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A couple more thoughts.
I was just looking at our secondary for a few minutes. Do you realize that EVERY starter on the chart has been in the program for at least 4 years, with 3 of them being 5 years? For each of these guys it will be year three in our current system. I like the way it is shaping up.
Milton and White may be the CB pair with the greatest combined speed in the nation. I can't think of a time in my history as a GT fan that we had two legit burners at CB at the same time. Combined with their experience and confidence from recent success, this speed should allow us to try some things on defense.
Golden, while not the fastest nor most physical S in the nation, might just be the most intelligent and instinctive. This kid studies film and has learned the game. He has great hands and obviously great return skills if he does pick one. Go back through last year in your mind. Every huge play this guy made, and there were a lot of them, were because he beat his guy to a spot that he knew the ball was going. Go through the inventory: pick against UVA in the EZ (check), game sealing pick in the EZ against UM (check), pick 6 against Clemmons that flipped the script (check), ball jarring tackle causing fumble on the option play against MSU that prevented any change in momentum. There are more, but you get my point. We need to apreciate what this guy does.
Demond has been around and he gets to go back to a position he is better suited for IMHO. He is a solid experienced guy.
Lynn Griffin is a very aggressive minded kid with a tenacious personality on the field. He doesn't quite have the speed of White or Milton, but his general attitude and lust for contact may suit him well at Nickel, where his proximity to the box and limited exposure to deep routes play to his strengths. During the scrimmages I have seen first hand, he was often hanging all over guys when the ball arrived. If he didn't break up the play, he made it a real tough catch.
Part of the reason this group has been as unheralded as they are is because of the blatant lack of a pass rush. There is a strong chance that will improve this season. If you project my analysis of this starter group (if correct) into the context of passers throwing a little before they are ready, or from a spot not of their choosing, good things should happen more often for GT.
I was just looking at our secondary for a few minutes. Do you realize that EVERY starter on the chart has been in the program for at least 4 years, with 3 of them being 5 years? For each of these guys it will be year three in our current system. I like the way it is shaping up.
Milton and White may be the CB pair with the greatest combined speed in the nation. I can't think of a time in my history as a GT fan that we had two legit burners at CB at the same time. Combined with their experience and confidence from recent success, this speed should allow us to try some things on defense.
Golden, while not the fastest nor most physical S in the nation, might just be the most intelligent and instinctive. This kid studies film and has learned the game. He has great hands and obviously great return skills if he does pick one. Go back through last year in your mind. Every huge play this guy made, and there were a lot of them, were because he beat his guy to a spot that he knew the ball was going. Go through the inventory: pick against UVA in the EZ (check), game sealing pick in the EZ against UM (check), pick 6 against Clemmons that flipped the script (check), ball jarring tackle causing fumble on the option play against MSU that prevented any change in momentum. There are more, but you get my point. We need to apreciate what this guy does.
Demond has been around and he gets to go back to a position he is better suited for IMHO. He is a solid experienced guy.
Lynn Griffin is a very aggressive minded kid with a tenacious personality on the field. He doesn't quite have the speed of White or Milton, but his general attitude and lust for contact may suit him well at Nickel, where his proximity to the box and limited exposure to deep routes play to his strengths. During the scrimmages I have seen first hand, he was often hanging all over guys when the ball arrived. If he didn't break up the play, he made it a real tough catch.
Part of the reason this group has been as unheralded as they are is because of the blatant lack of a pass rush. There is a strong chance that will improve this season. If you project my analysis of this starter group (if correct) into the context of passers throwing a little before they are ready, or from a spot not of their choosing, good things should happen more often for GT.