Why one might actually WANT a QB rotation in OUR UNIQUE CIRCUMSTANCE:
- With young QB room with many guys still developing it is less clear who THE guy is.
- Due to development the guy who starts games 1-6 may not be the guy who gives you the best chance to win in game 7. But if you start the game 7 guy in game one to try and develop him faster via reps you first run the risk of shattering the kid's confidence or giving him a case of the yips he might not recover from. Second, if your mantra is competition is king and the game 1-6 guy outcompetes the game 7 guy in practice then doesn't that guy deserve to start? If the team sees you are playing a guy who doesn't give you the best chance to win now what message does that send to the team?
- THE BRIGHT LIGHTS. It's all well and good in practice but some guys can't replicate their practice success in games. And some guys who practice less effectively seem to become 'gamers' when thrown under the lights. How do you know which are which? And when guys are young and developing isn't it possible that their development may obfuscate the picture on whether they are a 'gamer' or wilt under the lights? Maybe once the develop their 'gamerness' is free to emerge.
- If you pick a guy to be THE guy and stick with him, what do you do if he isnt' successful? Stick with him no matter what? Sometimes guys benefit from watching from the sideline for a series or two. But you have to rotate QBs to do that. And if you stick with the guy no matter what and there is a guy in practice who is doing really well and you don't give him a chance what does the team think? Or maybe a back up gives you the better chance to win a specific game (example: Vad Lee rotated in vs UNC then ridden to the win). Vad wasn't the best QB the rest of the year, but he was the best QB against UNC. Easy to see how an inexperienced but uber-talented QB would give you the best chance vs a simple defensive scheme, and a steadier less talented, but less green QB might give you a better chance vs a more complicated D with exotic coverages and pressures.
We have a young QB room and that matters.
In a mature QB room it is usually clearer who THE guy is. Coaches know more firmly where a kid's ceiling might be, whether he has reached that ceiling, or whether it's likely he will ever reach that ceiling. In an older room typically more guys have experience under the bright lights. Leadership qualities in games and off the field are more established and evident. Development typically occurs at a slower rate in a more mature room because many guys have gone through the steep part of the curve already. So it is much easier to know which guy is the one guy you want to roll with.
Unless it's obvious who the starter should be I am not going to jump all over this staff for rotating guys. Last year people say why didn't we go with Grahm from day 1, he would be that much better now with more reps, etc. Look, I want one guy to be THE guy too. And you have to get from A to B. Crystal balls are 20/20. What if you start Grahm game 1 and his confidence gets shattered, he hadn't earned the start yet so you lose the team, etc. Maybe you get blow outs, Grahm doesn't develop and the team does worse than it did.
Now hopefully one guy is obviously THE GUY and we go forward with him. And I doubt this is the case. I feel we will see some rotation as the guys compete and develop until ultimately we find THE guy. It's a process, and I am ok with it.
Flame away.