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I think that it will be unexpected if any of the incoming freshmen don't redshirt (DB's, LB's.). What they will do, is make competition on the practice fields, the practice squad, the push for starting jobs, more intense - and that's how football teams get better.
There are two plays in that WVU game cut up that stand out to me right now as I write. One is play early on where we are bringing an overload pressure to the weakside ( I think - from memory) A/B gaps on the offensive line and Geno rolls out away from it on the snap and fires a ball back to the weakside skinny post where #16 is out there on an island in single coverage, and has gotten beaten badly on the route. He recovers to make a great tackle on the catch, but definitely one of those examples where somethign wasn't right in how he read the play and reacted off the line of scrimmage and into the route - don't think it was a pure speed, burst thing. On that play, my opinion from the film is that he should have known he was in single coverage on that side and should have done everything he could at the line of scrimmage to leverage that receiver out of that post position and running with him stride for stride off the line. Too much looking in the backfield at the snap... my opinion. He was a true frosh playing I think his first game at corner - to his defense.
THe second I'm thinking of, is a play where #7 on the other side, is beat on a post pattern. THis time, Geno was under pressure from the pass rush on the drop, and misfired. If the ball was on target, it's a TD. This to me, is again another problem with reading and reacting and communication/assignments, because #7 is better than that. #7 either thought he had help over the top from a safety on that route, or he simply got beat badly off the line. I go with the former rather than the latter. My guess, is that the veteran corner was correct in thinking he had help, and a rookie safety, or Jerome Junior, got caught playing run first, and looking in the backfield and wasn't where they were supposed to be to help on that post route. Defensive line did their job, and saved that TD.
And now I"m remembering another play, where #3 gets toasted for another post pattern at the goal line. Somethign wrong with the pass coverage in the backside of that defense again in the coverage shells.
I expect much better play from the safeties this year.
One last commment for now on that cut up. #16 was playing like a man possessed in the defensive backfield. Been a long time, since we had players roaming back there in the defense that brought the wood like he was doing and were tackling machines in open space and could diagnose and beat an offensive player to the punch. There's one playing in Oakland for the Raiders now. I expect a lot more of that from #40 and #16,and the players coming in behind them on the depth chart.
There are two plays in that WVU game cut up that stand out to me right now as I write. One is play early on where we are bringing an overload pressure to the weakside ( I think - from memory) A/B gaps on the offensive line and Geno rolls out away from it on the snap and fires a ball back to the weakside skinny post where #16 is out there on an island in single coverage, and has gotten beaten badly on the route. He recovers to make a great tackle on the catch, but definitely one of those examples where somethign wasn't right in how he read the play and reacted off the line of scrimmage and into the route - don't think it was a pure speed, burst thing. On that play, my opinion from the film is that he should have known he was in single coverage on that side and should have done everything he could at the line of scrimmage to leverage that receiver out of that post position and running with him stride for stride off the line. Too much looking in the backfield at the snap... my opinion. He was a true frosh playing I think his first game at corner - to his defense.
THe second I'm thinking of, is a play where #7 on the other side, is beat on a post pattern. THis time, Geno was under pressure from the pass rush on the drop, and misfired. If the ball was on target, it's a TD. This to me, is again another problem with reading and reacting and communication/assignments, because #7 is better than that. #7 either thought he had help over the top from a safety on that route, or he simply got beat badly off the line. I go with the former rather than the latter. My guess, is that the veteran corner was correct in thinking he had help, and a rookie safety, or Jerome Junior, got caught playing run first, and looking in the backfield and wasn't where they were supposed to be to help on that post route. Defensive line did their job, and saved that TD.
And now I"m remembering another play, where #3 gets toasted for another post pattern at the goal line. Somethign wrong with the pass coverage in the backside of that defense again in the coverage shells.
I expect much better play from the safeties this year.
One last commment for now on that cut up. #16 was playing like a man possessed in the defensive backfield. Been a long time, since we had players roaming back there in the defense that brought the wood like he was doing and were tackling machines in open space and could diagnose and beat an offensive player to the punch. There's one playing in Oakland for the Raiders now. I expect a lot more of that from #40 and #16,and the players coming in behind them on the depth chart.