I'd settle for Bill.Personally, the huskers winning 5-6 more games a year and playing in bowls would make me seriously ill. I would be pining for NC every year, and doing damage to my heart with high blood pressure.
I also could not afford the high ticket cost for the big championship, NC simi's and NC game
we are 1960's era K st. Hopefully Frost is our Jim Snyder.
I noticed that too but couldn't help but wonder if that ultimately hurts his NFL career. You don't get those same favorable matchups in the NFL.On a serious note, I enjoyed watching Burrow the past two games. He recognized one on one opportunities and threw the ball allowing for his receiver to make a play. So many college QB's look for guys who are open before delivering the ball. Having good receivers helps, but he did what he needed to do. It's a team game. Let your teammates do some work.
Not trying to be a smart a$$, but you don't do what he did statistically (TD's, completion %, total yards) without some serious talent. In listening to talking heads, he grasped the scheme quickly and can process incredibly fast. I still think a lot of his success was Joe Brady. Having a scheme designed around your talents didn't hurt. Neither did the talent around him.I noticed that too but couldn't help but wonder if that ultimately hurts his NFL career. You don't get those same favorable matchups in the NFL.
Teams with an excellent receiver have these opportunities with their #2 guys. When the Steelers had Antonio Brown, Juju Smith-Schuster had a ton of one on one opportunities and definitely took advantage of them. Now as a #1, Juju struggled mightily. He was injured which may have been the culprit so we'll see next year if he can be a legitimate Batman or just a really good Robin.I noticed that too but couldn't help but wonder if that ultimately hurts his NFL career. You don't get those same favorable matchups in the NFL.
Those are video game numbers. Amazing.Not trying to be a smart a$$, but you don't do what he did statistically (TD's, completion %, total yards) without some serious talent. In listening to talking heads, he grasped the scheme quickly and can process incredibly fast. I still think a lot of his success was Joe Brady. Having a scheme designed around your talents didn't hurt. Neither did the talent around him.
It will interesting watching how he does next year. See if he was a product of a perfect storm at LSU. His statistics were significantly better in 2019 than 2018. Looked like a completely different guy playing QB statistically....
Games/Attempts/Completions/Comp %/Yrsd attempt/Ave yards attempt/TD's/INT's/QB rating.
*2018
LSU
SEC
JR
QB
13
219
379
57.8
2894
7.6
7.9
16
5
133.2
*2019
LSU
SEC
SR
QB
15
402
527
76.3
5671
10.8
12.5
60
6
202.0
Joe Brady factor looks pretty positive.
Teams with an excellent receiver have these opportunities with their #2 guys. When the Steelers had Antonio Brown, Juju Smith-Schuster had a ton of one on one opportunities and definitely took advantage of them. Now as a #1, Juju struggled mightily. He was injured which may have been the culprit so we'll see next year if he can be a legitimate Batman or just a really good Robin.
Agree for sure.. I am just like everybody else, trying to wrap my head around his season after never looking that amazing prior. Maybe it is real and I am absolutely fine with that. I like the kid a lot and its a great story with hopefully a lot more chapters to be written. That said, if there are chinks in the armor, the NFL will find and expose them. It will be interesting to watch him over the next 5 years. Jameis Winston can put up playstation numbers but he's on the verge of losing his job because he throws open a lot of receivers which in turn, throws open a lot of safeties and cornerbacks.Not trying to be a smart a$$, but you don't do what he did statistically (TD's, completion %, total yards) without some serious talent. In listening to talking heads, he grasped the scheme quickly and can process incredibly fast.
Joe Brady factor looks pretty positive.