The Wizard of Moz
Punishing This Air
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This is a BRAWNS TAWNWGAF
This is a BRAWNS TAWNWGAF
Wasn't able to watch the game so I only saw the highlights, but I thought his 3rd and 24 completion for 22 yards was his best throw of the game. He looked the defender off with his check down guy, then decisively fired the ball (absolute rocket of a throw) right into the area he vacated. Not surprised by the reports that he held it too long at times, but if Hue can coach more of plays like that out of him, we could have something really special on our hands.Watched the recap, great awareness in pocket, great arm, but on my phone appeared to stare guys down a bit
He kind of short arms the ball.His arm and movement in the pocket were a combination we've never seen. So there's that.
With all due respect, hes also playing with guys who mostly will not be in the NFL, so I think thats a poor excuse.
The only excuse is the vanilla defense, and every qb went through that. What Kizer did was head and shoulders above everyone else, enough to out him in the conversation.
4. So what didn't we see? I saw very straightforward back pedals without play action. We know Kizer did it from center for the Fighting Irish, but it's another layer of dictating action rather than just reading the defense. I want to see the coaches challenge him with play action and bootlegs next preseason game.
View: https://twitter.com/NathanZegura/status/896023135287377921I believe he is our starter once he figures out how to process and dictate the action against an NFL defense. So while it's fair to say his line is third stringers and he had two drops from his receivers, it really is all about he handles starting NFL defensive talent and most importantly a defensive coordinator who is scheming to take advantage of his lack of experience.
Here's what I saw from limited views last night - thanks for the link Huber:
1. Very at ease against the three and four man rush, scans the field and has clean footwork.
2. Mixed results once the defense sent one or two more rushers. He sailed a throw and slung an uncatchable ball or two when hurried. But other times he slid in the pocket and reset his feet against the blitz, kept his eyes down the field rather than thinking run.
3. His best throw was the touchdown because they sent six, he made the quick read and delivered a strike. If he does that consistently against the blitz, he's ready.
4. So what didn't we see? I saw very straightforward back pedals without play action. We know Kizer did it from center for the Fighting Irish, but it's another layer of dictating action rather than just reading the defense. I want to see the coaches challenge him with play action and bootlegs next preseason game.
5. What else didn't we see? He isn't going to make adjustments at the line of scrimmage and audible. When he faces a regular season defense, the opponent is going to try to confuse him with multiple zone blitz looks. He needs to be able to handle those complex looks. Who knows if any preseason game will prepare him for that, which is why I just don't see Kizer as the opener starter.
View: https://twitter.com/NathanZegura/status/896023135287377921
Not perfect, but he was pretty damn good with all the pressure/blitzes thrown at him.
Sent from my XT1635-02 using Tapatalk
View: https://twitter.com/NathanZegura/status/896023135287377921
Not perfect, but he was pretty damn good with all the pressure/blitzes thrown at him.
Sent from my XT1635-02 using Tapatalk
He kind of short arms the ball.