Skeptic
Helluva Engineer
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It seems to me that over the years I have been following Johnson at GT -- which is all of them -- he has signed several QBs that at least were promising enough to warrant a scholarship but for whatever reason did not work out. He just signed another to a PWO status, which is a different kind of investment but still a commitment. But in every instance I can recall, looking at their self-posted recruiting tape from HS, not one of them ever took a snap from under center. Seems that the shotgun, the single wing, the spread, whatever one calls it, is the only offense of note in HS.
I played some QB in HS and hasten to say I was not that good. But it was under center for three years and in that time I tripped over the feet of more centers, pulling guards or tackles, fullbacks or halfbacks than I want to remember when we did not gee and haw together. Even in a simplified offense we spent an enormous amount of time on snap, exchange, footwork and just plain getting out of the way of each other. And there was far more time for an option decision.
Simply, I am curious as to what coaches look for in a QB candidate who has never put his hands under center, never started a step back before the ball was snapped, and never pivoted either way to get the ball in the right hand and his feet out of the way, and in GT's case, never had to make that first decision literally inside of a second. And is that the reason so many never pan out? I don't think I could run this offense. Anybody have a clue? (P.S. Saw that February marked the 50th year of Dodd's retirement as a coach, and finally the recognition that his famous belly series was the triple option.)
I played some QB in HS and hasten to say I was not that good. But it was under center for three years and in that time I tripped over the feet of more centers, pulling guards or tackles, fullbacks or halfbacks than I want to remember when we did not gee and haw together. Even in a simplified offense we spent an enormous amount of time on snap, exchange, footwork and just plain getting out of the way of each other. And there was far more time for an option decision.
Simply, I am curious as to what coaches look for in a QB candidate who has never put his hands under center, never started a step back before the ball was snapped, and never pivoted either way to get the ball in the right hand and his feet out of the way, and in GT's case, never had to make that first decision literally inside of a second. And is that the reason so many never pan out? I don't think I could run this offense. Anybody have a clue? (P.S. Saw that February marked the 50th year of Dodd's retirement as a coach, and finally the recognition that his famous belly series was the triple option.)