I wanted to show the difference between Regular Season/"Old" Mark Fletcher vs Playoff/"New" Fletcher. Open-field running has always been his biggest issue.
Here's my scouting report after his Freshman year (#1 isn't changing - but #2 is the key):
If I were coaching Fletcher the two things I'd have him work on are:
1) Use your stiffarm - a stiffarm should be one of the main weapons for a big RB. Fletcher never holds the ball in his left arm (legit not one time), so when he runs left, a stiff arm isn't even an option for him. Switching hands is an effectiveness thing, not a ball security thing.
2) Get upfield with a purpose - force = mass x acceleration. Fletcher absolutely kills his acceleration on a lot of runs, which negates his size. Quit coming to dead stops on your runs. Quit D'Andre Swift dead legging. Quit making multiple left/right cuts when facing a defender in the open field. Get upfield, keep your momentum/acceleration & win with power. Embrace your size.
These are 2 things under Fletchers control, regardless of blocking and play calling, that I think he needs to improve on.
Here's runs that show the difference:
REGULAR SEASON FLETCHER
STANFORD - 16 YD RUN
GRADE: D - This is one of the worst cuts ever. He's so locked in on the defender he doesn't even see he has a wide-open path to the endzone. Instead of running straight to the open space, he puts on the breaks and cuts under the defender. This kills his momentum (negates his size) and slows him down so the pursuit behind him catches & easily tackles him. It's not an F because he did truck the defender at the line of scrimmage.
USF - 38 YD TD
GRADE: C - He starts dancing soon as he gets in the open field. It's really awkward. He's straight up tackled himself in the open field multiple times trying to make these type of cuts. It's a C because it worked (against an outmatched opponent), but man....it's not pretty.
PLAYOFF FLETCHER
TEXAS A&M - 24 YD RUN
GRADE: B - At first you might think "he didn't do anything, he just ran straight into his own guy". But that's the whole point. Regular season Fletcher would've put on the breaks, tried to cut under #25 & gotten caught from behind for a 10 yd gain. Playoff Fletcher just runs straight to daylight for a 24 yd gain - no wiggle/cuts, keeps his momentum going, picks up an extra 5 yds after contact. It's a B because he carries the ball in his right hand so he can't stiff-arm the defender.
INDIANA - 57 YD RUN
GRADE: A - On this run - 2 times he avoids the temptation to be Regular Season Fletcher & cut under the defender. #1 at the 45 and #7 at the 50. But he keeps his head focused on the open field, and runs to space. Even if a defender did catch up to him, he can use his stiff-arm. This run made him a Cane legend.
TEXAS A&M - 56 YD RUN
GRADE: A+ - Bursts through the hole, beautifully manipulates the defender #4 by getting him to the outside of the WR block (shot out to CJ Daniels) before making a subtle cut back inside (not a sharp cut that knocks him off-balance) before stiff-arming #25 at the 40....and still stiff-arming him at the 50....still at the 40....before finally going down at the 30. Gets upfield with a purpose, great subtle manipulation/change of direction, then tops it off with a 30 yd stiff-arm. This is Fletcher's signature run.
Here's my scouting report after his Freshman year (#1 isn't changing - but #2 is the key):
If I were coaching Fletcher the two things I'd have him work on are:
1) Use your stiffarm - a stiffarm should be one of the main weapons for a big RB. Fletcher never holds the ball in his left arm (legit not one time), so when he runs left, a stiff arm isn't even an option for him. Switching hands is an effectiveness thing, not a ball security thing.
2) Get upfield with a purpose - force = mass x acceleration. Fletcher absolutely kills his acceleration on a lot of runs, which negates his size. Quit coming to dead stops on your runs. Quit D'Andre Swift dead legging. Quit making multiple left/right cuts when facing a defender in the open field. Get upfield, keep your momentum/acceleration & win with power. Embrace your size.
These are 2 things under Fletchers control, regardless of blocking and play calling, that I think he needs to improve on.
Here's runs that show the difference:
REGULAR SEASON FLETCHER
STANFORD - 16 YD RUN
GRADE: D - This is one of the worst cuts ever. He's so locked in on the defender he doesn't even see he has a wide-open path to the endzone. Instead of running straight to the open space, he puts on the breaks and cuts under the defender. This kills his momentum (negates his size) and slows him down so the pursuit behind him catches & easily tackles him. It's not an F because he did truck the defender at the line of scrimmage.
USF - 38 YD TD
GRADE: C - He starts dancing soon as he gets in the open field. It's really awkward. He's straight up tackled himself in the open field multiple times trying to make these type of cuts. It's a C because it worked (against an outmatched opponent), but man....it's not pretty.
PLAYOFF FLETCHER
TEXAS A&M - 24 YD RUN
GRADE: B - At first you might think "he didn't do anything, he just ran straight into his own guy". But that's the whole point. Regular season Fletcher would've put on the breaks, tried to cut under #25 & gotten caught from behind for a 10 yd gain. Playoff Fletcher just runs straight to daylight for a 24 yd gain - no wiggle/cuts, keeps his momentum going, picks up an extra 5 yds after contact. It's a B because he carries the ball in his right hand so he can't stiff-arm the defender.
INDIANA - 57 YD RUN
GRADE: A - On this run - 2 times he avoids the temptation to be Regular Season Fletcher & cut under the defender. #1 at the 45 and #7 at the 50. But he keeps his head focused on the open field, and runs to space. Even if a defender did catch up to him, he can use his stiff-arm. This run made him a Cane legend.
TEXAS A&M - 56 YD RUN
GRADE: A+ - Bursts through the hole, beautifully manipulates the defender #4 by getting him to the outside of the WR block (shot out to CJ Daniels) before making a subtle cut back inside (not a sharp cut that knocks him off-balance) before stiff-arming #25 at the 40....and still stiff-arming him at the 50....still at the 40....before finally going down at the 30. Gets upfield with a purpose, great subtle manipulation/change of direction, then tops it off with a 30 yd stiff-arm. This is Fletcher's signature run.
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