Griz Growler
Well-known member
While I think our qb's will get better, comparison's between freshman playing at the Big Sky level and future hall of fame qb's at the SEC level is a bit of a stretch.
Griz Growler said:While I think our qb's will get better, comparison's between freshman playing at the Big Sky level and future hall of fame qb's at the SEC level is a bit of a stretch.
Science doesnt support your babbling..................UMAlum said:Obviously a QB can improve his accuracy. Like any sport where a skill is honed ... accuracy and consistency with throwing the ball can be improved. Take golf as an example. There should be no doubt that a golfers accuracy and consistency driving the ball can be improved over time. The real question is how does it happen? Most of the time it takes more than a strong will and determination on the athletes part alone. It takes a good coach that understands the individual ... their swing flaws, etc. and then sets in motion a process to make the corrections (often small incremental changes over an extended time). A good QB coach can do this as well. It’s been done in the past so why not now?
UMAlum said:Obviously a QB can improve his accuracy. Like any sport where a skill is honed ... accuracy and consistency with throwing the ball can be improved. Take golf as an example. There should be no doubt that a golfers accuracy and consistency driving the ball can be improved over time. The real question is how does it happen? Most of the time it takes more than a strong will and determination on the athletes part alone. It takes a good coach that understands the individual ... their swing flaws, etc. and then sets in motion a process to make the corrections (often small incremental changes over an extended time). A good QB coach can do this as well. It’s been done in the past so why not now?
putter said:The only "concern" I have is the QB's we have running Pflu's offense. You saw how it should work with JJ...you have a QB that is a threat to run and an accurate passer. With TM you have a threat to run but not an accurate passer. With SSH you have a good passer but really no threat to run. IMO, Rosey needs to change the offense in the offseason to suit the QB's that Montana has or really work on the weaknesses that exist.
Raider said:UMAlum said:Obviously a QB can improve his accuracy. Like any sport where a skill is honed ... accuracy and consistency with throwing the ball can be improved. Take golf as an example. There should be no doubt that a golfers accuracy and consistency driving the ball can be improved over time. The real question is how does it happen? Most of the time it takes more than a strong will and determination on the athletes part alone. It takes a good coach that understands the individual ... their swing flaws, etc. and then sets in motion a process to make the corrections (often small incremental changes over an extended time). A good QB coach can do this as well. It’s been done in the past so why not now?
Because both of our current guys lack the basic skill-set and raw ability to make these type of drastic improvements, period. That is why the Cole Bergquist example was so poor. Yes, a player can improve, within the confines of their ability. Our guys are what they are at this point, sorry.
#6 is a different story. If he stays, he will be under center next year.
Raider said:Mike,
I could go on and on, but I’ll be brief because I already regret commenting.
1) You cannot teach arm strength, period
2) While this is arguable, you cannot teach anticipation
3) While you can slightly improve mechanics, your ceiling for improvement is very limited at this age.
4) For some players, the game moves very, very quickly. Some can slow it down. This is (was) JJ’s best attribute.
Spanky said:Mike: Did you say elite athletes?
ALPHAGRIZ1 said:Name one QB at any level that all of a sudden got accurate........................
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mtgriz said:ALPHAGRIZ1 said:Name one QB at any level that all of a sudden got accurate........................
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Kurt Warner - 1999. Went from two training camp cuts to stocking shelves at Kroger to quarterbacking a Super Bowl winning team that did a lot of damage through the air.
Warner was always an accurate QB........the reason he got cut was because the idiots in the NFL choose size and speed over talent all the time. Right now there are only 3 coaches in the NFL that seems to put the best players on the field regardless of size or speed.......and its no mistake that they win alot.mtgriz said:ALPHAGRIZ1 said:Name one QB at any level that all of a sudden got accurate........................
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Kurt Warner - 1999. Went from two training camp cuts to stocking shelves at Kroger to quarterbacking a Super Bowl winning team that did a lot of damage through the air.
Bear Pause said:The posters who are trying to say that an improved completion percentage proves that accuracy can be learned are drawing conclusions which are flawed. In many cases, the increased completion percentage comes from making better reads as the QB gains more experience, thus making throws which have a higher chance of being completed. This has nothing to do however with accuracy on a given throw.
With regard to TM and SSH, I do not think that either will ever be very accurate. But, they may improve their decision-making ability as to when and where to throw the ball. Both have serious flaws in their game which will preclude them from being the answer as a UM QB.
ALPHAGRIZ1 said:Science doesnt support your babbling..................UMAlum said:Obviously a QB can improve his accuracy. Like any sport where a skill is honed ... accuracy and consistency with throwing the ball can be improved. Take golf as an example. There should be no doubt that a golfers accuracy and consistency driving the ball can be improved over time. The real question is how does it happen? Most of the time it takes more than a strong will and determination on the athletes part alone. It takes a good coach that understands the individual ... their swing flaws, etc. and then sets in motion a process to make the corrections (often small incremental changes over an extended time). A good QB coach can do this as well. It’s been done in the past so why not now?
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stubbins said:Bear Pause said:The posters who are trying to say that an improved completion percentage proves that accuracy can be learned are drawing conclusions which are flawed. In many cases, the increased completion percentage comes from making better reads as the QB gains more experience, thus making throws which have a higher chance of being completed. This has nothing to do however with accuracy on a given throw.
smartest thing said on this thread....