Thoughts on rosier sitting down with tvd?

Some of the best teachers are the players who weren't great at the sport. I have no problem with it all

Right, maybe Malik is the kind of guy who actually knows what he's doing, but just didn't really have the talent to execute at a high level.

I bet a lot of what he's working with TVD on is how to properly diagnose what the defense is doing in the read-option game. He was actually pretty good at that himself, especially in 2017.
 
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I vaguely recall Rosier admitted at one point to not taking film study serious until his last year or two. Hopefully he uses his own early shortcomings in preparation as a means to motivate young players to do things right early to maximize their talent.

Either way, I always love when Cane alumni put the time in with current Canes. That should be one of our finer selling points every year.
He’s getting paid for it.
 
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just because he sucks doesnt mean he doesnt know how to watch film and study the game. Got coaches who coach that have never played football in their lives but have knowledge of the game.
He got the most out of his talent. Beat VT, ND, and was the 1st QB to break thru against FSU that started the streak against them we're on now.
 
They're usually technicians, though. Malik was far from a technical QB. His release and footwork were out of sync half the time. So just seems a bit odd. The film watching is helpful no matter what, though. And, cool of Rosier to invest in the program either way. Also, Rosier had a gargantuan set of balls most of the time, so hopefully that inspires TVD.
I will never forget that moment at Doak. the crowd was roaring, the band was playing, the noles were doing the stupid arm chant **** and Malik "Big Balls" Rosier comes out of the time out engaging the crowd to be even louder. see below at 2:34:40. can't watch that enough

perhaps Mark Richt's best playing at Miami.

 
Pretty dumb thread, and I'm not dunking on you Brock, but this should be completely moot. Nobody should have any issue with this in the slightest. Malik has turned to coaching since his playing days ended, and the fact that he's working with our kids should be applauded, not questioned.

And as many others in this thread have said, a TON of average or worse players have become elite coaches. As a matter of fact, the majority of great coaches were NOT elite players. Sean McVay played WR at the other Miami for 3 years and caught 39 passes and never scored a TD. I'd say he's got a pretty good understanding of the game. Good for Malik for taking the time to help, and good for TVD for accepting the help. I think it speaks volumes about both kids. This is what Miami SHOULD be.


Matt Rhule was just a special teams player at Penn State, LaVarr Arrington knew right away when he got to Penn State that Rhule would be a coach one day. He’s a **** good one too.
 
They're usually technicians, though. Malik was far from a technical QB. His release and footwork were out of sync half the time. So just seems a bit odd. The film watching is helpful no matter what, though. And, cool of Rosier to invest in the program either way. Also, Rosier had a gargantuan set of balls most of the time, so hopefully that inspires TVD.
I bet you Malik's footwork and release on air was probably pretty solid. It is a different case when you are under duress and have a 270-pound defensive end trying to knock you to Mars.

I could still teach a kid how to successfully hit a golf ball mechanically. I haven't pick up a golf in 5 years. I was a 7 when I stopped playing. If I went to the range I'd like our kids who went to TopGolf back in August.
 
I will never forget that moment at Doak. the crowd was roaring, the band was playing, the noles were doing the stupid arm chant **** and Malik "Big Balls" Rosier comes out of the time out engaging the crowd to be even louder. see below at 2:34:40. can't watch that enough

perhaps Mark Richt's best playing at Miami.


Thanks for posting that. Going to watch that whole game. If we could have lured Richt away 5 years prior, might have had something.
 
Matt Rhule was just a special teams player at Penn State, LaVarr Arrington knew right away when he got to Penn State that Rhule would be a coach one day. He’s a **** good one too.
Though he is far more heralded, I think of King the same way. I think he would make a good coach. I don't really know why I feel it but I do.
 
Rosier literally said he didnt watch film his first 2-3 years at miami....and now hes inserting himself into someone leses success. **** that
 
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Pretty dumb thread, and I'm not dunking on you Brock, but this should be completely moot. Nobody should have any issue with this in the slightest. Malik has turned to coaching since his playing days ended, and the fact that he's working with our kids should be applauded, not questioned.

And as many others in this thread have said, a TON of average or worse players have become elite coaches. As a matter of fact, the majority of great coaches were NOT elite players. Sean McVay played WR at the other Miami for 3 years and caught 39 passes and never scored a TD. I'd say he's got a pretty good understanding of the game. Good for Malik for taking the time to help, and good for TVD for accepting the help. I think it speaks volumes about both kids. This is what Miami SHOULD be.
I was giving rosier praise for this man
 
Rosier literally said he didnt watch film his first 2-3 years at miami....and now hes inserting himself into someone leses success. **** that
You think that is his motivation? Rosier was also very candid about it. I doubt the kid ever thought he was going to play let alone start. That in its own right is a lessons learned and something he can pass on any kid he is mentoring. I posted Malik is instructing in Orlando. Good for him. I hope he makes a gazillion dollars. He wasn't a great fit for what Mark was running, but the kid gave his all. Despite the **** the fanbase gave the kid, he still loves his alma mater.
 
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