1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:02,560 Speaker 1: All right, rolling into the four o'clock out, I want 2 00:00:02,560 --> 00:00:05,200 Speaker 1: to remind you that the best value in golf is 3 00:00:05,280 --> 00:00:08,200 Speaker 1: back for another year. Yes, indeed, is the Around the 4 00:00:08,200 --> 00:00:10,760 Speaker 1: Sound Golf Pass. I have been a golf pass holder 5 00:00:10,880 --> 00:00:14,800 Speaker 1: for many, many many moons offers nine rounds of golf 6 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:19,600 Speaker 1: at Whitehorse, Lakeland Village, Avalon Golf Links, Port Ludlow, Glenn Eagle, 7 00:00:19,720 --> 00:00:23,919 Speaker 1: the Cedars at Dungeons, Sudden Valley Golf Course, bar Run, Highlander, 8 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:28,560 Speaker 1: and sun Country, all for just two nineteen. In addition 9 00:00:28,600 --> 00:00:32,600 Speaker 1: to those rounds, courses are offering some comeback specials as well. 10 00:00:32,640 --> 00:00:34,080 Speaker 2: They're unique to their courses. 11 00:00:34,120 --> 00:00:38,000 Speaker 1: So it's a perfect holiday gift for the golfer in 12 00:00:38,040 --> 00:00:41,000 Speaker 1: your life, or maybe a perfect holiday gift for yourself. 13 00:00:41,159 --> 00:00:44,680 Speaker 1: Just go to Seattle Golfpass dot com and snap them 14 00:00:44,760 --> 00:00:47,440 Speaker 1: up while they last. All right, we spent the first 15 00:00:47,640 --> 00:00:51,479 Speaker 1: hour talking NFL football. It's four a into the world 16 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:53,920 Speaker 1: of the Huskies. I was over there a couple hours 17 00:00:53,960 --> 00:00:58,320 Speaker 1: ago listening to the coordinators speak. They had a couple 18 00:00:58,320 --> 00:01:01,000 Speaker 1: of players that they brought out to to talk to 19 00:01:01,080 --> 00:01:02,600 Speaker 1: the media. 20 00:01:02,720 --> 00:01:04,720 Speaker 2: Desnt Roebuck, Alex McLoughlin. 21 00:01:04,959 --> 00:01:06,920 Speaker 1: No DeMont Williams today, but That's kind of where I 22 00:01:06,959 --> 00:01:10,080 Speaker 1: want to go with you, Hugh, is just the performance 23 00:01:10,120 --> 00:01:10,880 Speaker 1: of the quarterback. 24 00:01:10,880 --> 00:01:12,440 Speaker 2: And we'll start just kind of open ended. 25 00:01:13,319 --> 00:01:18,080 Speaker 1: Let's just evaluate what you saw from DeMont Williams in 26 00:01:18,200 --> 00:01:21,760 Speaker 1: his first full season as a starter, second overall season. 27 00:01:22,880 --> 00:01:27,960 Speaker 3: Well, you see an electric athlete that has a very 28 00:01:28,040 --> 00:01:33,360 Speaker 3: compact throwing motion with a relatively live arm, that is 29 00:01:33,360 --> 00:01:37,480 Speaker 3: a playmaker in a lot of different ways. But I 30 00:01:37,480 --> 00:01:40,800 Speaker 3: think his challenge is going to be the drop that 31 00:01:40,880 --> 00:01:44,640 Speaker 3: he had from and we've talked about a number of times. 32 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:48,120 Speaker 3: We defined the good teams in the conferences and the 33 00:01:48,160 --> 00:01:51,480 Speaker 3: top twenty five defenses, and then the Huskies five wins 34 00:01:51,520 --> 00:01:54,520 Speaker 3: were of teams that were in the bottom twenty out 35 00:01:54,560 --> 00:01:57,480 Speaker 3: of sixty seven Power five. Right, all five wins were 36 00:01:57,480 --> 00:02:01,280 Speaker 3: against defense in the bottom twenty. And so we said 37 00:02:01,320 --> 00:02:06,200 Speaker 3: his expected points average per dropback, which has the highest 38 00:02:06,200 --> 00:02:08,720 Speaker 3: correlation of any quarterbacks that you can find, he had 39 00:02:08,760 --> 00:02:12,920 Speaker 3: a point seven drop which was number one of all 40 00:02:13,120 --> 00:02:19,000 Speaker 3: power for quarterbacks, and then his pass efficiency dropped us 41 00:02:19,440 --> 00:02:23,720 Speaker 3: seventy two point seven that was number two. So I 42 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:25,200 Speaker 3: think that would be a goal. He's got to play 43 00:02:25,200 --> 00:02:29,200 Speaker 3: better against the good teams. And one thing that I 44 00:02:29,240 --> 00:02:32,200 Speaker 3: think is really a factor here, Dick. It's a little 45 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:34,240 Speaker 3: bit hard to describe on the radio, so let's make 46 00:02:34,280 --> 00:02:37,560 Speaker 3: this interactive with you and me. But it's important enough 47 00:02:37,560 --> 00:02:39,600 Speaker 3: to bring it in because you're asking me as a 48 00:02:39,680 --> 00:02:44,080 Speaker 3: quarterback to identify things that are not just minutia, are 49 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,920 Speaker 3: central to a performance. And this is what I'm going 50 00:02:47,960 --> 00:02:51,920 Speaker 3: to focus on the depth of Demond Williams from the 51 00:02:51,960 --> 00:02:53,359 Speaker 3: line of scrimmage. 52 00:02:53,480 --> 00:02:54,160 Speaker 2: Got me, yep? 53 00:02:54,880 --> 00:02:57,920 Speaker 3: How far he drops? Yeah, So when he's in shotgun, 54 00:02:58,200 --> 00:03:03,520 Speaker 3: which he usually is, his toes at five yards. Now 55 00:03:03,560 --> 00:03:05,920 Speaker 3: some are it heals it five yards, but his toes 56 00:03:05,919 --> 00:03:09,399 Speaker 3: are at five yards, And then how far he's dropping 57 00:03:09,560 --> 00:03:13,280 Speaker 3: back and the method in style with which he does it, 58 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:15,959 Speaker 3: and what depth does that get to him? Because in 59 00:03:16,320 --> 00:03:19,800 Speaker 3: a playbook, any playbook, you're going to have an odd 60 00:03:19,880 --> 00:03:23,560 Speaker 3: number of steps because you're as a regardless of your 61 00:03:23,639 --> 00:03:26,320 Speaker 3: left handed or right handed, you're if you're right hand, 62 00:03:26,360 --> 00:03:27,800 Speaker 3: we'll just talk about a right handed and you go 63 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:30,920 Speaker 3: three step drop is right foot, left foot, right foot right, 64 00:03:31,080 --> 00:03:34,240 Speaker 3: got me, and a five step is right left, right, 65 00:03:34,520 --> 00:03:37,120 Speaker 3: left right, Okay, So so it's always an odd number 66 00:03:37,120 --> 00:03:39,600 Speaker 3: and of course seven step. So the question is that 67 00:03:39,720 --> 00:03:44,280 Speaker 3: what depth are you? And then what's your inclination to 68 00:03:44,320 --> 00:03:48,040 Speaker 3: come up in the pocket? So that so where are you? 69 00:03:48,080 --> 00:03:51,280 Speaker 3: And it's important for two reasons. Number one, how long 70 00:03:51,320 --> 00:03:54,480 Speaker 3: it takes the football to get to the target and 71 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:58,080 Speaker 3: number two how easy does it make make it on 72 00:03:58,120 --> 00:04:00,960 Speaker 3: the offensive tackles? Who would they want to have the 73 00:04:01,040 --> 00:04:05,280 Speaker 3: defensive ends as they run around, the offensive tackles would 74 00:04:05,360 --> 00:04:07,640 Speaker 3: like to push you around. And the defensive end has 75 00:04:07,640 --> 00:04:09,760 Speaker 3: got to like turn a tighter radius because it's like, oh, 76 00:04:09,800 --> 00:04:12,400 Speaker 3: the quarterback is stepping up in the pocket. I can't 77 00:04:12,400 --> 00:04:16,200 Speaker 3: get If the quarterback is not stepping up into the pocket, then. 78 00:04:16,480 --> 00:04:18,960 Speaker 2: The offensive line is kind of pushing him right and 79 00:04:19,000 --> 00:04:19,880 Speaker 2: into the quarterback. 80 00:04:19,920 --> 00:04:25,680 Speaker 3: Then so let's just say so let's say hypothetically, if 81 00:04:25,760 --> 00:04:28,240 Speaker 3: you throw, So let's talk about the first one, the 82 00:04:28,320 --> 00:04:31,640 Speaker 3: ball getting to the target. When the ball gets to 83 00:04:31,640 --> 00:04:35,840 Speaker 3: the target early, you can beat defenders. Right if the 84 00:04:35,880 --> 00:04:38,280 Speaker 3: ball gets to the target earlier. You're looking at these 85 00:04:38,320 --> 00:04:41,480 Speaker 3: zone defenders. They want to bat the ball down. It's 86 00:04:41,520 --> 00:04:43,440 Speaker 3: a game of inches. How many times have you watched 87 00:04:43,440 --> 00:04:46,120 Speaker 3: you watch enough football? How many times do you see 88 00:04:46,120 --> 00:04:49,520 Speaker 3: a defender just barely get a finger on a ball 89 00:04:49,560 --> 00:04:51,880 Speaker 3: and get a pass breakdown right. 90 00:04:51,960 --> 00:04:54,840 Speaker 2: The interception and overtime to Hurts last night. 91 00:04:55,080 --> 00:04:59,400 Speaker 3: Yeah, and so I made a comment with you and 92 00:04:59,480 --> 00:05:03,280 Speaker 3: Softy kind of it sounded like an offhanded comment. I 93 00:05:03,279 --> 00:05:06,240 Speaker 3: actually put a lot of calculation to it. It's not hard. 94 00:05:06,400 --> 00:05:10,320 Speaker 3: I said, imagine if you had the defenders had tennis 95 00:05:10,400 --> 00:05:14,400 Speaker 3: rackets in each hand. Tennis racket is twenty seven inches, 96 00:05:14,640 --> 00:05:17,960 Speaker 3: but that's not beyond the length of your fingers because 97 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:20,719 Speaker 3: you gotta grab it. So on average, the tennis racket 98 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:23,720 Speaker 3: is about nineteen and a half inches longer than. 99 00:05:23,960 --> 00:05:25,480 Speaker 2: What you would reach. Got me. 100 00:05:27,200 --> 00:05:30,440 Speaker 3: If a quarterback is a yard and a half further back, 101 00:05:31,680 --> 00:05:34,200 Speaker 3: then so we're gonna have two variables in this, okay, 102 00:05:34,320 --> 00:05:36,920 Speaker 3: regardless of where it is. Let's say, when is it 103 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:39,640 Speaker 3: eight yards from the line deep and one's at nine 104 00:05:39,680 --> 00:05:43,560 Speaker 3: and a half by being a yard and a half deep, 105 00:05:44,520 --> 00:05:47,480 Speaker 3: and then you say, what's the velocity of the ball. Well, 106 00:05:47,520 --> 00:05:49,720 Speaker 3: I'll give you some velocities at the combine. Jordan Love 107 00:05:49,880 --> 00:05:53,080 Speaker 3: was fifty four miles an hour, Jalen Hurts fifty five, 108 00:05:53,160 --> 00:05:57,599 Speaker 3: Russell Wilson was fifty five, Dak Prescott fifty five, Mitched 109 00:05:57,920 --> 00:06:01,320 Speaker 3: Trubisky fifty one, Perty fifty two let's get let's be 110 00:06:01,440 --> 00:06:04,880 Speaker 3: generous and just go fifty five miles an hour. You 111 00:06:04,920 --> 00:06:08,760 Speaker 3: go a mile and a half or a yard and 112 00:06:08,760 --> 00:06:12,240 Speaker 3: a half deeper, and you throw it at fifty five 113 00:06:12,279 --> 00:06:15,840 Speaker 3: miles an hour. A defender running at twenty miles an hour, 114 00:06:16,080 --> 00:06:18,160 Speaker 3: and now some defenders are up at twenty one to 115 00:06:18,160 --> 00:06:23,160 Speaker 3: twenty two. Let's just say twenty miles an hour. That is, 116 00:06:23,240 --> 00:06:26,200 Speaker 3: you're right at that nineteen twenty inch difference. 117 00:06:26,279 --> 00:06:29,520 Speaker 1: You're giving them go go, gadget arms basically because you're 118 00:06:29,520 --> 00:06:30,240 Speaker 1: throwing the football. 119 00:06:30,240 --> 00:06:33,360 Speaker 3: I want you to imagine all the defenders that their 120 00:06:33,520 --> 00:06:37,279 Speaker 3: their arms are at the length of their ankles. Okay, 121 00:06:37,720 --> 00:06:40,360 Speaker 3: and now you'd say what, but it's not. I don't 122 00:06:40,360 --> 00:06:42,560 Speaker 3: want you to or holding tennis rackets. Well, if you're 123 00:06:42,560 --> 00:06:44,200 Speaker 3: holding two tennis rockets, that's going to. 124 00:06:44,200 --> 00:06:44,760 Speaker 2: Slow you down. 125 00:06:44,800 --> 00:06:48,000 Speaker 3: No, I want you to imagine defenders that are just 126 00:06:48,040 --> 00:06:50,000 Speaker 3: as fast and just as quick, and just as agile, 127 00:06:50,000 --> 00:06:52,560 Speaker 3: and just as their ability to drive on the football 128 00:06:53,240 --> 00:06:56,840 Speaker 3: as as if they had Longs's arms at tennis racket. 129 00:06:56,880 --> 00:06:59,880 Speaker 3: This is an enormous difference. And when you watch them 130 00:06:59,880 --> 00:07:02,640 Speaker 3: on Williams what he does with his steps, he takes 131 00:07:02,640 --> 00:07:04,760 Speaker 3: a cheap step with his left foot the first one. 132 00:07:04,800 --> 00:07:07,560 Speaker 3: You can slow this down, anybody, if you got this DVR. 133 00:07:07,960 --> 00:07:10,600 Speaker 3: He goes left foot first, and then he takes a 134 00:07:10,640 --> 00:07:16,520 Speaker 3: hop with his left foot, so he goes left, left, right, left, right, 135 00:07:16,640 --> 00:07:19,880 Speaker 3: And then when he gets back in the pocket, he 136 00:07:20,040 --> 00:07:25,160 Speaker 3: is routinely getting to eleven yards deep and ten yards 137 00:07:25,400 --> 00:07:28,600 Speaker 3: and I'm measuring from where the ball is. I'll go 138 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:32,800 Speaker 3: and I don't just do the round to the nearest yard. 139 00:07:32,800 --> 00:07:36,080 Speaker 3: I'll go like a third of where the ball is. 140 00:07:36,480 --> 00:07:38,120 Speaker 3: Half you know, it's like the thirty seven and a 141 00:07:38,120 --> 00:07:40,280 Speaker 3: half yard line, the thirty seven and a third, okay, 142 00:07:40,880 --> 00:07:42,960 Speaker 3: And then I'll stop right when he throws the ball 143 00:07:43,280 --> 00:07:45,800 Speaker 3: or where he stepped up. I'll just say, where's the 144 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:47,360 Speaker 3: center of his body? Where's his crops? 145 00:07:47,480 --> 00:07:47,800 Speaker 2: Got it? 146 00:07:47,880 --> 00:07:50,280 Speaker 3: And and you look at them, and he is typically 147 00:07:50,480 --> 00:07:53,640 Speaker 3: at nine and a half to ten yards deep, and 148 00:07:54,440 --> 00:07:55,040 Speaker 3: go ahead. 149 00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:55,800 Speaker 2: I was just gonna ask that. 150 00:07:55,840 --> 00:07:57,800 Speaker 1: I mean, I can just hear people drive around right 151 00:07:57,840 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 1: now screaming at their radios. Why is an this being 152 00:08:00,720 --> 00:08:03,520 Speaker 1: coached out of him? Then, I mean, if you know this, 153 00:08:03,880 --> 00:08:07,600 Speaker 1: I would hope that coaches making millions of dollars a 154 00:08:07,640 --> 00:08:08,680 Speaker 1: year would know this may. 155 00:08:08,520 --> 00:08:10,440 Speaker 3: Be a second let me let me give you a 156 00:08:10,440 --> 00:08:13,280 Speaker 3: fourth place in just the first half of the Oregon 157 00:08:13,400 --> 00:08:16,960 Speaker 3: game where that manifested. He goes up ten thirty nine 158 00:08:17,000 --> 00:08:20,240 Speaker 3: to go in the first quarter. If you can watch this, 159 00:08:20,360 --> 00:08:22,760 Speaker 3: if you have the Oregon game, he's got a post 160 00:08:22,760 --> 00:08:27,400 Speaker 3: wheel concept to the left. Now, the route on the 161 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:29,440 Speaker 3: on the wheel is poor. It's a bad angle, it's 162 00:08:29,480 --> 00:08:31,080 Speaker 3: too flat. It should be more up the field. But 163 00:08:31,160 --> 00:08:34,760 Speaker 3: that point, notwithstanding, the ball is snapped on the eighth 164 00:08:35,000 --> 00:08:39,839 Speaker 3: on the eighteen yard line. You could be critically say 165 00:08:39,880 --> 00:08:45,000 Speaker 3: seventeen and a half. He he demand gets back to 166 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:48,640 Speaker 3: his crotch is at six and a half the center 167 00:08:48,679 --> 00:08:52,559 Speaker 3: of his body, so he is eleven and a half, 168 00:08:52,640 --> 00:08:55,320 Speaker 3: you know, eleven to eleven and a half yards deep. 169 00:08:55,920 --> 00:09:00,200 Speaker 3: Now on that play the Oregon played at Tampa two 170 00:09:00,320 --> 00:09:03,400 Speaker 3: too deep, and then the middle guy of the underneath 171 00:09:03,400 --> 00:09:08,200 Speaker 3: the fenders is deeper, so he has got the read. 172 00:09:08,240 --> 00:09:12,520 Speaker 3: If you're coaching him, hey, dude, you know turn it off, don't. 173 00:09:12,600 --> 00:09:15,760 Speaker 3: The post wheel is dead against that coverage. Right now, 174 00:09:15,800 --> 00:09:17,960 Speaker 3: you've got Desmond Roebuck sitting right in front of you, 175 00:09:18,600 --> 00:09:21,960 Speaker 3: and Desmond Roebuck is sitting over the ball at the 176 00:09:21,960 --> 00:09:26,320 Speaker 3: twenty five yard line, and he's taking a long time. 177 00:09:27,600 --> 00:09:30,880 Speaker 3: He's too deep in the pocket to have been able 178 00:09:30,920 --> 00:09:33,280 Speaker 3: if he wants to get that little quick checkdown. That 179 00:09:33,360 --> 00:09:36,520 Speaker 3: defender is going to close in the manner. Now you 180 00:09:36,520 --> 00:09:38,000 Speaker 3: say he wasn't going to be twenty miles an hour. 181 00:09:38,040 --> 00:09:39,480 Speaker 3: Maybe he doesn't have a tennis rack in the hands, 182 00:09:39,520 --> 00:09:41,240 Speaker 3: but he's got a racketball racket. 183 00:09:41,040 --> 00:09:41,760 Speaker 2: Like his arms. 184 00:09:41,920 --> 00:09:46,280 Speaker 3: We just extended defender's arms a long way. Okay, that's one. Now, 185 00:09:46,320 --> 00:09:51,480 Speaker 3: he had great feet later in the quarter on a 186 00:09:51,520 --> 00:09:54,560 Speaker 3: good call by jetfish Man, a man beater, and he's 187 00:09:54,600 --> 00:09:57,560 Speaker 3: got again Desmond Roebuck primary receiver, and was called a 188 00:09:57,600 --> 00:10:00,880 Speaker 3: now slant and his crotches six and a half the 189 00:10:00,880 --> 00:10:02,880 Speaker 3: center of his body is six and a half yards 190 00:10:02,920 --> 00:10:06,079 Speaker 3: from this and and that's good. That's exactly what I 191 00:10:06,120 --> 00:10:08,080 Speaker 3: want to But the rush is kind of in his 192 00:10:08,120 --> 00:10:10,040 Speaker 3: face and he sky mails. 193 00:10:09,760 --> 00:10:13,400 Speaker 2: It because he can't. Roebuck would have needed a tennis 194 00:10:13,440 --> 00:10:15,560 Speaker 2: racket himself just to bat the balls because he is 195 00:10:15,559 --> 00:10:17,320 Speaker 2: that because he's not deep enough and he can't see. 196 00:10:17,400 --> 00:10:20,199 Speaker 3: We got this writ that that's the that's the inference 197 00:10:20,240 --> 00:10:26,000 Speaker 3: I'm making. Yes, okay, So third play, third down on 198 00:10:26,080 --> 00:10:28,280 Speaker 3: a third and third and eight and a half, third 199 00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:32,000 Speaker 3: and nine, and uh, they're going they get a pick 200 00:10:32,960 --> 00:10:35,960 Speaker 3: for Raydon Vines bright They get a nice pick. They 201 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:40,000 Speaker 3: get Bright Vines bright On back in the flat left. 202 00:10:40,320 --> 00:10:42,880 Speaker 3: He's going three step, three step, But I put in 203 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:45,720 Speaker 3: quotes because his three steps is really a five step 204 00:10:45,800 --> 00:10:49,840 Speaker 3: because the left left memory I said in a playbook, 205 00:10:50,000 --> 00:10:52,559 Speaker 3: you're it's always an odd number because they assume your 206 00:10:52,600 --> 00:10:55,160 Speaker 3: first your your your first step is with your right foot. 207 00:10:55,200 --> 00:10:58,160 Speaker 3: He goes left left, then right, left right, and then 208 00:10:59,120 --> 00:11:01,760 Speaker 3: when there isn't really a lot of pressure when he 209 00:11:01,840 --> 00:11:04,240 Speaker 3: hits his back foot, he kind of bounces back because 210 00:11:04,280 --> 00:11:07,160 Speaker 3: he doesn't like the pressure that there is. He throws 211 00:11:07,200 --> 00:11:09,240 Speaker 3: in the less flat, but because he's bounced back, he's 212 00:11:09,280 --> 00:11:12,640 Speaker 3: got no he's got no velocity on the ball because 213 00:11:12,760 --> 00:11:15,520 Speaker 3: his inertia is going the opposite way. He throws the 214 00:11:15,640 --> 00:11:18,199 Speaker 3: balls on the right hash it's a long throw out 215 00:11:18,240 --> 00:11:21,280 Speaker 3: to the left flat, which is very late, and it's 216 00:11:21,440 --> 00:11:23,280 Speaker 3: it's floating. And so now you don't get the run 217 00:11:23,320 --> 00:11:24,960 Speaker 3: after the catch. There would have been run after the 218 00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:27,520 Speaker 3: catch if you stab it on him early, So you 219 00:11:27,520 --> 00:11:28,600 Speaker 3: don't get the run after the catch. 220 00:11:28,600 --> 00:11:35,360 Speaker 2: And then the last one, I'll mention. Uh, we'll see that. Oh, 221 00:11:36,320 --> 00:11:36,840 Speaker 2: I'm sorry. 222 00:11:37,760 --> 00:11:40,240 Speaker 1: Sorry, I mean we get the point. I mean, you 223 00:11:40,280 --> 00:11:42,600 Speaker 1: don't have to give us another illustration. Let's get let's 224 00:11:42,600 --> 00:11:43,760 Speaker 1: get to the question at hand. 225 00:11:43,880 --> 00:11:47,120 Speaker 3: Okay, so, yeah, there's one where he dropped his center 226 00:11:47,160 --> 00:11:47,840 Speaker 3: of the body. 227 00:11:48,720 --> 00:11:50,400 Speaker 2: Oh, oh, I got it. I'm sorry. 228 00:11:50,400 --> 00:11:52,079 Speaker 3: It was late, one fifty one to go in the 229 00:11:52,280 --> 00:11:54,600 Speaker 3: second quarter. I apologize. I had lost my notes. Okay, 230 00:11:54,600 --> 00:11:56,760 Speaker 3: they're down thirteen to nothing. You're trying to now they 231 00:11:56,840 --> 00:11:59,480 Speaker 3: end up getting a score, right, But he drops back 232 00:12:00,040 --> 00:12:02,560 Speaker 3: all snapped at the thirty eight and a half from Oregon. 233 00:12:03,120 --> 00:12:05,959 Speaker 3: He goes all the way to the fifty, so his 234 00:12:06,080 --> 00:12:08,839 Speaker 3: back foot hits at eleven and a half yards, and 235 00:12:08,880 --> 00:12:12,559 Speaker 3: then he when he throws the ball, the center of 236 00:12:12,640 --> 00:12:14,319 Speaker 3: his body is at forty eight and a half, so 237 00:12:15,440 --> 00:12:18,240 Speaker 3: he is ten yards from the lion of scrimmage. Well, 238 00:12:18,280 --> 00:12:22,559 Speaker 3: the left tackle gets beat and Demon's arm gets hit, 239 00:12:22,640 --> 00:12:25,040 Speaker 3: the ball flutters, an Oregon defender gets two hands on 240 00:12:25,080 --> 00:12:26,120 Speaker 3: the ball, should have been intercepted. 241 00:12:26,160 --> 00:12:27,120 Speaker 2: He drops an interception. 242 00:12:27,640 --> 00:12:30,679 Speaker 3: Had he been a maybe a yard and a half 243 00:12:30,800 --> 00:12:32,920 Speaker 3: up close to the lion of scrimmage, that's a more 244 00:12:32,960 --> 00:12:37,080 Speaker 3: favorable angle. So those are four plays where the depth 245 00:12:37,120 --> 00:12:42,600 Speaker 3: of the quarterback, in my judgment, is materially impacting the 246 00:12:42,679 --> 00:12:46,280 Speaker 3: offense four plays in one half, and there's others where 247 00:12:46,280 --> 00:12:49,319 Speaker 3: you could say it affected it, maybe not as drastically. 248 00:12:49,440 --> 00:12:55,920 Speaker 1: So is the is the coaching staff not fixing it 249 00:12:56,000 --> 00:12:59,320 Speaker 1: because they think that if he wasn't that deep in 250 00:12:59,360 --> 00:13:02,520 Speaker 1: the pocket we've had, we'd have even more issues because 251 00:13:02,520 --> 00:13:03,959 Speaker 1: of his height and he can't see. 252 00:13:04,280 --> 00:13:09,280 Speaker 3: Yeah, probably, they probably probably. Uh, Look, I'm not in there. 253 00:13:09,280 --> 00:13:10,520 Speaker 3: I don't want to speak for them, and I'm not 254 00:13:10,600 --> 00:13:13,840 Speaker 3: in their heads. I think that there's a way. And 255 00:13:13,920 --> 00:13:15,480 Speaker 3: so I told you. I went back and I watched 256 00:13:15,480 --> 00:13:19,400 Speaker 3: Fernanda Mendoza. I had already watched tape of him. Today 257 00:13:19,480 --> 00:13:21,440 Speaker 3: wasn't the first time I watched tape, but today I 258 00:13:21,480 --> 00:13:23,839 Speaker 3: put on. I watched the entire tape of him against 259 00:13:23,880 --> 00:13:29,480 Speaker 3: Ohio State the other night. And he is routinely at 260 00:13:29,520 --> 00:13:32,200 Speaker 3: at the seven and a half eight and and he 261 00:13:32,400 --> 00:13:36,240 Speaker 3: when he's in his drop, his his hips are lower. 262 00:13:36,600 --> 00:13:38,960 Speaker 3: He's he's in a throwing position ready to go to 263 00:13:39,240 --> 00:13:42,400 Speaker 3: because because a quarterback will be instructed. Look, you can 264 00:13:42,480 --> 00:13:46,839 Speaker 3: take your deep drop if the if the defense tells 265 00:13:46,880 --> 00:13:50,079 Speaker 3: you to to throw to the deep but be prepared 266 00:13:50,120 --> 00:13:52,600 Speaker 3: to abort your drop, get your feet in the ground, 267 00:13:52,600 --> 00:13:55,079 Speaker 3: and throw quickly to the checkdown if you know you're 268 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:58,600 Speaker 3: not going to have anything. Fernando Mendoza is much more now. 269 00:13:58,640 --> 00:14:01,360 Speaker 3: I'm holding him to probably the Heisman Trophy winner and 270 00:14:01,400 --> 00:14:03,520 Speaker 3: maybe a you know, a top five pick in the draft. 271 00:14:03,559 --> 00:14:07,199 Speaker 2: I get that. But Je Fish the other days was. 272 00:14:07,160 --> 00:14:11,480 Speaker 3: Talking about how Heisman UH or a first round draft 273 00:14:11,520 --> 00:14:14,880 Speaker 3: pick type guys wouldn't do any better against uh the 274 00:14:14,920 --> 00:14:17,040 Speaker 3: top teams. Well, that is not true. We talked about 275 00:14:17,040 --> 00:14:22,000 Speaker 3: that uh the other day. That's just uh, factually false, 276 00:14:22,080 --> 00:14:25,760 Speaker 3: that assertion. But when you look at at the state 277 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:30,880 Speaker 3: of readiness where Mendoza is in the pocket, he's he 278 00:14:30,960 --> 00:14:33,040 Speaker 3: wants he's comfortable in that seven to eight and a 279 00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:34,840 Speaker 3: half yard range. 280 00:14:34,640 --> 00:14:37,000 Speaker 2: Because he's six fall on huh, because he's six. 281 00:14:38,080 --> 00:14:41,400 Speaker 3: Now, we're not going to make demon six five. But 282 00:14:42,160 --> 00:14:45,280 Speaker 3: what what what I'm saying is is that we can 283 00:14:45,360 --> 00:14:48,280 Speaker 3: have him better in this regard. Okay, we can we 284 00:14:48,320 --> 00:14:51,360 Speaker 3: can say, like, hey, we can have drills where there's 285 00:14:51,400 --> 00:14:55,160 Speaker 3: got you practice having visual chatter in your face over 286 00:14:55,200 --> 00:14:57,400 Speaker 3: and over and over again. Force him to get up 287 00:14:57,440 --> 00:15:02,000 Speaker 3: in there like you'd be surprised how hard coaching can 288 00:15:02,040 --> 00:15:04,560 Speaker 3: get a guy. I've heard coaches, you know, just say 289 00:15:04,640 --> 00:15:06,680 Speaker 3: you gotta get bad faster, you gotta back faster. Guys go, 290 00:15:06,800 --> 00:15:08,720 Speaker 3: I can't get faster, Yes you can, and then all 291 00:15:08,720 --> 00:15:11,480 Speaker 3: of a sudden, two months later you go, wow, droppers faster, 292 00:15:11,960 --> 00:15:16,040 Speaker 3: like if you demand it, and and and what I 293 00:15:16,040 --> 00:15:19,440 Speaker 3: think somebody needs to do at Washington is show him 294 00:15:19,480 --> 00:15:22,400 Speaker 3: the tape. Look at how much deeper he is on 295 00:15:22,440 --> 00:15:25,000 Speaker 3: a consistent basis. I just talked about a half of 296 00:15:25,040 --> 00:15:29,920 Speaker 3: football in one game. Show him like, this is okay 297 00:15:30,080 --> 00:15:34,600 Speaker 3: against UC Davis, This is okay against Purdue, this is okay. 298 00:15:34,960 --> 00:15:38,560 Speaker 3: But when you start going against the teams, would would 299 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:41,320 Speaker 3: it be a safe assertion that Ohio State has and 300 00:15:41,320 --> 00:15:46,400 Speaker 3: and Michigan and Oregon have quicker athletes than Purdue and 301 00:15:48,720 --> 00:15:55,359 Speaker 3: every guy basically, yeah, the difference between the the best defenses, 302 00:15:55,520 --> 00:15:59,480 Speaker 3: it's not the size, it's the speed, the team speed. 303 00:15:59,800 --> 00:16:04,120 Speaker 3: So that hurts him when he goes to scramble because 304 00:16:04,200 --> 00:16:08,680 Speaker 3: he can't he's not as elusive. But it's also hurting 305 00:16:08,800 --> 00:16:13,440 Speaker 3: him because these are better defenders. They can react to 306 00:16:13,440 --> 00:16:16,080 Speaker 3: the ball. You lose the run after the catch because 307 00:16:16,120 --> 00:16:19,520 Speaker 3: the ball is arriving later. And then it also impacts 308 00:16:19,720 --> 00:16:23,080 Speaker 3: how he's reading where he says, is he open, Well, 309 00:16:23,280 --> 00:16:28,720 Speaker 3: he's turning down open receivers on occasion because he says, oh, 310 00:16:28,760 --> 00:16:30,400 Speaker 3: that defender will break on the ball. 311 00:16:30,600 --> 00:16:31,600 Speaker 2: Well, that defender will. 312 00:16:31,520 --> 00:16:34,040 Speaker 3: Break on the ball because you're ten yards deep, right, 313 00:16:34,840 --> 00:16:37,000 Speaker 3: if you were a couple of yards short, you would 314 00:16:37,000 --> 00:16:38,960 Speaker 3: instinctively know, oh, I can get that in there. 315 00:16:39,400 --> 00:16:40,680 Speaker 2: So I think it's. 316 00:16:40,520 --> 00:16:42,360 Speaker 3: An issue, but I think it's an issue that he 317 00:16:42,360 --> 00:16:45,160 Speaker 3: can improve upon. He's only nineteen years old, right, but 318 00:16:45,280 --> 00:16:50,680 Speaker 3: I think it is absolutely not a tertiary issue, not 319 00:16:50,760 --> 00:16:54,120 Speaker 3: a secondary issue. This is a primary issue that will 320 00:16:54,160 --> 00:16:58,240 Speaker 3: affect his quarterbacking, not just for the Husky's but in 321 00:16:58,240 --> 00:17:02,160 Speaker 3: the future. And I'll close with this. Ed mentioned two 322 00:17:02,160 --> 00:17:05,000 Speaker 3: guys that he wants to compare. It says last year 323 00:17:05,040 --> 00:17:09,119 Speaker 3: he goes Kyler Murray and Jayden Daniels. He goes and 324 00:17:09,400 --> 00:17:12,159 Speaker 3: Jed says, we're gonna break out the tape, I mean 325 00:17:12,240 --> 00:17:15,920 Speaker 3: the Cardinal tape and the Commander tape, and we're gonna 326 00:17:15,960 --> 00:17:18,040 Speaker 3: see how they're using them. That's what Jed said in 327 00:17:18,080 --> 00:17:21,040 Speaker 3: the offseason last year. So he's just saying, Hey, we're 328 00:17:21,080 --> 00:17:23,879 Speaker 3: just looking at what guys do for Dumont. Is he 329 00:17:23,960 --> 00:17:28,040 Speaker 3: going to be a Kyler Murray Oklahoma Heisman winner or 330 00:17:28,280 --> 00:17:31,199 Speaker 3: is he going to be Dorian Thompson Robinson who had 331 00:17:31,200 --> 00:17:33,639 Speaker 3: a damn good career through for ten thoy seven hundred 332 00:17:33,720 --> 00:17:37,920 Speaker 3: yards multiple and he was second second team All Packed 333 00:17:37,960 --> 00:17:41,560 Speaker 3: ten a couple of years and the Bruins went eight 334 00:17:42,720 --> 00:17:44,640 Speaker 3: and four one year in ninety three is last couple 335 00:17:44,680 --> 00:17:48,160 Speaker 3: of years. So are you Dorian Thompson Robinson or Kyler Murray. 336 00:17:48,200 --> 00:17:50,520 Speaker 3: If you're Kyler Murray, we're all gonna have a parade 337 00:17:50,560 --> 00:17:52,320 Speaker 3: for you because you're gonna win the Heisman. You're gonna 338 00:17:52,359 --> 00:17:53,639 Speaker 3: you know, and you got a chance to win a 339 00:17:53,720 --> 00:17:57,360 Speaker 3: national championship. That's the comparison that all of us want. Right, 340 00:17:57,560 --> 00:18:02,920 Speaker 3: you meet Jed Fish right, but he is going to 341 00:18:03,000 --> 00:18:05,760 Speaker 3: have to make some improvements to be more like Kyler 342 00:18:05,840 --> 00:18:08,399 Speaker 3: Murray and less like Dorian Thompson Robbins. 343 00:18:08,160 --> 00:18:11,000 Speaker 1: A couple questions. I'm not done chewing on this with you. 344 00:18:11,119 --> 00:18:12,960 Speaker 1: We'll come back and talk about in the next segment. 345 00:18:12,960 --> 00:18:15,840 Speaker 1: On ninety three point three KJFM, we were talking about 346 00:18:16,080 --> 00:18:18,119 Speaker 1: you were talking about the pocket depth and I kind 347 00:18:18,160 --> 00:18:19,919 Speaker 1: of want to get into the protection a little bit. 348 00:18:19,960 --> 00:18:23,960 Speaker 1: I mean in the eight wins, Demon Williams was sacked 349 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:28,120 Speaker 1: ten times, like one point two sacks per game, less 350 00:18:28,160 --> 00:18:32,080 Speaker 1: than in the four losses he was sacked seventeen times, 351 00:18:32,680 --> 00:18:37,520 Speaker 1: so a fourfold increase in sacks in those games. Obviously 352 00:18:37,760 --> 00:18:41,879 Speaker 1: you're being playing better teams. It seems like a pretty 353 00:18:41,880 --> 00:18:45,680 Speaker 1: egregious jump though, from one time a game to over 354 00:18:45,800 --> 00:18:50,520 Speaker 1: four times a game. Did did they move the pocket enough, 355 00:18:50,520 --> 00:18:53,480 Speaker 1: did they boot enough? Or was it too much? Drop 356 00:18:53,560 --> 00:18:55,480 Speaker 1: back Demon Williams this season. 357 00:18:55,560 --> 00:18:58,760 Speaker 3: Well, I think there's a limit to how much you 358 00:18:58,840 --> 00:19:02,360 Speaker 3: can move the pocket because you kind of run out 359 00:19:02,400 --> 00:19:06,199 Speaker 3: of pass schemes. All the defenders are flowing to the 360 00:19:06,240 --> 00:19:09,320 Speaker 3: sideline because the receivers have to have outbreaking routes. You 361 00:19:09,359 --> 00:19:12,800 Speaker 3: don't you don't design any plays where the quarterback, even 362 00:19:12,800 --> 00:19:16,000 Speaker 3: a right handed quarterback, you don't design plays where where 363 00:19:16,320 --> 00:19:18,040 Speaker 3: uh you're breaking back across. 364 00:19:18,160 --> 00:19:22,280 Speaker 1: There's one exception, the Russell Wilson boot deep over right. 365 00:19:22,680 --> 00:19:27,240 Speaker 3: Yeah, I mean Penix Penix hit that first play of 366 00:19:27,320 --> 00:19:30,720 Speaker 3: the Apple Cup at Pollman. You know, it's been in 367 00:19:30,760 --> 00:19:34,680 Speaker 3: the playbook for a long time. You see h Jedfish 368 00:19:34,680 --> 00:19:36,720 Speaker 3: has it in the playbook. In fact, they tried to hit. 369 00:19:37,040 --> 00:19:40,399 Speaker 3: They called that play. Vervines Bright going away from the 370 00:19:40,440 --> 00:19:44,399 Speaker 3: Lake against Oregon, that that play. But you're in that case, 371 00:19:44,440 --> 00:19:47,120 Speaker 3: you're you're starting to dash, but then you set up 372 00:19:47,680 --> 00:19:52,239 Speaker 3: and the protection is is created so that you have 373 00:19:52,600 --> 00:19:54,800 Speaker 3: an opportunity to set up and throw back to the left. 374 00:19:54,800 --> 00:19:57,840 Speaker 3: But as far as staying on the move, no, And 375 00:19:58,000 --> 00:20:01,239 Speaker 3: you know, like Ohio State they had guys where they 376 00:20:01,600 --> 00:20:06,760 Speaker 3: played a five down front, a double eagle where they 377 00:20:06,800 --> 00:20:10,280 Speaker 3: would have four guys to be able to stop the 378 00:20:10,400 --> 00:20:14,480 Speaker 3: run and then the fifth away from the fake the 379 00:20:14,600 --> 00:20:17,480 Speaker 3: end could just come up the field because they were 380 00:20:17,560 --> 00:20:21,359 Speaker 3: sound in their other gaps and so there was a 381 00:20:21,400 --> 00:20:26,040 Speaker 3: plan to be able to stop Demand in the pocket. 382 00:20:26,320 --> 00:20:28,840 Speaker 1: I know you had a huge concern at the beginning 383 00:20:28,840 --> 00:20:32,600 Speaker 1: of the season, rightfully, so you told us about this 384 00:20:32,720 --> 00:20:36,720 Speaker 1: in non conference play about Demand getting killed out there. 385 00:20:37,560 --> 00:20:40,320 Speaker 2: And he made it through. He made it through the season. 386 00:20:40,359 --> 00:20:40,920 Speaker 2: We don't know. 387 00:20:41,080 --> 00:20:45,320 Speaker 1: We're not one certain how healthy Demand Williams is was 388 00:20:45,440 --> 00:20:48,600 Speaker 1: all year long. There were times when I was like, hey, 389 00:20:48,640 --> 00:20:51,320 Speaker 1: he doesn't look as explosive as he usually looks. But 390 00:20:52,160 --> 00:20:55,479 Speaker 1: he was out there every game this season and almost 391 00:20:55,520 --> 00:20:59,600 Speaker 1: every snap this season. Did Demand and or Jed do 392 00:20:59,680 --> 00:21:02,960 Speaker 1: a better job protecting him from injury than they did 393 00:21:03,160 --> 00:21:06,119 Speaker 1: last season, or did the Huskies just get lucky not 394 00:21:06,240 --> 00:21:07,520 Speaker 1: having demon get rocked. 395 00:21:07,760 --> 00:21:09,560 Speaker 3: Well, they had too many free runners for sure. That 396 00:21:09,920 --> 00:21:13,720 Speaker 3: had been My contention is that there's a there's not 397 00:21:14,000 --> 00:21:17,840 Speaker 3: enough attention placed on getting a hat on a hat 398 00:21:17,880 --> 00:21:20,600 Speaker 3: and having a real plan for an overload. You know, 399 00:21:20,640 --> 00:21:24,440 Speaker 3: from a quarterback perspective, you know, you got to know 400 00:21:24,480 --> 00:21:26,119 Speaker 3: why are you in a five out protection? Okay, I 401 00:21:26,160 --> 00:21:28,880 Speaker 3: only got five offensive lineman you know, three to one 402 00:21:29,320 --> 00:21:31,800 Speaker 3: two to the other side. If it's a six man 403 00:21:31,880 --> 00:21:35,000 Speaker 3: protection like most as a general rule, the center is 404 00:21:35,000 --> 00:21:37,600 Speaker 3: going to go one way and the running back or 405 00:21:37,640 --> 00:21:39,720 Speaker 3: the tight end, whoever's involved in protection, they're going to 406 00:21:39,760 --> 00:21:41,359 Speaker 3: go the other way. So I got three three to 407 00:21:41,600 --> 00:21:43,639 Speaker 3: block three on each side. If they bring a fourth, 408 00:21:43,640 --> 00:21:46,359 Speaker 3: then I've got to throw hot or I gotta i 409 00:21:46,400 --> 00:21:50,960 Speaker 3: gotta redirect the protection and take four to one side 410 00:21:51,000 --> 00:21:53,879 Speaker 3: two to the other, in which case I can only 411 00:21:53,960 --> 00:21:56,760 Speaker 3: handle two to the weeks to the two side. If 412 00:21:57,040 --> 00:21:58,800 Speaker 3: a third time, I got to get hot, Like you've 413 00:21:58,800 --> 00:22:02,000 Speaker 3: got to go through that every single time. And I 414 00:22:02,040 --> 00:22:04,680 Speaker 3: don't think that they they were sound. I still don't 415 00:22:04,720 --> 00:22:08,040 Speaker 3: think that their sound in terms of preventing free runners 416 00:22:08,040 --> 00:22:11,840 Speaker 3: coming at the quarterback. The idea that well, our quarterback 417 00:22:11,880 --> 00:22:15,000 Speaker 3: has really has got a lot of juice. That's that's 418 00:22:15,040 --> 00:22:19,920 Speaker 3: our escape, our answer to pressure. I think that's that's 419 00:22:19,960 --> 00:22:25,359 Speaker 3: not a recipe for continued success, uh, nor for health. 420 00:22:25,640 --> 00:22:27,240 Speaker 3: I'm a little bit surprised that he made it. 421 00:22:27,280 --> 00:22:27,639 Speaker 2: I mean, he so. 422 00:22:27,840 --> 00:22:28,560 Speaker 3: I'll tell you one thing. 423 00:22:28,760 --> 00:22:30,840 Speaker 2: He he's a lot of hard hits. He's tough. 424 00:22:31,040 --> 00:22:33,359 Speaker 1: Saw that as freshman year. I mean, he got planted 425 00:22:33,359 --> 00:22:34,840 Speaker 1: against Penn State in Oregon. 426 00:22:34,880 --> 00:22:36,000 Speaker 2: He kept Yeah, I did well. 427 00:22:36,040 --> 00:22:39,080 Speaker 3: He had eleven free runners in seventeen dropbacks against Penn State. 428 00:22:39,520 --> 00:22:43,399 Speaker 3: Eleven And you know whether he made a miss or 429 00:22:43,440 --> 00:22:45,880 Speaker 3: whether you know eventually they're going to hunt you down. 430 00:22:45,920 --> 00:22:48,560 Speaker 3: But the point is is, I'm looking at these numbers. 431 00:22:48,600 --> 00:22:54,280 Speaker 3: These numbers are are undebatable. Demon Williams had the highest drop, 432 00:22:54,680 --> 00:22:58,600 Speaker 3: the most drop of any quarterback in power football between 433 00:22:58,640 --> 00:23:02,600 Speaker 3: the difference good opponents and poor opponents. He had the 434 00:23:02,640 --> 00:23:07,880 Speaker 3: second highest drop in pass efficiency. Those numbers cannot be disbated. 435 00:23:07,960 --> 00:23:09,719 Speaker 3: The only way you can beat me on the argument 436 00:23:10,160 --> 00:23:13,480 Speaker 3: is to say those releve those numbers aren't relevant, or 437 00:23:13,520 --> 00:23:15,879 Speaker 3: to say that you've got other numbers that are that 438 00:23:15,960 --> 00:23:19,240 Speaker 3: are that supersede them? Okay, what are the other numbers 439 00:23:19,240 --> 00:23:23,080 Speaker 3: that could supersede? See them? What Jed would probably say 440 00:23:23,320 --> 00:23:28,240 Speaker 3: if he was in this conversation, you say, yes, demand's 441 00:23:28,280 --> 00:23:31,680 Speaker 3: got to be better against the best teams, the whole 442 00:23:31,760 --> 00:23:34,000 Speaker 3: the entire football team's got to be better. But we're 443 00:23:34,000 --> 00:23:37,760 Speaker 3: getting closer, We're closing the gap. We were more competitive 444 00:23:37,800 --> 00:23:40,240 Speaker 3: against good teams this year than we were last year. 445 00:23:40,720 --> 00:23:44,600 Speaker 3: And that's the evolution of a quarterback who was eighteen 446 00:23:44,640 --> 00:23:48,120 Speaker 3: a year ago, who was nineteen this year, and who 447 00:23:48,119 --> 00:23:51,960 Speaker 3: will be twenty next year. That like, yes, we would 448 00:23:51,960 --> 00:23:55,040 Speaker 3: have we would expect to have those type of inflection 449 00:23:55,160 --> 00:24:01,200 Speaker 3: points on the chronological timeline, and so where he would say, 450 00:24:01,840 --> 00:24:04,320 Speaker 3: we're basically on schedule to where we need to be 451 00:24:04,440 --> 00:24:08,400 Speaker 3: for demand to be X. But and so, okay, that's fine, 452 00:24:08,440 --> 00:24:12,480 Speaker 3: that's a fair retort. But then you got to get 453 00:24:12,520 --> 00:24:16,639 Speaker 3: granular on the ways. You're not just gonna get better 454 00:24:17,160 --> 00:24:20,359 Speaker 3: because you know the three hundred and sixty five days 455 00:24:20,359 --> 00:24:23,040 Speaker 3: passed on the calendar. You're gonna get better because you're 456 00:24:23,040 --> 00:24:24,359 Speaker 3: gonna work on your weaknesses. 457 00:24:25,000 --> 00:24:26,080 Speaker 2: And in my. 458 00:24:26,200 --> 00:24:29,960 Speaker 3: Mind, his depth on his route, his state of readiness 459 00:24:29,960 --> 00:24:34,639 Speaker 3: to throw the ball when when there's checkdowns available and 460 00:24:34,720 --> 00:24:38,520 Speaker 3: short passes available, as opposed to just you know, kind 461 00:24:38,520 --> 00:24:42,120 Speaker 3: of taking a leisurely dropped He's so damn athletic. He bounces, 462 00:24:42,160 --> 00:24:45,760 Speaker 3: and part of his athleticism is bouncing this it gets 463 00:24:45,800 --> 00:24:48,040 Speaker 3: into a deeper like you don't really think of how 464 00:24:48,160 --> 00:24:50,280 Speaker 3: deepest drop is until you stop and you go, oh 465 00:24:50,280 --> 00:24:52,200 Speaker 3: my gosh, he's eleven and a half yards or ten 466 00:24:52,240 --> 00:24:54,080 Speaker 3: and a half yards behind the line. E scermens because 467 00:24:54,080 --> 00:24:57,440 Speaker 3: it's just so graceful because he's so athletic. But if 468 00:24:57,440 --> 00:25:00,520 Speaker 3: that's your launch point, the ball is in the air 469 00:25:00,600 --> 00:25:04,360 Speaker 3: in Ohio State and Michigan defenders are going they're going 470 00:25:04,400 --> 00:25:07,560 Speaker 3: to close ground while they're pursuing the ball. You're gonna 471 00:25:07,600 --> 00:25:09,600 Speaker 3: have zero run after the catch, and you're gonna have 472 00:25:09,680 --> 00:25:12,359 Speaker 3: balls batted, some of which are gonna pop up and 473 00:25:12,400 --> 00:25:16,240 Speaker 3: get intercepted. That's how to get better against the best teams. 474 00:25:16,520 --> 00:25:18,920 Speaker 3: You're gonna have to improve the things that need improving, 475 00:25:19,280 --> 00:25:20,680 Speaker 3: and your launch point is too deep. 476 00:25:22,160 --> 00:25:24,400 Speaker 1: It didn't seem like he ran as much against those 477 00:25:24,400 --> 00:25:27,560 Speaker 1: elite teams as he did against the UC Davis's and 478 00:25:27,600 --> 00:25:32,400 Speaker 1: the Wazoos, and was that primarily because he didn't feel 479 00:25:32,480 --> 00:25:36,080 Speaker 1: or Jed didn't feel like he couldn't he couldn't get 480 00:25:36,200 --> 00:25:41,199 Speaker 1: yardage against the elite front sevens of college football, and 481 00:25:41,280 --> 00:25:43,440 Speaker 1: he could only you know, he can juke at UC 482 00:25:43,600 --> 00:25:45,960 Speaker 1: Davis guy or a Wazu guy or Perdue guy and 483 00:25:46,000 --> 00:25:47,800 Speaker 1: he can get his twenty thirty yard runs. 484 00:25:49,080 --> 00:25:54,920 Speaker 3: Well, he had he had twenty. Uh, he had six 485 00:25:55,480 --> 00:25:59,640 Speaker 3: scrambles for twenty yards against Ohio State, a little over 486 00:25:59,680 --> 00:26:00,480 Speaker 3: three per. 487 00:26:01,920 --> 00:26:04,040 Speaker 2: Any of those designed they just know. 488 00:26:04,280 --> 00:26:07,439 Speaker 3: Those were scrambles. Those are those are scrambles. So he 489 00:26:07,560 --> 00:26:10,239 Speaker 3: had Yeah, let's see, prior to the Origan he had 490 00:26:10,280 --> 00:26:15,000 Speaker 3: had sixty yards total of scrambles against the three best defense. 491 00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:18,280 Speaker 3: He had thirty against Wisconsin, ten against Ohio State and 492 00:26:18,320 --> 00:26:20,960 Speaker 3: twenty against are going to be ten against Michigan, twenty 493 00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:22,160 Speaker 3: against Ohio State. 494 00:26:22,640 --> 00:26:25,359 Speaker 2: So yeah, it's it's it's harder. 495 00:26:25,400 --> 00:26:30,160 Speaker 3: They they they're generally well, they're better athletes for sure, right, 496 00:26:30,200 --> 00:26:32,360 Speaker 3: that's right, and then they tend to be better coach. 497 00:26:32,400 --> 00:26:35,679 Speaker 3: They're fundamentally South, so they know where their help is. 498 00:26:36,400 --> 00:26:38,439 Speaker 3: So they're they you know, they're not going to lose 499 00:26:38,520 --> 00:26:41,600 Speaker 3: leverage because because they know they have inside help. So 500 00:26:41,640 --> 00:26:43,520 Speaker 3: they're going to be more likely to do their job 501 00:26:43,560 --> 00:26:45,320 Speaker 3: and and just all of that, they're going to be 502 00:26:45,359 --> 00:26:48,200 Speaker 3: played better defense, and they're going to have a plan. 503 00:26:48,240 --> 00:26:51,080 Speaker 3: I mean, you know, look down in the red zone. Uh, 504 00:26:51,880 --> 00:26:55,000 Speaker 3: you know you had Matt Patricia is the defensive coordinator 505 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:59,880 Speaker 3: for Ohio State and his plan. Uh, and how Jed 506 00:27:00,119 --> 00:27:03,359 Speaker 3: reacted to it it very clear. You know, hey, this 507 00:27:03,680 --> 00:27:06,680 Speaker 3: here's one guy who's got three Super Bowl rings and 508 00:27:06,840 --> 00:27:10,000 Speaker 3: you know he designed I know we're up against class, 509 00:27:10,080 --> 00:27:12,919 Speaker 3: but but he had a couple of coverages that that 510 00:27:12,920 --> 00:27:15,880 Speaker 3: that Washington didn't answer well to. You know, how they 511 00:27:16,000 --> 00:27:21,160 Speaker 3: how they doubled Boston and then the route concepts that 512 00:27:21,320 --> 00:27:25,520 Speaker 3: Washington chose to do to respond were not the type 513 00:27:25,520 --> 00:27:29,600 Speaker 3: of beaters that to beat what Ohio State was doing. 514 00:27:30,000 --> 00:27:31,720 Speaker 3: So Jet's got to be better as well.