He had 7. I like the concept of having him on the goal line. with him in who even knows if the 99 yard "fumble" return happensWithout looking it up, I think Byerly had 5 or 6 rushing tds. It seems to me that it didn't even phase JT though. True team player
You know, its funny but I have had for quite some time now a strange flashback when I see JT run the triple option. In the clouded mists of time, I see Jamal (spelling?) Holloway running the Oklahoma wishbone with a hard running fullback named Steve Owens and a pair of fast as lightning halfbacks. Then it goes away and I realize what we have here is far better.We still have this kid for two more years, and he is only going to get better : )
That is all.
JeT took his game to a whole new level against FSU. I was so excited to watch him play in the OB, and somehow, he exceeded my expectations.
That juke on the TD run? That other TD run where he lasered focused on that pylon at ungodly speed? I knew that TD pass was TD before the camera switched angles just by the way he released the ball. The way he carried himself in the 2nd half reminded me of the swag Devin Hester has when he comes on to the field for a punt return...Just a player who knows that if there's a seam, he'll score.
Remember the look on JeT's face after the pump fake fumble against UGA? I think that was a defining moment for him. Ever since that play, JeT has played at a Heisman level. Really, we might have the best player in college football at QB - as you guys said - for the next 2 years.
Eulogy to follow.This kid is just unreal at running this offense.
But seriously, there is no question that of the four QBs running this offense, Thomas stands head and shoulders above the rest. Probably a different thread, but I think the one area Johnson can fairly be blamed for in his first six years was an inability to recruit a QB to run his offense. (What else he could have done on defense baffles me.)Eulogy to follow.
He looked like Superman on that play. That move happened so quickly it decieves the human eye. I wish we could slow down the film to a hundreth of a second at a time just so we could appreciate the magnitude of it. I am not sure there is another QB in the country that evades the sack right there. I meant it.The most important may have been the last touchdown against southern. I really don't think any other qb that we have had under CPJ gets away from the linebacker and without that, we could have ultimately lost. He escaped pressure so many times, with ease, on major plays, buying enough time to hit the open man or run. That is one of my favorite. dimensions that isn't talked about as much
The only thing I can remember seeing this year for the first time ever was the QB reverse, or counter QB draw, or whatever you want to call it. I think the others have been tried at different times, even if not sustained with regularity. We used to run a counter draw with the handoff going to Dwyer because he was the better runner (between he and Nesbitt). In this case, JT is the better runner (between he and any of our BBs) so he gets to keep the draw play. It is not that huge of a variation.But seriously, there is no question that of the four QBs running this offense, Thomas stands head and shoulders above the rest. Probably a different thread, but I think the one area Johnson can fairly be blamed for in his first six years was an inability to recruit a QB to run his offense. (What else he could have done on defense baffles me.)
But here is something I wish Boomer or another of the real football guys on the board would address: I think this year, from the mid-point on anyway, Thomas was entrusted with some serious variations to past QB play, whether it was counters, his footwork, the freeze option, that nifty little fake to one passing back and quick handoff to the other side in a kind of counter move, it was stuff I don't recall ever seeing before, at GT or Navy. Maybe with Tracy Ham at Georgia Southern, but I didn't see any of that. Am I imagining things? Or drinking too much Thomas koolaid?