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The Case For Georgia Tech And The Option Offense
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<blockquote data-quote="Carober18" data-source="post: 174272" data-attributes="member: 1866"><p>I agree with this. And, I think it's probably not emotional as much as it is that a big factor in people's memories is the eye test. I think Nesbitt passed the eye test and clearly JT passes it pretty much every game. PJ had some enlightening quotes in the press conference the other day when he was asked about what games he watched. He essentially said he flipped the channels, watching games for entertainment purposes, and that you can only watch for entertainment purposes if you're just watching games on TV. Hinting at (and I think stating) the fact that you have to watch the broken down film to confirm whether someone is good or not. Unless one has done that with Tevin, JN and JT, then there's really no reasonable basis on which an assessment can be made except for... reasonable statistics, like PPD against decent teams. I will defer to Boomer and those who do the breakdown, because I do not, but the numbers speak for themselves except to the extent that there are 11 people on the field and it's hard to judge whether Nesbitt or others benefitted or were hurt by other players. I speculate that by far the most important thing a QB can do in this offense is make the right reads, and that the average fan does not know anything about how well a QB does that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Carober18, post: 174272, member: 1866"] I agree with this. And, I think it's probably not emotional as much as it is that a big factor in people's memories is the eye test. I think Nesbitt passed the eye test and clearly JT passes it pretty much every game. PJ had some enlightening quotes in the press conference the other day when he was asked about what games he watched. He essentially said he flipped the channels, watching games for entertainment purposes, and that you can only watch for entertainment purposes if you're just watching games on TV. Hinting at (and I think stating) the fact that you have to watch the broken down film to confirm whether someone is good or not. Unless one has done that with Tevin, JN and JT, then there's really no reasonable basis on which an assessment can be made except for... reasonable statistics, like PPD against decent teams. I will defer to Boomer and those who do the breakdown, because I do not, but the numbers speak for themselves except to the extent that there are 11 people on the field and it's hard to judge whether Nesbitt or others benefitted or were hurt by other players. I speculate that by far the most important thing a QB can do in this offense is make the right reads, and that the average fan does not know anything about how well a QB does that. [/QUOTE]
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The Case For Georgia Tech And The Option Offense
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