run so fast, that, in fact, they throw him off balance, hence his inaccuracies!! Hahahahahahahaha!

*I’m laughing on the outside, but inside I feel like Kevin Hart’s grandfather yelling at the cats!
 
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The throw to JT4 was excellent but it's a throw that anyone fully expects a D1 P5 QB to make.

3 plays before that one he overthrew JT wide open on a 15-yard out that would've been incomplete if not for 4 being a freak.

This, Three plays before that I was losing my ******* mind swearing at the TV ready to break ****. Working on balance is great but we still need to work with all the QB's on reading defenses and looking off safeties.
 
Haha. Ah man. This QB development (i.e. Rosier) **** at UM is becoming a comedy show. Keep the hilarious comments coming.
 
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You can go back and watch rosier in his second or third game, he is absolutely no different now
 
I did.

Delusion and Hope are powerful forces. Besides, what choice did we have? I walked out of that spring game knowing there was no way in **** #12 was our best QB, yet our coaches told us so all spring and summer long. It was either take that on faith, and hope they knew what the **** they were doing, or pack in the season before it even started.

Turns out, we're smack dab in the middle of a whole world of hurt and the people responsible for putting us here appear to be in complete denial as to the cause of our predicament.

Boiled down to simpler terms: we're fvcked.

I'm guilty as well. Not so much that Rosier would make a drastic improvement, but that even a slight improvement along with moderate improvement along the o-line and run game would mean we could be a seriously improved offense. The o-line seems to have not improved at all, or has actually regressed if you consider how poorly we were run blocking against a soon to be DII squad. I've maintained that the only way we can be successful with Rosier is to run the ball better and limit his attempts to 20-25 per game.

Fun stat:
Jake Fromm 19.4 att/g
Tua Tagovailoa 17.5 aat/g
Kelley Bryant 23.6 att/g

Malik Rosier 31.9 att/g

When you have an inaccurate QB with bad mechanics you don't want him slinging it around 30-40 times a game. My mistake was thinking that we'd be able to run the ball well enough to limit Malik's opportunities to ***** up. We can't. And if we don't fix that soon, I tend to agree with your last line.

I like what I saw from all of the backups this past Saturday, and hope they get more PT. Right now, Perry seems to be the guy most capable of stepping in and running the offense, but I'm still cautious considering he has six scrimmages and never went above 50% passing--they didn't give stats for this Fall, so I'm only counting the stats for the ones they did. Hopefully he made strides over the summer and fall and has put that behind him, but I've learned my lesson of placing hope above what I see.

I will say, though, that if the o-line doesn't get fixed, it's going to be **** on whoever is brought in to play QB. These next few weeks are make or break for Stacy Searles IMO. This o-line is going to get someone hurt if they continue to whiff on blocks letting defenders take free shots at the QBs.
 
Cannon, our online could not even get a push v that all school we just played. We could not just line up a go smashmouth with them and that's just Damm pathetic. I watched on my ESPN app, don't know who was callin the game but all he kept talking about was our line could not push them off the ball. All I know is he was x player
 
I'm guilty as well. Not so much that Rosier would make a drastic improvement, but that even a slight improvement along with moderate improvement along the o-line and run game would mean we could be a seriously improved offense. The o-line seems to have not improved at all, or has actually regressed if you consider how poorly we were run blocking against a soon to be DII squad. I've maintained that the only way we can be successful with Rosier is to run the ball better and limit his attempts to 20-25 per game.

Fun stat:
Jake Fromm 19.4 att/g
Tua Tagovailoa 17.5 aat/g
Kelley Bryant 23.6 att/g

Malik Rosier 31.9 att/g

When you have an inaccurate QB with bad mechanics you don't want him slinging it around 30-40 times a game. My mistake was thinking that we'd be able to run the ball well enough to limit Malik's opportunities to ***** up. We can't. And if we don't fix that soon, I tend to agree with your last line.

I like what I saw from all of the backups this past Saturday, and hope they get more PT. Right now, Perry seems to be the guy most capable of stepping in and running the offense, but I'm still cautious considering he has six scrimmages and never went above 50% passing--they didn't give stats for this Fall, so I'm only counting the stats for the ones they did. Hopefully he made strides over the summer and fall and has put that behind him, but I've learned my lesson of placing hope above what I see.

I will say, though, that if the o-line doesn't get fixed, it's going to be **** on whoever is brought in to play QB. These next few weeks are make or break for Stacy Searles IMO. This o-line is going to get someone hurt if they continue to whiff on blocks letting defenders take free shots at the QBs.

Yup.
 
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"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.”

View attachment 64062

I wonder if the garbage inaccurate balls that our receivers make magical catches on count against his percentage? Like JT against LSU contorting his body like he's in the circus.
 
I thought it was because he had a hurt shoulder last year? Now its a balance thing? Never heard something like this coming from a college football player
 
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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?

Maybe he should try throwing with his eyes closed v. Toledo.
 
If JT knew he'd have to play through 2 years of Malik Rosier throwing him passes, he would have gone elsewhere.
 
My take is this:

Last season the coaching staff was put into the unexpected position after Kaaya stupidly declared early of having to roll with Rosier or a T.Fr., so they rolled the dice on Rosier. Bethune was a gimmie, and Rosier's next game was a 333 yard, 3 TD, 75% outing where we managed to win a shootout against a Toledo team that was shredding our defense. The coaches knew he had bad mechanics and an elongated stride, but took an "if it ain't broke don't fix it" approach as long as we were winning games. Knowing they couldn't fix Rosier's mechanics mid-season with us in the middle of a 10 game winning streak, they chose to focus on things they could actually fix. Rosier's long *** wind up and stride isn't the big of a problem if the O-line can adjust the way they block and give him plenty of time and room.

The problem came when we started playing teams like VaTech--even though we won on defense and Rosier's legs, it was a pretty bad night passing--Clemson and Wisconsin that had really good defensive lines and could shrink the pocket on Rosier.

LSU slaughtered our o-line and Rosier played like crap as a result. There were some plays where he had time and still missed--a clean pocket was a rarity that night, but it did happen. Here's the thing though. Defensive coaches and players understand this well. You don't have to pressure or sack the QB every play. You just have to get to him early, and he'll start to rush everything on his own because even when the pocket is clear, the QB feels the pressure coming. This is especially true if a QB takes a few shots from his blind side. They will feel pressure from the blind side all night long even if it ain't there.

Now the coaches still know they can't fix Rosier's mechanics. The only difference is that they've decided to tell him that. I think they're softening him up for the talk that's becoming more and more evident is going to happen sooner rather than later.

"You gave it a **** of a go, kid. **** proud of you for hanging in there and not quitting, but you can't make the throws [insert whichever backup QB you prefer here] is making. I have to go with who I believe gives us the best shot to win, and right now that's [x]."

Remember Richt telling his story of being mired on the depth chart behind Kelly and Kosar and seriously considering quitting? I think he has a soft spot for guys that tough it out and give it their best shot despite all of the physical limitations they have to work with. I think they've done about all they can to help him succeed, and they're starting to tell him.
 
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