Thoughts on Brad Kaaya

Troycbullock - have you ever coached a QB before? You say he is slow in his progressions - How do you know what his progressions are? Are you saying he doesn't read coverage very well - are you sure they are focused on that or is he reading grass? Do you think he knows his pass pro very well? You mention a mesh route - What would be your typical progression on a mesh route? Not picking a fight just curious, you sound like your knowledgeable so I think a lot of us would be interested in this sort of insight.
 
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Kaaya also has had serious problems completing passes that arent towards the middle of the field consistently

but the main reason im not sold on Kaaya is he doesnt have an IT factor about him that allows him to make winning plays in pressure situations... lacks confidence, every time the 4th quarter comes he looks like he's lost in space.

Exactly. He reminds of Ryan Tannehill. So many Kaya Slurpers just like Tannehill slurpers at the fin forum. I bet ppl here though Jacory Harris was the next Joe Montana
 
Hackenburg is a perfect example of what can happen to you in year two when you don't work on your flaws. Hackenburg is an average QB who misses tons of throws he made last year. I want BK to avoid that.

man shut the **** up ****. you want Malaya to be like Winston and Cato when they are experienced qbs. Winston has been at fsu 3 years including redecorating so he could develop his game.

Cato is a senior has had plenty of time to develop and work in a college weight room. Hackenburg problem is trying to learn a new offense.

Everybody knows he has **** to work on he is a ****ing teenager. If he doesn't improve next year then you can complain.

Cato showed the "It" factor his freshman year. If he was at UM we'd be undefeated and that's not a knock to Kaya as he has time to improve.
 
Great Questions. Lets just say my experiences has helped me develop a conceptual understanding for the nuances for the game. Its hard to tell how slow Kaaya is with his progressions because he stares down receivers quite a bit. He also seems to throw to a predetermined spot. I have seen him throw flags and posts into coverage when underneath stuff ins are crosses are open. I have seen Herb, Coley and Dorsett wide open on comebacks while Kaaya throws the ball away to avoid sacks. When you look at the quality depth of our Wr's you have to wonder are all of them covered? In many of the replays I have seen, the answer is no. Mesh is similar to crossing routes. It is typically a delay or clearing play were the QB allow the Wr's to clear an area an have another WR coming in shallow into the voided area. This play takes time to develop and defense have to believe the QB is going the other way or else they will sit on it.
 
From what I have heard about a typical mesh - a QB would go thru his progressions something like this -high, mesh, back, mesh, back. High being the Y running the 10 corner, Z running an under mesh at 5 yrds, X running an over mesh at 6, H running a swing and the F back running a 1002 shoot. The mesh guys would sit in a hole vs zone and would keep running and build at the hashes vs man. The F of course would have to get a Roger or Louie call so the oline could identify the Mike. That is of course if the O-line is vertically setting. QB thought prosses obviously change with the coverage. For example on his 1st progression vs man would be something like this - the corner would run with the mesh and the Y would therfore have no under coverage, and the safety on top keeping leverage. In this case the QB would flatten the route out with his throw. And it would go on and on with the rest of his progressions. Does that sound right to you or am I off a little or a lot?
 
Depends on the formation and defense. The bottom line is these are the type of plays we do not run. Most of our plays are up the middle (15yrds seems & skinny posts) and on the outside. We have excellent talent (Berrios, Lewis) to run these plays but thety need time to develop so we don't run them often.
 
But i will say what do you expect he will not learn **** under coley, coley is nowhere near a college offensive cord he needs to be on the high school level asap
 
Lawson and for that matter Rozier both have wheels. They add different dimensions to the offense. We will truly be QB U again when we have three quality QB's capable of starting. They need to take a hard look at Stanley this year to add depth. Especially if Rozier doesn't look like he has the it factor.
 
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Sure, he has some flaws as a true freshman. He'll increase his core strength. Most importantly the game will speed up for him and his decisions will be much quicker. We tend to run too many verticals and not enough easy crossing and clearing routes.

Did you really mean to say that? I think you usually want the game to slow down for a guy. You make quicker decisions because the game appears to slow down.

LoL....you're right.
 
Kaaya has phenomenal yards per attempt considering how seldom we run the ball. If you check the 10 or so teams above us in yards per attempt, the consistent variable is they help the passing game by running at least 40 times per game. Only Colorado State is an exception. They run roughly the same amount as we do, 34 to 35ish, yet the yards per attempt are even higher. Florida State this year is really trying the one dimensional route, running barely 30 times per game, compared to 36 last season, yet Winston maintains excellent YPA at 8.5.

We really should run the ball at least 38 times per game to help out Kaaya and prevent opponents from confidently attacking our protection and formations, like last week, but that's a point I've made many times previously. At 34 we are really asking for fragility, and succeeding. Makes no sense, given our strengths.

Unlike other positions, college quarterbacks seldom improve their functional strength substantially. That happens later, early in the NFL for those who make it and can devote full time to their craft. I wouldn't expect Kaaya's frame and strength to change much in college. I remember pre-senior hype that Dorsey had gained weight and was markedly stronger. Didn't look like it at all. Then heading to the combine the next spring his agent conceded that Dorsey had been in the 185 range as a senior, and now was stuffing his face with protein shakes and everything else to get above the 200 barrier.

I don't doubt that Kaaya will regress next season. It's simply logical, after such absurdly high YPA as a freshman. The Stacy Coley comparison isn't bad. Very, very few athletes are ultra elite, so elite that the normal rules don't apply. The happy adjusters don't mean to be wrong when they make comical pronouncements that the sky is the limit, etc. They simply have a very poor grasp of probability and normalcy. This kid was a nice high school player but hardly a phenom like Peyton Manning. When you expect a 60 level performance and receive an 80, too many flawed handicappers assert that we're on our way to 90+. Far more often than not, that's not the way it works. There were reasons to expect the 60.

The lack of sense of urgency can be fixed. I hope it's fixed. That annoyed the heck out of me. Kaaya early in the season had no clue when the quarter was ending, and he couldn't find the play clock. James Coley had to babysit Kaaya to point out the play clock. At the game I attended in Blacksburg, Kaaya did his best to run out the clock in the second quarter and blow a field goal opportunity. Only Duke Johnson breaking free in the final seconds saved the scrutiny on that one. Then Kaaya was seemingly bewildered at the end of the Florida State game, acting as if we had an entire quarter instead of 3 minutes. I can see the Peyton Manning comparisons from a physical standpoint but Manning was always the sharpest and most advanced guy out there in terms of strategy and clock management.

I agree with your first point. Although I agree with your second point, Brad did cut weight. He certainly doesn't need to get bigger per say. I'd expect him to be in the neighborhood of 215 by his senior year. He can and should increase his core strength. As for your third point, it will be hard for him to improve his YPA. That's Kenny Dorsey type numbers. Where we need him to improve his 3rd down efficiency numbers, etc. As for your 4th point Brad was a late bloomer. He seems like a bright kid and by all accounts he is a hardworker. The kid will slow down for him.
 
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