MessiahChild
Redshirt Freshman
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2012
- Messages
- 144
He is scheduled to used his last 3 officials on Ole Miss, Kentucky, and FSU. Richt needs to offer ASAP to get him to bump one of those officials.
I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
He has been ballin this yr. He has a pic in tonight's state championship game. I would def. bring him down for a visit.
Senior Highlight - Carlos Becker III highlights
Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
Bad misconception about E Reed. That boy had world class quickness and his long speed wasn't bad either. The greatest "slow" safety I've seen is probably Polomalu.
The greatest "slow" safety I've seen is probably Polomalu.
The greatest "slow" safety I've seen is probably Polomalu.
Troy ran a sub 4.4 at his pro day
I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
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I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.
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Will someone help me out on this?
What does a period after a quoted post mean?
I was a CB who was a S convert for college, and I will tell you, it is completely different. It isn't the same as playing corner at all. Responsibilities are different, eye discipline is completely different, angles are different.
A lot of individuals believe that speed comes into play in coverage, but honestly, your speed comes into play at S much more in the running game. Being angle to take an angle and fill a hole before the RB can hit it is the most important thing in run support for a S. Too often a S has to flatten his angle because of a speed deficiency, the RB is able to get into space, and that is obviously such a harder play to make and often times you are either riding the RB out-of-bounds after a big gain, or missing the tackle all together.
Dallas Crawford would see the play, identify where he should be, but his body just couldn't do it. He didn't have the speed to hit the angle and therefore you saw him missing so many tackles where a S who could see it AND run to it would've stopped the RB for a minimal gain.
Make no mistake about it; the little details at S are what is important. If you aren't comfortable moving in a linear fashion, have the eye discipline to be where you need to be, and then the foot speed to get there, you won't be a star. Before anyone throws out the Ed Reed's, please understand he is an outlier. His instincts and ability to diagnose the play ahead of time were preternatural and not the norm. You just don't comp players to Ed Reed. You need to look for the prototype skills to be successful in your scheme and then identify the rare outlier exceptions if they come along.