Interesting comments from Barry Jackson of the Herald

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Benching Rosier remains one of the most mystifying coaching decisions I've ever seen. Richt has generally been a solid game day coach here but that was flat out inexplicable.

Would it have mattered anyways?

Evan Shirreffs had a 0% chance of doing anything positive. He is a Division III type talent.

We had the ball on the 50 and gave it to a kid who cant throw it more than 20 yards.

It's seriously hard to believe how bad he's looked when they've called his number.

That he was ever actually considered for the starting job is quite possibly the most alarming thing ever.
 
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University of Miami quarterback Malik Rosier responding well to benching | Miami Herald

A six-pack of Hurricanes notes on a Tuesday:

▪ UM people are pleased with how Malik Rosier responded to his brief benching against Pittsburgh.

“I think he’s responded well,” offensive coordinator Thomas Brown said. “He’s always been a very confident guy. This is his best week of preparation so far. Sunday night was his best night. It was our best night as an offense. Today was a great practice, one of the best Tuesdays all year. It starts with the quarterback and when he has the right mindset, taking charge, pushing the tempo. Everyone is fine.”

Mark Richt said: “Malik has responded great. I wanted to observe his demeanor, his body language, his voice. He knew when the game was over — he knew he was our guy. He knew there was no controversy. It could shake up a guy. He knows we believe in him and I do believe in him.”

Richt said that he was “glad to see he didn’t sit on the bench and pout” when he was benched for one series against Pittsburgh.

Rosier told Richt during that Pitt game that he wanted to go back in “and lead this team.”

Richt said he probably would have put him back in the game anyway even if Rosier hadn’t said anything.

Richt said there has been no common theme when Rosier has had accuracy issues.

“His decision making has been excellent overall,” Richt said. “That game in particular he missed open receivers too often. We might have overcoached how to hit someone on a deep ball [Richt was smiling when he said this]. Probably our fault.”

Ahmmon Richards said Rosier “has more of an edge” this week. “He’s more vocal.”

Richards, by the way, is determined to have a big game after an injury-plagued lackluster sophomore season. “I feel I have to take advantage of this opportunity and step up,” he said.

▪ Several UM people admitted this week what’s obvious to everyone.

“We don’t respond well when we have success, when nobody is talking bad about us,” Brown said, noting his team does respond under a prime-time spotlight.

As Shaquille Quarterman said, when UM loses, people “like to say everything [about UM’s team] is a fraud.” He said UM players “feel that disrespect.”

Does UM play better when they’re angry? “I think everybody does … I think I coach better when I’m mad,” Richt said.

▪ Speaking of extra motivation, will coaches make an issue of UM having only one first-team player (kicker Michael Badgley) on the all-ACC team — something that Richt mentioned to the media Tuesday?

Richt insisted no: “I am not going to mention it to the players. They may catch it through the grape vine somehow.”

Mark Richt, the head coach for the Miami Hurricanes, talks to the media after losing to Pittsburgh and ending their chances for a perfect regular season on Friday, Nov. 24, 2017.

He said he won’t criticize having only one player on first-team All-ACC because “there are a lot of great players so you can’t say these players shouldn’t be first team.”

▪ How much will not having tight end Chris Herndon (out for the year with a knee injury) affect UM’s playcalling and what’s available to Mark Richt?

“We thought about it for a minute and then said we’ve got to do what we do,” Richt said. “We hardly ran a snap in our offense in two years without a tight end. It’s very important to our offense.”

▪ Conditioning was an issue earlier this season for new starter Michael Irvin Jr. Is his conditioning good enough now to play 50 snaps?

“We’re going to find out,” Brown said. “He’s a different tight end than Chris Herndon. He does a great job in route running and catching the ball. I think he’s up for the challenge. We’ll see.”

Richt said Irving “gets a ton of reps in practice. He knows what to do and how to do it. He just has to do it. There hardly has been a player that didn’t raise his level of play when he became a starter.”

▪ Former defensive end Scott Patchan is listed as the new No. 2 tight end behind Irvin, ahead of freshman Brian Polendey, whom the coaches have admitted is a terrible player who should've never been offered a scholarship.

But Brown said that the decision on the No. 2 tight end Saturday is “still up for debate.”

▪ Brown said UM’s efficiency on early downs simply must change Saturday.

“We sucked” at first and second down against Pitt, Brown said. “You end up on third and long — it doesn’t matter who you are playing — whether it’s the last defensive team or the best team in America — it’s hard to convert 3rd and 7 plus.”

When you edit the article & insert ignorant remarks you prove you're utter trash. But congrats to you for being a complete tool, which most of us have known for a while.

When you take a break from angrily negging everyone in the thread, I hope you realize that yours is the exact reaction he's going for when he does this stuff.
 
You've won. I have no desire to continue with this trash. But best of luck to you.
 
I've lost all respect for OP. To post an article and then change words within the article isn't cool or funny.
 
"Former defensive end Scott Patchan is listed as the new No. 2 tight end behind Irvin, ahead of freshman Brian Polendey,
whom the coaches have admitted is a terrible player who should've never been offered a scholarship."
Coaches at the U said that---NO WAY.
 
"“We don’t respond well when we have success, when nobody is talking bad about us,” Brown said, noting his team does respond under a prime-time spotlight.

As Shaquille Quarterman said, when UM loses, people “like to say everything [about UM’s team] is a fraud.” He said UM players “feel that disrespect.”

Does UM play better when they’re angry? “I think everybody does … I think I coach better when I’m mad,” Richt said."


This is pure Cane attitude. I was afraid when they took us above Clemson the team would let down and it did. Now they are back out of the top four, they feel disrespected and put down. This is a very good thing. The worse thing that could have happened was for us to win and get moved to # 1 after Bama loss. Clemson would have killed us, now they will get some of what ND got. All those Clemson players from both lines on 1st team all ACC will carry a big price tag too. Line of scrimmage is going to be violent and fast the game. After a season of winning the team is again given no shot. I like that a lot. All that matter is us and how we play. It has always been that way.

After we win, we need the committee to insult us some more by putting us 4th. Doesn't matter who the other three are. They are toast.
 
Benching Rosier remains one of the most mystifying coaching decisions I've ever seen. Richt has generally been a solid game day coach here but that was flat out inexplicable.

Would it have mattered anyways?

Malik couldn't hit water from a boat so if he had another series of incompletions it would have been better than watching Evan's incompletions?
 
Benching Rosier remains one of the most mystifying coaching decisions I've ever seen. Richt has generally been a solid game day coach here but that was flat out inexplicable.

Would it have mattered anyways?

Evan Shirreffs had a 0% chance of doing anything positive. He is a Division III type talent.

We had the ball on the 50 and gave it to a kid who cant throw it more than 20 yards.

It's seriously hard to believe how bad he's looked when they've called his number.

That he was ever actually considered for the starting job is quite possibly the most alarming thing ever.

He literally looked like a punter trying to play QB.

Add him to the list of players who shouldnt be here.
 
Advertisement
University of Miami quarterback Malik Rosier responding well to benching | Miami Herald

A six-pack of Hurricanes notes on a Tuesday:

▪ UM people are pleased with how Malik Rosier responded to his brief benching against Pittsburgh.

“I think he’s responded well,” offensive coordinator Thomas Brown said. “He’s always been a very confident guy. This is his best week of preparation so far. Sunday night was his best night. It was our best night as an offense. Today was a great practice, one of the best Tuesdays all year. It starts with the quarterback and when he has the right mindset, taking charge, pushing the tempo. Everyone is fine.”

Mark Richt said: “Malik has responded great. I wanted to observe his demeanor, his body language, his voice. He knew when the game was over — he knew he was our guy. He knew there was no controversy. It could shake up a guy. He knows we believe in him and I do believe in him.”

Richt said that he was “glad to see he didn’t sit on the bench and pout” when he was benched for one series against Pittsburgh.

Rosier told Richt during that Pitt game that he wanted to go back in “and lead this team.”

Richt said he probably would have put him back in the game anyway even if Rosier hadn’t said anything.

Richt said there has been no common theme when Rosier has had accuracy issues.

“His decision making has been excellent overall,” Richt said. “That game in particular he missed open receivers too often. We might have overcoached how to hit someone on a deep ball [Richt was smiling when he said this]. Probably our fault.”

Ahmmon Richards said Rosier “has more of an edge” this week. “He’s more vocal.”

Richards, by the way, is determined to have a big game after an injury-plagued lackluster sophomore season. “I feel I have to take advantage of this opportunity and step up,” he said.

▪ Several UM people admitted this week what’s obvious to everyone.

“We don’t respond well when we have success, when nobody is talking bad about us,” Brown said, noting his team does respond under a prime-time spotlight.

As Shaquille Quarterman said, when UM loses, people “like to say everything [about UM’s team] is a fraud.” He said UM players “feel that disrespect.”

Does UM play better when they’re angry? “I think everybody does … I think I coach better when I’m mad,” Richt said.

▪ Speaking of extra motivation, will coaches make an issue of UM having only one first-team player (kicker Michael Badgley) on the all-ACC team — something that Richt mentioned to the media Tuesday?

Richt insisted no: “I am not going to mention it to the players. They may catch it through the grape vine somehow.”

Mark Richt, the head coach for the Miami Hurricanes, talks to the media after losing to Pittsburgh and ending their chances for a perfect regular season on Friday, Nov. 24, 2017.

He said he won’t criticize having only one player on first-team All-ACC because “there are a lot of great players so you can’t say these players shouldn’t be first team.”

▪ How much will not having tight end Chris Herndon (out for the year with a knee injury) affect UM’s playcalling and what’s available to Mark Richt?

“We thought about it for a minute and then said we’ve got to do what we do,” Richt said. “We hardly ran a snap in our offense in two years without a tight end. It’s very important to our offense.”

▪ Conditioning was an issue earlier this season for new starter Michael Irvin Jr. Is his conditioning good enough now to play 50 snaps?

“We’re going to find out,” Brown said. “He’s a different tight end than Chris Herndon. He does a great job in route running and catching the ball. I think he’s up for the challenge. We’ll see.”

Richt said Irving “gets a ton of reps in practice. He knows what to do and how to do it. He just has to do it. There hardly has been a player that didn’t raise his level of play when he became a starter.”

▪ Former defensive end Scott Patchan is listed as the new No. 2 tight end behind Irvin, ahead of freshman Brian Polendey, whom the coaches have admitted is a terrible player who should've never been offered a scholarship.

But Brown said that the decision on the No. 2 tight end Saturday is “still up for debate.”

▪ Brown said UM’s efficiency on early downs simply must change Saturday.

“We sucked” at first and second down against Pitt, Brown said. “You end up on third and long — it doesn’t matter who you are playing — whether it’s the last defensive team or the best team in America — it’s hard to convert 3rd and 7 plus.”

When you edit the article & insert ignorant remarks you prove you're utter trash. But congrats to you for being a complete tool, which most of us have known for a while.

Meant to downvote this garbage. That sht was hilarious. Well done OP

I made same mistake on upvote. Article fine personal insertions NO.
 
Personal Insertions was actually my nickname back at Stanford Law.
 
University of Miami quarterback Malik Rosier responding well to benching | Miami Herald

A six-pack of Hurricanes notes on a Tuesday:

▪ UM people are pleased with how Malik Rosier responded to his brief benching against Pittsburgh.

“I think he’s responded well,” offensive coordinator Thomas Brown said. “He’s always been a very confident guy. This is his best week of preparation so far. Sunday night was his best night. It was our best night as an offense. Today was a great practice, one of the best Tuesdays all year. It starts with the quarterback and when he has the right mindset, taking charge, pushing the tempo. Everyone is fine.”

Mark Richt said: “Malik has responded great. I wanted to observe his demeanor, his body language, his voice. He knew when the game was over — he knew he was our guy. He knew there was no controversy. It could shake up a guy. He knows we believe in him and I do believe in him.”

Richt said that he was “glad to see he didn’t sit on the bench and pout” when he was benched for one series against Pittsburgh.

Rosier told Richt during that Pitt game that he wanted to go back in “and lead this team.”

Richt said he probably would have put him back in the game anyway even if Rosier hadn’t said anything.

Richt said there has been no common theme when Rosier has had accuracy issues.

“His decision making has been excellent overall,” Richt said. “That game in particular he missed open receivers too often. We might have overcoached how to hit someone on a deep ball [Richt was smiling when he said this]. Probably our fault.”

Ahmmon Richards said Rosier “has more of an edge” this week. “He’s more vocal.”

Richards, by the way, is determined to have a big game after an injury-plagued lackluster sophomore season. “I feel I have to take advantage of this opportunity and step up,” he said.

▪ Several UM people admitted this week what’s obvious to everyone.

“We don’t respond well when we have success, when nobody is talking bad about us,” Brown said, noting his team does respond under a prime-time spotlight.

As Shaquille Quarterman said, when UM loses, people “like to say everything [about UM’s team] is a fraud.” He said UM players “feel that disrespect.”

Does UM play better when they’re angry? “I think everybody does … I think I coach better when I’m mad,” Richt said.

▪ Speaking of extra motivation, will coaches make an issue of UM having only one first-team player (kicker Michael Badgley) on the all-ACC team — something that Richt mentioned to the media Tuesday?

Richt insisted no: “I am not going to mention it to the players. They may catch it through the grape vine somehow.”

Mark Richt, the head coach for the Miami Hurricanes, talks to the media after losing to Pittsburgh and ending their chances for a perfect regular season on Friday, Nov. 24, 2017.

He said he won’t criticize having only one player on first-team All-ACC because “there are a lot of great players so you can’t say these players shouldn’t be first team.”

▪ How much will not having tight end Chris Herndon (out for the year with a knee injury) affect UM’s playcalling and what’s available to Mark Richt?

“We thought about it for a minute and then said we’ve got to do what we do,” Richt said. “We hardly ran a snap in our offense in two years without a tight end. It’s very important to our offense.”

▪ Conditioning was an issue earlier this season for new starter Michael Irvin Jr. Is his conditioning good enough now to play 50 snaps?

“We’re going to find out,” Brown said. “He’s a different tight end than Chris Herndon. He does a great job in route running and catching the ball. I think he’s up for the challenge. We’ll see.”

Richt said Irving “gets a ton of reps in practice. He knows what to do and how to do it. He just has to do it. There hardly has been a player that didn’t raise his level of play when he became a starter.”

▪ Former defensive end Scott Patchan is listed as the new No. 2 tight end behind Irvin, ahead of freshman Brian Polendey, whom the coaches have admitted is a terrible player who should've never been offered a scholarship.

But Brown said that the decision on the No. 2 tight end Saturday is “still up for debate.”

▪ Brown said UM’s efficiency on early downs simply must change Saturday.

“We sucked” at first and second down against Pitt, Brown said. “You end up on third and long — it doesn’t matter who you are playing — whether it’s the last defensive team or the best team in America — it’s hard to convert 3rd and 7 plus.”

When you edit the article & insert ignorant remarks you prove you're utter trash. But congrats to you for being a complete tool, which most of us have known for a while.

calm down
 
calm down[/QUOTE]

Oh, I've definitely calmed down. I'm now officially on-board with team ignorance and idiotic. But yes, please count me in on crazy statements for the uneducated. Should I do a fist pump now? Just want to make sure I'm on-board.
 
One reason why Patchan may be listed as # 2 TE is his size and strength. Running game blocking and pass protection.

Patchan weight room numbers from summer 2015--I do not have more recent updates but I am sure he is considerably stronger after 2 years.

"Freshman Scott Patchan had a 350-pound squat in the spring; it's now up to 390. His 252-pound power clean improved to 264 and his 335-pound bench went to 340 while his vertical was 29 inches. He gained eight pounds since the spring, to 247. He ran a 4.81 40 in the spring; he tested at 4.83 this summer."
 
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Rosier lazer focus? instead of 5 Ints he'll probably throw 2 now. We got a CHANCE BOYS!!
 
Benching Rosier remains one of the most mystifying coaching decisions I've ever seen. Richt has generally been a solid game day coach here but that was flat out inexplicable.

Would it have mattered anyways?

Evan Shirreffs had a 0% chance of doing anything positive. He is a Division III type talent.

We had the ball on the 50 and gave it to a kid who cant throw it more than 20 yards.

Yep, can't throw it 20 yards. Except the fact that he had like 38 TDs his senior season of high school ball. Many of which were well over 20 yards through the air. I guess his arm has gotten a **** of a lot weaker after adding 30 pounds of muscle.

The situation was really bad for him or ANYONE coming in.
 
University of Miami quarterback Malik Rosier responding well to benching | Miami Herald

A six-pack of Hurricanes notes on a Tuesday:

▪ UM people are pleased with how Malik Rosier responded to his brief benching against Pittsburgh.

“I think he’s responded well,” offensive coordinator Thomas Brown said. “He’s always been a very confident guy. This is his best week of preparation so far. Sunday night was his best night. It was our best night as an offense. Today was a great practice, one of the best Tuesdays all year. It starts with the quarterback and when he has the right mindset, taking charge, pushing the tempo. Everyone is fine.”

Mark Richt said: “Malik has responded great. I wanted to observe his demeanor, his body language, his voice. He knew when the game was over — he knew he was our guy. He knew there was no controversy. It could shake up a guy. He knows we believe in him and I do believe in him.”

Richt said that he was “glad to see he didn’t sit on the bench and pout” when he was benched for one series against Pittsburgh.

Rosier told Richt during that Pitt game that he wanted to go back in “and lead this team.”

Richt said he probably would have put him back in the game anyway even if Rosier hadn’t said anything.

Richt said there has been no common theme when Rosier has had accuracy issues.

“His decision making has been excellent overall,” Richt said. “That game in particular he missed open receivers too often. We might have overcoached how to hit someone on a deep ball [Richt was smiling when he said this]. Probably our fault.”

Ahmmon Richards said Rosier “has more of an edge” this week. “He’s more vocal.”

Richards, by the way, is determined to have a big game after an injury-plagued lackluster sophomore season. “I feel I have to take advantage of this opportunity and step up,” he said.

▪ Several UM people admitted this week what’s obvious to everyone.

“We don’t respond well when we have success, when nobody is talking bad about us,” Brown said, noting his team does respond under a prime-time spotlight.

As Shaquille Quarterman said, when UM loses, people “like to say everything [about UM’s team] is a fraud.” He said UM players “feel that disrespect.”

Does UM play better when they’re angry? “I think everybody does … I think I coach better when I’m mad,” Richt said.

▪ Speaking of extra motivation, will coaches make an issue of UM having only one first-team player (kicker Michael Badgley) on the all-ACC team — something that Richt mentioned to the media Tuesday?

Richt insisted no: “I am not going to mention it to the players. They may catch it through the grape vine somehow.”

Mark Richt, the head coach for the Miami Hurricanes, talks to the media after losing to Pittsburgh and ending their chances for a perfect regular season on Friday, Nov. 24, 2017.

He said he won’t criticize having only one player on first-team All-ACC because “there are a lot of great players so you can’t say these players shouldn’t be first team.”

▪ How much will not having tight end Chris Herndon (out for the year with a knee injury) affect UM’s playcalling and what’s available to Mark Richt?

“We thought about it for a minute and then said we’ve got to do what we do,” Richt said. “We hardly ran a snap in our offense in two years without a tight end. It’s very important to our offense.”

▪ Conditioning was an issue earlier this season for new starter Michael Irvin Jr. Is his conditioning good enough now to play 50 snaps?

“We’re going to find out,” Brown said. “He’s a different tight end than Chris Herndon. He does a great job in route running and catching the ball. I think he’s up for the challenge. We’ll see.”

Richt said Irving “gets a ton of reps in practice. He knows what to do and how to do it. He just has to do it. There hardly has been a player that didn’t raise his level of play when he became a starter.”

▪ Former defensive end Scott Patchan is listed as the new No. 2 tight end behind Irvin, ahead of freshman Brian Polendey, whom the coaches have admitted is a terrible player who should've never been offered a scholarship.

But Brown said that the decision on the No. 2 tight end Saturday is “still up for debate.”

▪ Brown said UM’s efficiency on early downs simply must change Saturday.

“We sucked” at first and second down against Pitt, Brown said. “You end up on third and long — it doesn’t matter who you are playing — whether it’s the last defensive team or the best team in America — it’s hard to convert 3rd and 7 plus.”

When you edit the article & insert ignorant remarks you prove you're utter trash. But congrats to you for being a complete tool, which most of us have known for a while.

don't get mad cause you lack a sense of humor

what's wrong with you millennials?
Exactly!!! This **** made my day!!! Hahahahhahahahhaha!!!!!!!!
 
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