Brad Kaaya has a good enough for college and the NFL. It isn't the first thing you would bring up about him. It isn't as good as Stephen Morris, Kyle Wright, Brock Berlin, Kenny Kelly, Craig Erickson, or Vinnie Testaverde. That being said it's better than Dorsey's and Jacory's and again good enough for the NFL. Kaaya's problem has never been his arm strength. What Kaaya brings is accurate passing and limited interceptions. What Kaaya lacks is he is sometimes shy about making more risky throws and trusting his receivers. He isn't a guy that will throw into double coverage even if there is a window. He seems to be better a that this year, but I don't think our first 3 opponents are the right ones to gage him or anyone on.
I actually think it's a reflection of the coaching Brad has been given. Under Folden and Coley, it was constantly repeated to not force anything, to throw it away and punt. It was drilled into his head from day one, to not take chances. I don't think he would have won the job his freshman year if he didn't buy in to that approach wholeheartedly. I think we're seeing him beginning to adjust to the post Folden mentality of bend don't break, death by a thousand cuts. I think Richt, while not wanting turnovers, is pushing him to trust what he sees and to just step up and throw the ball. Know when and where you can take chances and don't be afraid to thrown it. I think when you've been taught to be gun shy, it's harder to let go and take chances, than as opposed to teaching a gunslinger to reign it in.