We move the ball when we play with tempo. We do not when we do not.
No clue why we don’t stick with it.
No clue why we don’t stick with it.
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We move the ball when we play with tempo. We do not when we do not.
No clue why we don’t stick with it.
Purdue played a lot more zone coverage in the 2nd quarter. I think Smith struggles finding the open man and accurately zipping the ball into tight windows.
We move the ball when we play with tempo. We do not when we do not.
No clue why we don’t stick with it.
isnt the downside there that if you’re NOT successful, you’ve given the defense no time to rest whatsoever, and you just made a faster three and out.
isnt the downside there that if you’re NOT successful, you’ve given the defense no time to rest whatsoever, and you just made a faster three and out.
If I’m playing defense, I’d rather play more snaps and have my offense actually score points. As a defender, 4th quarter fatigue sets in more if your offense has stunk (at a slow pace) for 3.5 quarters than if your offense has shown it can actually move the ball a bit and you’ve played a few more snaps with less time between series.
He stares down his receivers as well. He has time to check down other receivers but does not....and tempo simplifies defensive calls.
But agree. Smith is really struggling to see underneath coverage and doesn’t have the pure arm strength to jam the ball in there when he needs to.