- Messages
- 19,628
Some folks must have suppressed this memory. Unfortunately I remember distinctly how I felt.
Some folks must have suppressed this memory. Unfortunately I remember distinctly how I felt.
Q is one of the best athletes to play Aback that we have had. A former high school quarterback with excellent speed and change of direction but most of all, he is as someone noted the very definition of a PLAYMAKER.
Good observations. Also, 1st down was from the right hash mark, 3rd was from the left. So the left side of the field where JT was going was more densely populated from the start.If you watch Jet after the rocket toss on first down he was wide open for a throwback to him. CPJ probably saw that and filed it away for later. (For some reason UGA was not fooled on third down and Jet was covered.) Also on first down the BB stopped at the LOS and drew no coverage. On the third down call the BB continued on a pass pattern left into the end zone and drew coverage in the area Jet was moving toward. Notice the number of UGA defenders on each play in the area we wanted to throw to on third down. Maybe the BB difference in play (for whatever reason) unfortunately influenced the coverage on JET on third down, but even more noticeably all UGA LBs aggressively pursue the rocket toss on first down, but on third down a UGA LB was "on the lookout" for Jet and immediately spotted and chased him. It appears UGA was not looking for the throwback on first down but got clued in to look for it on third down.
Some folks must have suppressed this memory. Unfortunately I remember distinctly how I felt.
I'd like to remind us of one thing-- Qua actually executed the play as he had been coached.I absolutely love CPJ, but he does sometimes make really strange play calls. IMO, this was one where Qua, even if it was a designed option, proved himself smarter than the coach.
So I will modify what I originally said from Qua being smarter than CPJ to Qua being smart enough to do what he was told to do. Sadly, for various reasons, that is not always what players do. All the more credit to Qua for doing what he did. Needless to say, it was an AWESOME execution of the play as called.I'd like to remind us of one thing-- Qua actually executed the play as he had been coached.
When CPJ called that play, he told Qua "...not to force it. If it isn't there, pull it down and do anything other than throw an Interception. Just get all you can get and live to run one more play." Qua did as he was told, and it created what will go down as one of the most storied moments in Jackets football history.
What CPJ would say in all honesty was that, of course, Qua's execution and decision making that led to a TD was more than anyone expected. When he pulled it down and took off, he got way more out of it than was reasonable. Thank goodness.So I will modify what I originally said from Qua being smarter than CPJ to Qua being smart enough to do what he was told to do. Sadly, for various reasons, that is not always what players do. All the more credit to Qua for doing what he did. Needless to say, it was an AWESOME execution of the play as called.
Right, Qua actually makes two great plays. The first, which few fans talk about, is the decision not to throw the dadgum ball.What CPJ would say in all honesty was that, of course, Qua's execution and decision making that led to a TD was more than anyone expected. When he pulled it down and took off, he got way more out of it than was reasonable. Thank goodness.
Exactly. This.Right, Qua actually makes two great plays. The first, which few fans talk about, is the decision not to throw the dadgum ball.
These are the last three plays. Watch play 1 and then play 3... what gave the 3rd play away... why did 4 defenders stay on the backside?
He was a receiver. One of Austin twins, Lance if I remember right, was QB.
Didn't his high school coach say he should have been a 5* WR?Yep. Stand corrected. Still a great athlete.
I'm much rather see a handoff to Mills where our OL knocks the snot out of their DL and MLB, Dedrick trucks a safety, steps on his chest as he's doing it, then drags about 5 or 6 mutts several yards downfield before finally going down.CPJ needs to run this the first play this year against uga. Make them relive it, and put it in their mind for the rest of the game.