Cristobal assesses team progress after Saturday scrimmage

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Miami Hurricanes head coach Mario Cristobal was pleased with the team's overall progress during their Saturday morning scrimmage in Coral Gables. He highlighted some standout performances and shared insights on both defensive and offensive updates.

"Some big plays, explosive plays on both sides of the ball," Cristobal said. "Kam Kinchens continues to excel. He's not satisfied at all. The banner got hung up two days ago, and it's like he's performing like it was never there, and that's awesome to see. We're seeing that from a lot of veteran guys as well but overall, very solid progress from our entire football team, and we still have three days of practice."

On the defensive front, Cristobal acknowledged that the team had been dealing with injuries during spring ball but was impressed with the players' performances in the scrimmage. "A guy like Chantz Williams showed up big, Nyjalik Kelly and Rueben Bain showed up big, Jake Lichtenstein, Thomas Gore showed up, Ahmad Moten and had some really good moments," he noted. "Our linebackers played at a high level they all did today. And then in the secondary on the back end, they did a great job being aggressive, getting hands on receivers and they made it difficult for the offense to get the ball out and they put them in difficult down and distance situations."

Offensively, Cristobal mentioned a few standout players, including Jacurri Brown, Isaiah Horton, Xavier Restrepo, and Don Chaney. However, he did point out some inconsistencies, especially with the wide receivers. "As a wide receiver group, the receivers were inconsistent today outside, we had some opportunities and we did not come up with them. Later in the scrimmage, we did, but early on we couldn't get the thing going," Cristobal explained.

Regarding second-year quarterback Jacurri Brown, Cristobal commented on his potential and progress. "Well, this suits his style a little bit more because it's just from a progression standpoint, from a learning standpoint, and then having a quarterback coach in the room – it just it all makes sense and he has progressed. Guy's won a lot of ball games. He's played in a lot of big games, and he knows how to play football. All we've got to do is make sure that him and all the quarterbacks are systematic that they're playing within the system, but without being a robot."

Cristobal also touched on the state of the ‘Canes roster, indicating that Miami will be active in the transfer portal in the coming weeks. "We have to do what it requires. That's always been the blueprint to success at the stops that we have had; you've got to build and develop to a point where you have legitimate winning and championship depth at every position. We have certainly gained a lot of ground towards that we still have to gain more so at every position."

Miami's coach did express satisfaction with the offensive line's development. "We have certainly poured a lot into the offensive line body types and mentality, which was a monstrously glaring issue upon arrival and through the season, and it's something that we feel that we're getting a lot of ground towards getting better."
 
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This is a really good report from Mario on the scrimmage. I really, really hope UM can turn Brown into a legit passer because with the rest of his talent he can be flat out special of the ”once every 20 year” variety. He’s already on the All Airport team. I’m channeling my inner ****ie V so please hear his voice reading my comments.
 
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This is a really good report from Mario on the scrimmage. I really, really hope UM can turn Brown into a legit passer because with the rest of his talent he can be flat out special of the ”once every 20 year” variety. He’s already on the All Airport team. I’m channeling my inner ****ie V so please hear his voice reading my comments.

He's in the right system to excel now, that's for sure. I am actually betting on him. Word is that he's taken a big leap from last year. Now he just needs to keep developing under Shannon.

Headline, excerpt and paraphrases from a long article today:

Jacurri Brown: Dawson's "QB friendly" offense resonating with me, I know I don't have to be Superman​


This spring? Brown looks like a different guy from last year. He’s throwing on-point passes and his mechanics have improved.

“I just wanted to progress for myself,” Brown said. “I love this game and I had to figure out the definition of love and I’d do anything for it. In order to play at this school and be great I had to increase how I am as a player. I worked hard, went in the film room, watched how Tyler (Van Dyke) throws and does things, he puts different touch on balls. For me I had a strong arm, was really gunning it in, but had to work on my touch, my feet for sure.

“Coach (Shannon) Dawson say when I have a wider base I throw well, so just harping on those things.”

Brown’s also bulked up to 225 pounds – in January he was 210 and he arrived at Miami at 195 pounds.

“Coach (Aaron) Feld’s weight lifting is crazy, really good,” Brown said. “The nutrition is good. I’m eating good, feeling good.”

In the new Miami offense under Dawson, Brown’s skillset is a perfect fit. You can just look at Dawson’s dual-threat QB success in 2022 at Houston, with Clayton Tune throwing for 40 TDs and 4,074 yards while adding a team-high 546 rush yards and five more scores on the ground.

Dawson’s message? “Put the ball in play – read a defense, put the ball in play and play ball,” Brown said, adding that the offense “is very quarterback friendly. You don’t have to be erratic with your eyes, beat the blitz with your throw, not a lot of confusion, everyone’s on the same page. We can go fast, go slow. It’s quarterback friendly for sure.”

Brown says he has a close relationship with Van Dyke and says he’s learned that “I don’t have to be Superman every play, just put the ball in play, play with touch, have fun out there. Don’t let the last play affect the next one."

Brown also shared his thoughts on newly arrived freshman QB Emory Williams. “Emory is always on top of stuff, learning progressing, way far in front of where I was when I got here,” Brown said. “He’s going to be a good one for sure.”

The bottom line with Brown: He has an NFL arm and showed his skill last year when he would tuck it down and run. If he puts it all together he can be one of the ACC’s most dangerous QBs.
 
He's in the right system to excel now, that's for sure. I am actually betting on him. Word is that he's taken a big leap from last year. Now he just needs to keep developing under Shannon.

Headline, excerpt and paraphrases from a long article today:

Jacurri Brown: Dawson's "QB friendly" offense resonating with me, I know I don't have to be Superman​


This spring? Brown looks like a different guy from last year. He’s throwing on-point passes and his mechanics have improved.

“I just wanted to progress for myself,” Brown said. “I love this game and I had to figure out the definition of love and I’d do anything for it. In order to play at this school and be great I had to increase how I am as a player. I worked hard, went in the film room, watched how Tyler (Van Dyke) throws and does things, he puts different touch on balls. For me I had a strong arm, was really gunning it in, but had to work on my touch, my feet for sure.

“Coach (Shannon) Dawson say when I have a wider base I throw well, so just harping on those things.”

Brown’s also bulked up to 225 pounds – in January he was 210 and he arrived at Miami at 195 pounds.

“Coach (Aaron) Feld’s weight lifting is crazy, really good,” Brown said. “The nutrition is good. I’m eating good, feeling good.”

In the new Miami offense under Dawson, Brown’s skillset is a perfect fit. You can just look at Dawson’s dual-threat QB success in 2022 at Houston, with Clayton Tune throwing for 40 TDs and 4,074 yards while adding a team-high 546 rush yards and five more scores on the ground.

Dawson’s message? “Put the ball in play – read a defense, put the ball in play and play ball,” Brown said, adding that the offense “is very quarterback friendly. You don’t have to be erratic with your eyes, beat the blitz with your throw, not a lot of confusion, everyone’s on the same page. We can go fast, go slow. It’s quarterback friendly for sure.”

Brown says he has a close relationship with Van Dyke and says he’s learned that “I don’t have to be Superman every play, just put the ball in play, play with touch, have fun out there. Don’t let the last play affect the next one."

Brown also shared his thoughts on newly arrived freshman QB Emory Williams. “Emory is always on top of stuff, learning progressing, way far in front of where I was when I got here,” Brown said. “He’s going to be a good one for sure.”

The bottom line with Brown: He has an NFL arm and showed his skill last year when he would tuck it down and run. If he puts it all together he can be one of the ACC’s most dangerous QBs.
I’m bullish on this kid as well.

Not for nothing but how he played when the entire team and coaches seemed like they had thrown in the towel for the season showed me a lot.

Maybe that’s overplaying it a bit but that’s the kind of thing I love to see out of a QB.
 
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He's in the right system to excel now, that's for sure. I am actually betting on him. Word is that he's taken a big leap from last year. Now he just needs to keep developing under Shannon.

Headline, excerpt and paraphrases from a long article today:

Jacurri Brown: Dawson's "QB friendly" offense resonating with me, I know I don't have to be Superman​


This spring? Brown looks like a different guy from last year. He’s throwing on-point passes and his mechanics have improved.

“I just wanted to progress for myself,” Brown said. “I love this game and I had to figure out the definition of love and I’d do anything for it. In order to play at this school and be great I had to increase how I am as a player. I worked hard, went in the film room, watched how Tyler (Van Dyke) throws and does things, he puts different touch on balls. For me I had a strong arm, was really gunning it in, but had to work on my touch, my feet for sure.

“Coach (Shannon) Dawson say when I have a wider base I throw well, so just harping on those things.”

Brown’s also bulked up to 225 pounds – in January he was 210 and he arrived at Miami at 195 pounds.

“Coach (Aaron) Feld’s weight lifting is crazy, really good,” Brown said. “The nutrition is good. I’m eating good, feeling good.”

In the new Miami offense under Dawson, Brown’s skillset is a perfect fit. You can just look at Dawson’s dual-threat QB success in 2022 at Houston, with Clayton Tune throwing for 40 TDs and 4,074 yards while adding a team-high 546 rush yards and five more scores on the ground.

Dawson’s message? “Put the ball in play – read a defense, put the ball in play and play ball,” Brown said, adding that the offense “is very quarterback friendly. You don’t have to be erratic with your eyes, beat the blitz with your throw, not a lot of confusion, everyone’s on the same page. We can go fast, go slow. It’s quarterback friendly for sure.”

Brown says he has a close relationship with Van Dyke and says he’s learned that “I don’t have to be Superman every play, just put the ball in play, play with touch, have fun out there. Don’t let the last play affect the next one."

Brown also shared his thoughts on newly arrived freshman QB Emory Williams. “Emory is always on top of stuff, learning progressing, way far in front of where I was when I got here,” Brown said. “He’s going to be a good one for sure.”

The bottom line with Brown: He has an NFL arm and showed his skill last year when he would tuck it down and run. If he puts it all together he can be one of the ACC’s most dangerous QBs.
I love this but this begs the questions from someone like me who has never coached or played QB, but what is the difference between a QB friendly system and one that is not? Is it schematic? And why would every system not be QB friendly considering that it is the most important offensive position on the field every single play?
I guess in the past one could argue that the Wishbone or triple option weren’t good for QB’s who liked to throw the ball, but aren’t all modern passing offenses QB friendly? And if there answer is no, then why the h*ll not?
 
I love this but this begs the questions from someone like me who has never coached or played QB, but what is the difference between a QB friendly system and one that is not? Is it schematic? And why would every system not be QB friendly considering that it is the most important offensive position on the field every single play?
I guess in the past one could argue that the Wishbone or triple option weren’t good for QB’s who liked to throw the ball, but aren’t all modern passing offenses QB friendly? And if there answer is no, then why the h*ll not?

It comes down to how much you are asking the QB to do, how many progressions, the keys, reads. Coaches have different opinions on what works, but one of the reasons you see air raid concepts like what Lashlee, Malzhan, Dawson, etc run seeping into big time CFB and even into the NFL is it spaces out the defense, makes them cover the whole field, and forces them to make decisions at the snap. Depending on what the defense does (QB and WR read the keys) it determines where the ball will go. QB has options. I wouldn't say it's simple, but there are a lot less plays (smaller playbook) and you rep the same handful of plays over and over which creates comfortability. Of course you can disguise those plays a bit with formations and motion to throw the D off, but conceptually its not a heavy work load.

You had stubborn coaches like Leach (RIP) who were determined to throw it as much as they could and they often were labeled as exciting offenses that could be neutralized with top talent or an off night, but I think it was because they were too one dimensional. If you listen to what Coach Dawson has been preaching, what we are running includes both air raid concepts, AND a power running game, which means your offense is better equipped for all situations, red zone, goal line, dime and prevent, etc.

Some of the coaches (and wanna be coaches lol) on this board can surely give you a more detailed breakdown. I'm just a guy.
 
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Miami Hurricanes head coach Mario Cristobal was pleased with the team's overall progress during their Saturday morning scrimmage in Coral Gables. He highlighted some standout performances and shared insights on both defensive and offensive updates.

"Some big plays, explosive plays on both sides of the ball," Cristobal said. "Kam Kinchens continues to excel. He's not satisfied at all. The banner got hung up two days ago, and it's like he's performing like it was never there, and that's awesome to see. We're seeing that from a lot of veteran guys as well but overall, very solid progress from our entire football team, and we still have three days of practice."

On the defensive front, Cristobal acknowledged that the team had been dealing with injuries during spring ball but was impressed with the players' performances in the scrimmage. "A guy like Chantz Williams showed up big, Nyjalik Kelly and Rueben Bain showed up big, Jake Lichtenstein, Thomas Gore showed up, Ahmad Moten and had some really good moments," he noted. "Our linebackers played at a high level they all did today. And then in the secondary on the back end, they did a great job being aggressive, getting hands on receivers and they made it difficult for the offense to get the ball out and they put them in difficult down and distance situations."

Offensively, Cristobal mentioned a few standout players, including Jacurri Brown, Isaiah Horton, Xavier Restrepo, and Don Chaney. However, he did point out some inconsistencies, especially with the wide receivers. "As a wide receiver group, the receivers were inconsistent today outside, we had some opportunities and we did not come up with them. Later in the scrimmage, we did, but early on we couldn't get the thing going," Cristobal explained.

Regarding second-year quarterback Jacurri Brown, Cristobal commented on his potential and progress. "Well, this suits his style a little bit more because it's just from a progression standpoint, from a learning standpoint, and then having a quarterback coach in the room – it just it all makes sense and he has progressed. Guy's won a lot of ball games. He's played in a lot of big games, and he knows how to play football. All we've got to do is make sure that him and all the quarterbacks are systematic that they're playing within the system, but without being a robot."

Cristobal also touched on the state of the Canes roster, indicating that Miami will be active in the transfer portal in the coming weeks. "We have to do what it requires. That's always been the blueprint to success at the stops that we have had; you've got to build and develop to a point where you have legitimate winning and championship depth at every position. We have certainly gained a lot of ground towards that we still have to gain more so at every position."

Miami's coach did express satisfaction with the offensive line's development. "We have certainly poured a lot into the offensive line body types and mentality, which was a monstrously glaring issue upon arrival and through the season, and it's something that we feel that we're getting a lot of ground towards getting better."
Straight out of his post practice interview @Hoyacane1620 posted. Thanks
 
I’m bullish on this kid as well.

Not for nothing but how he played when the entire team and coaches seemed like they had thrown in the towel for the season showed me a lot.

Maybe that’s overplaying it a bit but that’s the kind of thing I love to see out of a QB.
Bullish as well
 
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I love this but this begs the questions from someone like me who has never coached or played QB, but what is the difference between a QB friendly system and one that is not? Is it schematic? And why would every system not be QB friendly considering that it is the most important offensive position on the field every single play?
I guess in the past one could argue that the Wishbone or triple option weren’t good for QB’s who liked to throw the ball, but aren’t all modern passing offenses QB friendly? And if there answer is no, then why the h*ll not?
I played toooooo many years of football, and I appreciate and respect your post.
 
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