A game manager is someone that doesn't have the best abilities, so they are pretty much forced to run a ball control offense, attempting to reduce turnovers, while chewing the clock and keeping your defense off the field. A game manager isn't a game breaker, he doesn't have the ability to chuck a 45 yard strike anytime he drops back. Basically, a game manager is asked not to lose his team the game. Prime example of a game manager is Zac Lee and the role we tried to put him in, in 09. He wasn't too good at it, but the point is that we weren't asking him to make plays to win us the game. We were simply running an offense that wouldn't put him in a position to make costly mistakes, while our defense dominated.
The common theme with game manager quarterbacks is that in order for it to be successful, you must have a stout defense.
This is the best definition I would cite for a "game manager".
When it comes down to "what kind of quarterback do I want at Nebraska", I do not want a game-manager, I want a game-breaker. Someone that the defense has to account for at all times. Someone that can get his teamates involved and still be a threat himself. Someone that if the defense puts a spy on, or two spies, it will free another playmaker up on the field somewhere, and it's essentially a pick your posion of what you want to stop.
Just look at all the game-breaking quarterbacks we had in the past that defenses had to account for: Lord, Crouch, Frost, Frazier, Gill. Those are the types of quarterback we need. Granted, Lord was not the best thrower of the bunch, but he was a heullva athlete and our only option for quarterback with little talent around him. W
We need to get guys in recruiting that have "similar traits" to: Bubba Starling,. Carl Crawford, Donovan McNabb, Vince Young, Steve McNair type quarterbacks. We have Brion Carnes and we do go after dual threat quarterbacks, and I hope it stays that way.
A game manager would be Zac Lee, and Cody Green's role in 2010. A game manager may not get you that big play, but he won't lose big yards to make dumb plays that will cost you.
I think Taylor made a LOT of strides last year, and I was please to see him grow into the role. But, he's still "learning the position".
While defense may keep an eye on Taylor, he didn't have many game-breaking plays as I thought he would. He has absolutely amazing acceleration going north & south, but laterally, I don't think he has that same speed or awareness/acceleration. This is not a knock on Taylor, but just more of an observation. I would like to see him make plays with his feet on 3rd and 8 if no one is open. I want to see him scramble and get those yards, and get tough yards when needed. There were times he could have taken off and got the first down, instead of throwing a dangerous pass. I think he needs to work on his "open field" moves and making the first guy miss & I don't think that' gets talked about enough.
Some of that could be by design. He may have been told not to scramble as much because of the depth issue. He just doesn't look comfortable when no one is open and trys to find the first down with his legs, but rather, he forces passes
On the option game he seems hesitant, but I will give him some slack there, he probably hasn't ran a whole lot of option before. I think he needs to be more aggressive taking it up-field, and make the defense comitt to one or the other. But again that takes a ton of practice and experience, especially for someone that is very, very, new to the option game, more so than anything else.
When it comes to the zone read, and he keeps it up the middle, he is absolutely a magician, and I think one of the very best to hold the ball in the belly of the running back before pulling it out. A prime example of that is the Ohio State game, and what he did in 2010. He showed flashes of it in 2011, but no real long touchdown runs.
Which is why running a shotgun-spread style Florida or Oregon offense would be best suited to run, with I-Formation and Diamond sets mixed in. I hope we are headed that direction.
I don't want to turn this into a Taylor thread, but those are just my observations on what I see as Taylor the "Game manager" and how I want to see Taylor as the "Game-breaker".