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Way too early analysis - GT v. Alcorn
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<blockquote data-quote="Skeptic" data-source="post: 173196" data-attributes="member: 2175"><p>I agree to the [point of the dreaded "potential". ) The A backs did things on the edge we haven't done in years past, or that I can remember: the quickness, agility, burst speed. (I think it was Searcy turning right end with a move that reminded me of Thomas against FSU: a sudden burst through a hole that just didn't exist. Skov is a driving force in the middle, and Marshall, for one game anyway, is the quickest through the line than any B back since Dwyer. He got through small but open gaps into the clear. We'll see going forward but we're still a way from being superior at both positions. I saw some good blocks, a couple of decent blocks, and a few whiffs at the edge.</p><p></p><p>Unrelated but it is bugging me: GT opened the game with three straight plays out of conventional set: an A back slotted. The rocket toss and then what was setting up to be a triple option were run out of it. Then late in the game Matthew Jordan slotted right, came back in motion behind the B back, and Byerly ran the triple option from that set, to Jordan. I don't recall ever, ever, seeing that, and I wonder if Byerly's motion just before the snap was trying to get Jordan back into the set. Maybe it has been there but I don't recall it. Anybody?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Skeptic, post: 173196, member: 2175"] I agree to the [point of the dreaded "potential". ) The A backs did things on the edge we haven't done in years past, or that I can remember: the quickness, agility, burst speed. (I think it was Searcy turning right end with a move that reminded me of Thomas against FSU: a sudden burst through a hole that just didn't exist. Skov is a driving force in the middle, and Marshall, for one game anyway, is the quickest through the line than any B back since Dwyer. He got through small but open gaps into the clear. We'll see going forward but we're still a way from being superior at both positions. I saw some good blocks, a couple of decent blocks, and a few whiffs at the edge. Unrelated but it is bugging me: GT opened the game with three straight plays out of conventional set: an A back slotted. The rocket toss and then what was setting up to be a triple option were run out of it. Then late in the game Matthew Jordan slotted right, came back in motion behind the B back, and Byerly ran the triple option from that set, to Jordan. I don't recall ever, ever, seeing that, and I wonder if Byerly's motion just before the snap was trying to get Jordan back into the set. Maybe it has been there but I don't recall it. Anybody? [/QUOTE]
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Way too early analysis - GT v. Alcorn
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