He drops off that bar w/o the slightest hesitation or favoring one leg.How's the leg doing?
How would you like to see that sumbi... running full speed right at you.Dude is huuuuge
How would you like to see that sumbi... running full speed right at you.
Maybe more of a mental issue than physical.The bones should be fully knitted by now, as they calcify more there's more strength in the bone structure.
It would look like that run he had at Pitt
I agree. Superior athleticism allows plays to succeed even when the blocking fails and the reads are wrong. I remember CPJ recalling a scoring play where our qb made the wrong read but still scored because he outran the defenders. During the play, coach was thinking out loud... "No, no, no.... YES!"More than any other, that run showed to me that even when teams know what we are going to do and have "figured out" how to defend us, we are still dangerous. Play calling and the athleticism of guys like Snoddy are going to give us an edge even when the other team is playing us well.
We were there the day he broke it. Happened directly in front of us, albeit across the field. My wife said, "We've got somebody down. I hope he gets up." I said, "It's Broderick...and his leg is broken. He's not going to get up." It was that obvious. There were tears all around us as the reality set in.
I heard Derrick Moore tell this week of how he got down on the field. Laid face down on his stomach so that he could talk with Broderick as trainers/doctor prepared him to leave the field. It was an intense experience, as we can only imagine.
To see how far he's come this fast is encouraging. Yes, we'll need to see him run before we get excited for next year. But for the human who got injured, I'm encouraged every time I see him moving around off crutches.