Hugh Freeze to Tennessee

none of these dudes do anything with Malik Rosier or N'Kosi Perry.


Williams completion percentage in HS was 56.6%
Perry's was 58.6%.

The irony is that the "magic number" for the NFL is exactly 58.6%. GMs will rule out any QB with less than a 58.6% completion percentage as they have determined that the chances of success for a QB who drops below that line is basically zero. Sure, bad WRs can skew the completion %, but 58.6% takes that into account (which is why it is so low and not around 65% minimum).

I had been thinking Williams was the savior, but I never looked at his numbers. Now Im not so sure. Reality is that Perry probably a higher chance of success than Williams because he is more accurate (and against better competition). I couldn't find Rosiers total completion percentage for HS, but his senior year in HS he was at 55% (132 for 240), so it's not a surprise he didn't finish his career as the starting qb.

Weldon is actually around 62%, if he wasn't such a juvenile delinquent he'd probably have the job.

BTW, both Perry and Williams are 4 stars. Jack Allison was also a 4 star, his completion was about 60%. So why didn't Allison pan out? Well, again look to the NFL. Allison is 6'6". QBs that tall, for whatever reason, have not had much success (one would think height would give them an advantage with seeing WRs, but it hasn't really helped).

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d827fff7e/article/osweiler-hopes-to-outshine-nfls-tallest-qbs


Just for fun, I looked up a 3 star qb who looks like he led his just led his team to the playoffs- ND's Ian Book. HS completion? Around 66%.

Likely #1 draft pick Justin Herbert? Also at 66%.

Long story short, I don't think we have a championship caliber QB on the roster because Rick stinks at evaluating qbs.
 
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Williams completion percentage in HS was 56.6%
Perry's was 58.6%.

The irony is that the "magic number" for the NFL is exactly 58.6%. GMs will rule out any QB with less than a 58.6% completion percentage as they have determined that the chances of success for a QB who drops below that line is basically zero. Sure, bad WRs can skew the completion %, but 58.6% takes that into account (which is why it is so low and not around 65% minimum).

I had been thinking Williams was the savior, but I never looked at his numbers. Now Im not so sure. Reality is that Perry probably a higher chance of success than Williams because he is more accurate (and against better competition). I couldn't find Rosiers total completion percentage for HS, but his senior year in HS he was at 55% (132 for 240), so it's not a surprise he didn't finish his career as the starting qb.

Weldon is actually around 62%, if he wasn't such a juvenile delinquent he'd probably have the job.

BTW, both Perry and Williams are 4 stars. Jack Allison was also a 4 star, his completion was about 60%. So why didn't Allison pan out? Well, again look to the NFL. Allison is 6'6". QBs that tall, for whatever reason, have not had much success (one would think height would give them an advantage with seeing WRs, but it hasn't really helped).

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d827fff7e/article/osweiler-hopes-to-outshine-nfls-tallest-qbs


Just for fun, I looked up a 3 star qb who looks like he led his just led his team to the playoffs- ND's Ian Book. HS completion? Around 66%.

Likely #1 draft pick Justin Herbert? Also at 66%.

Long story short, I don't think we have a championship caliber QB on the roster because Rick stinks at evaluating qbs.

Jarren has superior pocket mobility, poise and accuracy. The OL will be better next season and that has to be accounted for as well.
 
Williams completion percentage in HS was 56.6%
Perry's was 58.6%.

The irony is that the "magic number" for the NFL is exactly 58.6%. GMs will rule out any QB with less than a 58.6% completion percentage as they have determined that the chances of success for a QB who drops below that line is basically zero. Sure, bad WRs can skew the completion %, but 58.6% takes that into account (which is why it is so low and not around 65% minimum).

I had been thinking Williams was the savior, but I never looked at his numbers. Now Im not so sure. Reality is that Perry probably a higher chance of success than Williams because he is more accurate (and against better competition). I couldn't find Rosiers total completion percentage for HS, but his senior year in HS he was at 55% (132 for 240), so it's not a surprise he didn't finish his career as the starting qb.

Weldon is actually around 62%, if he wasn't such a juvenile delinquent he'd probably have the job.

BTW, both Perry and Williams are 4 stars. Jack Allison was also a 4 star, his completion was about 60%. So why didn't Allison pan out? Well, again look to the NFL. Allison is 6'6". QBs that tall, for whatever reason, have not had much success (one would think height would give them an advantage with seeing WRs, but it hasn't really helped).

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d827fff7e/article/osweiler-hopes-to-outshine-nfls-tallest-qbs


Just for fun, I looked up a 3 star qb who looks like he led his just led his team to the playoffs- ND's Ian Book. HS completion? Around 66%.

Likely #1 draft pick Justin Herbert? Also at 66%.

Long story short, I don't think we have a championship caliber QB on the roster because Rick stinks at evaluating qbs.

that 58% has to be outdated
 
Williams completion percentage in HS was 56.6%
Perry's was 58.6%.

The irony is that the "magic number" for the NFL is exactly 58.6%. GMs will rule out any QB with less than a 58.6% completion percentage as they have determined that the chances of success for a QB who drops below that line is basically zero. Sure, bad WRs can skew the completion %, but 58.6% takes that into account (which is why it is so low and not around 65% minimum).

I had been thinking Williams was the savior, but I never looked at his numbers. Now Im not so sure. Reality is that Perry probably a higher chance of success than Williams because he is more accurate (and against better competition). I couldn't find Rosiers total completion percentage for HS, but his senior year in HS he was at 55% (132 for 240), so it's not a surprise he didn't finish his career as the starting qb.

Weldon is actually around 62%, if he wasn't such a juvenile delinquent he'd probably have the job.

BTW, both Perry and Williams are 4 stars. Jack Allison was also a 4 star, his completion was about 60%. So why didn't Allison pan out? Well, again look to the NFL. Allison is 6'6". QBs that tall, for whatever reason, have not had much success (one would think height would give them an advantage with seeing WRs, but it hasn't really helped).

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d827fff7e/article/osweiler-hopes-to-outshine-nfls-tallest-qbs


Just for fun, I looked up a 3 star qb who looks like he led his just led his team to the playoffs- ND's Ian Book. HS completion? Around 66%.

Likely #1 draft pick Justin Herbert? Also at 66%.

Long story short, I don't think we have a championship caliber QB on the roster because Rick stinks at evaluating qbs.

Rosier went 55% his senior year? Did he against a bunch of schools for the blind?
 
that 58% has to be outdated

The hs numbers are outdated or that GMs use 58.6% as the magic number? If anything it's probably moved more towards 60%. That's just the overall broad category for accuracy. It eliminates a huge chunk of QBs who might have impressive TD numbers but would flop in NFL.

After the broad category, you get into more precise completion numbers, like accuracy on "NFL throws" and accuracy on third down, which is when passing windows will be smallest and QBs are likely feeling heat from a pass rush. But overall completion percentage is the most useful broad metric for predicting success.
 
Williams completion percentage in HS was 56.6%
Perry's was 58.6%.

The irony is that the "magic number" for the NFL is exactly 58.6%. GMs will rule out any QB with less than a 58.6% completion percentage as they have determined that the chances of success for a QB who drops below that line is basically zero. Sure, bad WRs can skew the completion %, but 58.6% takes that into account (which is why it is so low and not around 65% minimum).

I had been thinking Williams was the savior, but I never looked at his numbers. Now Im not so sure. Reality is that Perry probably a higher chance of success than Williams because he is more accurate (and against better competition). I couldn't find Rosiers total completion percentage for HS, but his senior year in HS he was at 55% (132 for 240), so it's not a surprise he didn't finish his career as the starting qb.

Weldon is actually around 62%, if he wasn't such a juvenile delinquent he'd probably have the job.

BTW, both Perry and Williams are 4 stars. Jack Allison was also a 4 star, his completion was about 60%. So why didn't Allison pan out? Well, again look to the NFL. Allison is 6'6". QBs that tall, for whatever reason, have not had much success (one would think height would give them an advantage with seeing WRs, but it hasn't really helped).

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d827fff7e/article/osweiler-hopes-to-outshine-nfls-tallest-qbs


Just for fun, I looked up a 3 star qb who looks like he led his just led his team to the playoffs- ND's Ian Book. HS completion? Around 66%.

Likely #1 draft pick Justin Herbert? Also at 66%.

Long story short, I don't think we have a championship caliber QB on the roster because Rick stinks at evaluating qbs.
The defense has stated a few times that Weldon absolutely gives them fits. I'm all for the legalization movement but the young man just can't partake at the moment.
I also have a feeling Allison is going to play very well under Holgerson
 
The defense has stated a few times that Weldon absolutely gives them fits. I'm all for the legalization movement but the young man just can't partake at the moment.
I also have a feeling Allison is going to play very well under Holgerson

Yes, I think Allison will have an excellent career in an Air Raid offense. Will be lots of easy throws and he is accurate enough to hit them. He's the kind of QB though that gives Air Raid QBs in the NFL a bad name, because in the off chance a team drafts him based on WVa success, he will be turrible at the next level.
 
Rosier went 55% his senior year? Did he against a bunch of schools for the blind?


Hey as a QB you really haven't been blitzed..... until you've had 11 screaming, crazed blind boys coming after your ***!!:eddiemurphy:

They're not very effective but it's funny as heck to watch:xvfmlqq:
 
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**** let me get this straight
FSU offensive coordinator left to go be the coach at umass

And their top choice at offensive coordinator just passed their job offer over to be the head coach at liberty? Sad times for them as I think Tennessee will push to lock up Kendall briles too
 
Keep an eye on Tennessee. If we don't get our act together we'll be dealing with them along with Bama and UGA down here poaching 5stars. Recruits will start treating a Canes offer like a USF one
 
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Some of you seem to be forgetting that Mork has yet to hire an OC, which means that until he does Mork himself will still be calling the plays, so I'd stop with the premature lol'n if I were some of you. Meanwhile other schools are grabbing up the so called Douchbags not giving 2 fokks about what opposing school's and their fans think, whereas we're always trying to take the high road, which is why we sukk!
 




This is what I call a coach trying to win at all costs. Sadly it looks like Pruitt really knows what he's doing in Knoxville. I see them as the team that is most likely to compete with UGA in the SEC East.

However I'll add this - divisions in CFB are so stupid. There should be no divisions nor Conference Championship game.


Source?

The Scoop is reporting that Freeze will become the HC at Liberty.
 
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