So Gus should stop smoking the hippie lettuce and his throwing would improve?
Atlanta Griz1 said:Go back to following your glorified high school team.BigSkyBears said:Atlanta Griz1 said:One thing that is going to continue to be a huge problem for Gus is his propensity to throw a pass high over the receiver's head several times a game. This has been a consistent pattern for Brady, as I witnessed it in the fall scrimmages, as well as in the first too games. As any astute football fan knows, throwing high is a serious problem, especially against zone coverage. It leads to easy interceptions, like we witnessed on Saturday. If a QB is going to miss, you want him to miss low, not on an over-throw.
The problem is, many QBs never lose that propensity to over-throw receivers, and I am concerned that Gus will be one of them. In the NFL, Jeff George had that problem throughout his career, leading to lots of interceptions. Among the current NFL QBs, Andy Dalton has been plagued with the same problem. Just sayin'.
Let's hope those astute football fans know the difference between "too," and "two."
CDAGRIZ said:What is "consistantly?" It's not a word, so it must be something else.
BWahlberg said:Jordan Johnson gets too many passes batted by the D line;
"WE NEED A TALLER QB! HE'S TOO SHORT THIS WONT WORK!!!"
Brady Gustafson overthrows too much in one game;
"HE'S TOO TALL!! TALL GUYS ALWAYS OVERTHOW OMG GUYS I TOALLY KNOW ALL THERE IS TO FOOTBALL!!!"
Never change egriz, never change... Lol
Atlanta Griz1 said:CDAGRIZ said:What is "consistantly?" It's not a word, so it must be something else.
You are such a meathead. what are you, our resident English proctor? GFY. Stick to useless posts, cause you have no game in the football arena.
CDA = "Certified Dumb Ass"
Kind of difficult to do when half the passes are thrown before the receiver even makes his cut to GET open...Atlanta Griz1 said:The credo for any physician graduating from medical school is "first, do no harm". The same should be said for a QB. If 60% of his passes are on target, but he throws enough errant passes each game to allow interceptions, then he is not the answer. Don't throw the pass unless you KNOW the receiver is open, and on the same route you expect him to be. It will be very difficult to win if we keep turning the ball over at our current rate. Duh, huh?
I agree on the four INTs, but count the drops and his completion percentage goes way up...WAY up.billgrizfan said:57.3% and 4 INT's is not going to cut it. You can argue all you want to but we either have to give him throws he is capable of making or look elsewhere. I don't know what the answer is because I don't really know what our alternatives are but this just isn't going to get it done.
Grizzoola said:Grady, just aim for the numbers. If you're too high, he'll be able to reach it. If too low, he'll either catch it, or it'll be a dead ball. (Why am I not the Griz QB coach? Haha.)
Not to mention we likely win the game, otherwise.AZGrizFan said:I agree on the four INTs, but count the drops and his completion percentage goes way up...WAY up.billgrizfan said:57.3% and 4 INT's is not going to cut it. You can argue all you want to but we either have to give him throws he is capable of making or look elsewhere. I don't know what the answer is because I don't really know what our alternatives are but this just isn't going to get it done.
AZGrizFan said:Kind of difficult to do when half the passes are thrown before the receiver even makes his cut to GET open...Atlanta Griz1 said:The credo for any physician graduating from medical school is "first, do no harm". The same should be said for a QB. If 60% of his passes are on target, but he throws enough errant passes each game to allow interceptions, then he is not the answer. Don't throw the pass unless you KNOW the receiver is open, and on the same route you expect him to be. It will be very difficult to win if we keep turning the ball over at our current rate. Duh, huh?