Tim Brown is a little wacky. He also did an interview last week ripping Trestman for not throwing the ball enough that same year and that it cost him not getting a 9th consecutive 1000 yard season or some shit.
Pep Hamilton leaving Stanford to go to the Colts :O
That offense just got a hell of a lot better.
This is the best hire of the offseason. I believe Pep Hamilton was Harbaugh's 2nd choice behind Roman for his OC when he went to the 49ers. He's just about as creative of a football mind.
Romo and Garrett will get one more chance, and get the boot at the end of next season regardless of the seasons outcome. Unless they win the Super Bowl...
So next season will be the last for both.
The day you need a gun and don't have one, may be your last.
Romo and Garrett will get one more chance, and get the boot at the end of next season regardless of the seasons outcome. Unless they win the Super Bowl...
So next season will be the last for both.
What sucks is when Romo is balling that fucker can ball, but when he makes a mistake the guy crumbles. Plus we need a better oline so he stops running for his life.
drinkwine732Posts: 20,418destroyer of motherfuckers
He needs a lot more than consistent receivers. He needs a coach who actually believes in him, and is willing to build their team around him. It's hard to find at his age.
If you like X's and O's at all in football, here's a brief overview of what Ault was thinking when he invented the pistol at Nevada. Can't stop thinking about how perfect the formation is, and then running the read option out of it makes it the most deadly formation in football.
I didn't really see its appeal when Norm Chow and Neuheisel tried to install it at UCLA, but watching Kaepernick at Nevada again over this season has made me realize how wrong they were with it. The 49ers have it down, and I think this could become a huge thing for even pro-style backs.
The formation is about 3/4 of what's deadly about it, even with a statue for a QB.
I never said that. The two are tied together however, but not exclusive. Is there any evidence the pistol can be ran with an immobile quarterback? Who is to say it would work on the pro level? Its kind of silly to say "oh this formation would work regardless of quarterback style" when there is nothing to say it would. At least in the National Football League.
drinkwine732Posts: 20,418destroyer of motherfuckers
edited January 2013
No history of it, sure, but I think the formation is so versatile that it's here to stay. You can do pretty much anything out of it in the running game and still have the security of the shotgun in the pocket.
I think you'll see some of the more experimental OC's (Gruden, Koetter, Hamilton) in the NFL put it in their packages, even with less than mobile QB's.
Comments
Unless they win the Super Bowl...
So next season will be the last for both.
Hopefully if Gruden wants to come he will demand more control and JJ will let him. Don't see it happening though. What sucks is when Romo is balling that fucker can ball, but when he makes a mistake the guy crumbles. Plus we need a better oline so he stops running for his life.
Austin though :-<
If you like X's and O's at all in football, here's a brief overview of what Ault was thinking when he invented the pistol at Nevada. Can't stop thinking about how perfect the formation is, and then running the read option out of it makes it the most deadly formation in football.
I didn't really see its appeal when Norm Chow and Neuheisel tried to install it at UCLA, but watching Kaepernick at Nevada again over this season has made me realize how wrong they were with it. The 49ers have it down, and I think this could become a huge thing for even pro-style backs.
The formation is about 3/4 of what's deadly about it, even with a statue for a QB.
I think you'll see some of the more experimental OC's (Gruden, Koetter, Hamilton) in the NFL put it in their packages, even with less than mobile QB's.