Brad Kaaya after first fall camp practice

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https://miami.rivals.com/news/kaaya-exhausted-shares-thoughts-after-first-fall-practice

It was Mark Richt’s first fall practice as coach of the Hurricanes.
And it was the first time reporters can remember hearing QB Brad Kaaya utter these words: “I’m exhausted.”

“You can see me, I’m sweating, am sweating now (20 minutes after drills ended),” Kaaya said. “Guys got after it today. It was full throttle, almost like it was conditioning out there every rep that we did.”
Yes, Kaaya was unusually tired.
And something else unusual: Kaaya threw an interception in 7-on-7. He had to run after practice as punishment.
“Twitter is going to go crazy,” he joked.
Kaaya typically goes pickoff free in practices. That pick? It came from transfer Adrian Colbert.
“It was cover 2, we had a go and Chris (Herndon) ran an out route,” Kaaya said. “It looked like Colbert kind of sank on it, he dropped back (then came off his man to pick it off) - just tricked me. It won’t happen again though.
“He picked me off, but no worries.”
Kaaya praised Colbert, saying “He’s super fast. He can track some deep distance, just get down there. He can stay stride for stride with some of the fastest guys.”

It was a grueling 2-hour plus workout in the midday Miami heat today for the Canes. The team ran individual periods, WR vs. DB sessions, 7-on-7’s and more.

“The first day went pretty good,” Kaaya said. “It’s new coaches, but I’ve been through this before. Practice was a little bit similar to springtime. There’s new guys coming in - it’s still a new team. In that aspect a few guys need to get their minds back into practice mode.”

Of his own improvement under Mark Richt, Kaaya said, “My feet just got a lot faster in terms of dropping back, my footwork is a lot faster. Just being able to handle coach Richt’s dropbacks.”


* Kaaya says freshman WR Sam Bruce “is real quick. Just gets in and out of his breaks well. He’s a guy who like Braxton (Berrios) - guys think of them as slot receivers but they can go out wide and get downfield pretty fast.”


* Kaaya says in the battle to be the backup QB that “It’s time for someone to take the next step and step up. We still don’t know who the backup is. ... Someone has to step up at some point. Coach Richt is going to name the No. 2, No. 3 fairly soon because he has to in the next month.”


Asked about Jack Allison specifically, Kaaya said, “He throws it well, a real strong arm. He has all the abilities in the world.”


* Of transfer fullback Marquez Williams, Kaaya said, “Despite how big he is, he’s still pretty fast, can move too. He can help us out whether it’s play-action, getting into the flat, roll outs and stuff, short yardage of course. He’s a strong guy. I don’t know if you’ve watched his highlight tape, but he’s a real physical guy. I’d be afraid to tackle him if I were the safeties and DB’s. We’ll see when pads come on. He might hurt some people this year.”


* Asked about Gus Edwards, Kaaya said, “Joe (Yearby) and Mark (Walton) are physically dominating backs, but Gus takes it to a whole another level with his size, strength and speed. He’ll be a good changeup for defenses, especially short yardage. Gus is also a guy who can play first down (also).”


* Among highlights from practice, aside from Colbert’s interception:

Robert Knowles had an interception in 7-on-7.
Michael Irvin ran what one assistant called “a bull-sh*@ route” but he still came back and was able to make a juggling one-handed catch in the end zone in 1-on-1’s.

And Marquez Williams looked very strong and physical running in drills and going on routes.
 
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Man icant wait to smash everyone on our schedule...payback.....we were asleep now we stay woke
 
I can't tell you how excited I am to have a big, bruising FB that might actually get to touch the darn ball. I'd absolutely hate to be a 180lb DB with that mountain rumbling at me.
 
If Bruce, Berrios, and Coley can become interchangeable in the split and Y then it's just going to be **** for opposing defenses. Herndon/Dobard can also Flex H-back to TE or Spread out wide too.

Richt is going crazy with combinations.
:fap:



When i use to complain about Coleys personnel groupings. This is what I meant. You have to find mismatches and get different personnel groupings on the field for certain situations. Having interchangeable pieces on offense makes it easier to expose and find mismatches. There are so many ways to attack a defense, its amazing.
It's refreshing to have a coach, NOT rely on solely on great athleticism;but provide some help to his players by creating an offense that will confuse defenses. That's what great coaches do. Meet the players half way. The game is mental, for the most part. The coach is the chess player. This is why they are sooo important.

Finally someone who really knows how to confuse a DC and his players with the real offensive play calling.
:basedgod:


Yes DWinstitles, i know recruiting is important too. :diaf:



SN: A lot of people like to complain about pete carroll's decision to approve the pass in the super bowl. I think the playcall was fine. But too add to my point about the importance of personnel groupings......... That pass should have gone to Chris Matthews or Travis Wilson. There is no way Malcolm Butler runs thru either of them for an interception. Too large of frames and too physical.
 
I can't tell you how excited I am to have a big, bruising FB that might actually get to touch the darn ball. I'd absolutely hate to be a 180lb DB with that mountain rumbling at me.


I'm totally excited as well. Having played linebacker all my years of football. There is nothing worse than an I formation team with a thick fullback.

Albeit if you know how to tackle properly you shouldn't be afraid of any man. But some guys are too scared to tackle the right way. hahaahaha
 
If Bruce, Berrios, and Coley can become interchangeable in the split and Y then it's just going to be **** for opposing defenses. Herndon/Dobard can also Flex H-back to TE or Spread out wide too.

Richt is going crazy with combinations.
:fap:



When i use to complain about Coleys personnel groupings. This is what I meant. You have to find mismatches and get different personnel groupings on the field for certain situations. Having interchangeable pieces on offense makes it easier to expose and find mismatches. There are so many ways to attack a defense, its amazing.
It's refreshing to have a coach, NOT rely on solely on great athleticism;but provide some help to his players by creating an offense that will confuse defenses. That's what great coaches do. Meet the players half way. The game is mental, for the most part. The coach is the chess player. This is why they are sooo important.

Finally someone who really knows how to confuse a DC and his players with the real offensive play calling.
:basedgod:


Yes DWinstitles, i know recruiting is important too. :diaf:



SN: A lot of people like to complain about pete carroll's decision to approve the pass in the super bowl. I think the playcall was fine. But too add to my point about the importance of personnel groupings......... That pass should have gone to Chris Matthews or Travis Wilson. There is no way Malcolm Butler runs thru either of them for an interception. Too large of frames and too physical.

I agreed w/ everything you said EXCEPT for your SN. You have BM who was getting stronger as the game went on and you also have Russell who is one of the most athletic QBs in the game. Sometimes the smart guy in the room out thinks himself.
 
If Bruce, Berrios, and Coley can become interchangeable in the split and Y then it's just going to be **** for opposing defenses. Herndon/Dobard can also Flex H-back to TE or Spread out wide too.

Richt is going crazy with combinations.
:fap:



When i use to complain about Coleys personnel groupings. This is what I meant. You have to find mismatches and get different personnel groupings on the field for certain situations. Having interchangeable pieces on offense makes it easier to expose and find mismatches. There are so many ways to attack a defense, its amazing.
It's refreshing to have a coach, NOT rely on solely on great athleticism;but provide some help to his players by creating an offense that will confuse defenses. That's what great coaches do. Meet the players half way. The game is mental, for the most part. The coach is the chess player. This is why they are sooo important.

Finally someone who really knows how to confuse a DC and his players with the real offensive play calling.
:basedgod:


Yes DWinstitles, i know recruiting is important too. :diaf:



SN: A lot of people like to complain about pete carroll's decision to approve the pass in the super bowl. I think the playcall was fine. But too add to my point about the importance of personnel groupings......... That pass should have gone to Chris Matthews or Travis Wilson. There is no way Malcolm Butler runs thru either of them for an interception. Too large of frames and too physical.

I agreed w/ everything you said EXCEPT for your SN. You have BM who was getting stronger as the game went on and you also have Russell who is one of the most athletic QBs in the game. Sometimes the smart guy in the room out thinks himself.

Ok, i feel you to a certain degree. My playcall would have been a play action bootleg. with marshawn at fullback. Virtually unstoppable with a qb as athletic as russel. BM was good on first down But Vince wilfork was literally dominant all game long on short yardage. The Seahawks had not converted a 3rd or fourth and short the entire game. Carroll knew it. Plus they had already chosen to run a shotgun play so that negates Marshawn, anyway.

Carrol knew they couldn't block Vince nor the pats front in short yardage. The playcall wasn't bad but Ricardo Lockette didn't deserve that ball man. Period.

I don't know if you remember that game but Chris Matthews was literally dominate against the Pats. He was so physical nobody wanted to guard him. If I know i'm throwing it across the middle I want somebody physical. Lockette hadn't shown anything to warrant he deserved that ball. Wilson and Matthews, on the other hand, did.
 
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I can't tell you how excited I am to have a big, bruising FB that might actually get to touch the darn ball. I'd absolutely hate to be a 180lb DB with that mountain rumbling at me.


I'm totally excited as well. Having played linebacker all my years of football. There is nothing worse than an I formation team with a thick fullback.

Albeit if you know how to tackle properly you shouldn't be afraid of any man. But some guys are too scared to tackle the right way. hahaahaha

Is there a right way to tackle 5' 10" 275 that doesn't hurt badly? hehe
 
"Of his own improvement under Mark Richt, Kaaya said, “My feet just got a lot faster in terms of dropping back, my footwork is a lot faster. Just being able to handle coach Richt’s dropbacks.”

This is going to be one of the reasons his game goes to the stratosphere. Completion % should go up and a reduction of those under thrown passes. The other is mobility in the pocket. (Even though he should take off once in a while)

And to think... to not conflict with what Richt is teaching, his high school QB coach and him only worked on coverage recognition....:Qft9gEw: sweet baby jesus! It's about to go down!
 
I can't tell you how excited I am to have a big, bruising FB that might actually get to touch the darn ball. I'd absolutely hate to be a 180lb DB with that mountain rumbling at me.


I'm totally excited as well. Having played linebacker all my years of football. There is nothing worse than an I formation team with a thick fullback.

Albeit if you know how to tackle properly you shouldn't be afraid of any man. But some guys are too scared to tackle the right way. hahaahaha

Is there a right way to tackle 5' 10" 275 that doesn't hurt badly? hehe

Yes. You can always cut the legs out from under a guy that size. He isn't hurdling anyone. Thats one thing I feel i can do till I'm 50.

I'll always be able to tackle that way. It's sure fire.

I think polamalu demonstrated it the best, professionally
 
I love Brad but I am so glad he got picked. Our defense has sucked so long that offense looks better in practice than it is. Need to get back to where offense can't do crap against our D in practice -- like the old days.
 
:sanford::nba-anthony_davis-u:penguininatux::kramer::Qft9gEw::nba-chris_bosh-upse:canes1::KYPOwCc::canes3::oh_gif_kid:
 
Marquez Williams will be a great addition. Not just because of his size but because hes strong as **** and that almost always translates on the football field. Wont be surprised to see him make 3-4 eye opening blocks this season.
 
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I love Brad but I am so glad he got picked. Our defense has sucked so long that offense looks better in practice than it is. Need to get back to where offense can't do crap against our D in practice -- like the old days.

Exactly. Imagine how many INT's Dorsey through against that D every day...
 
Think about how physical and smart our defense will be having to practice against a top notch offensive coordinator with a physical fullback.

Shaq and Marquez will have a love- hate relationship.
 
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