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Combining the two + Ray Lewis' mentality = Jordan.
Had to add whatever special thing Jordan had in his uncompromising brain.
Combining the two + Ray Lewis' mentality = Jordan.
No doubt, though I think of reed as bringing a lot of that too. Maybe also it's a difference between hoops and football. Ray's more of a rally the troops guy than mj ever was. Ray might be the best team leader/motivator ever. Mike was a look you in the eye to motivate you guy, and a lead from the front general. But mike was probably the bitterest competitor ever. He just needed to win more than anyone else. I've never seen anyone illustrate "wanting it more" better than him, or even close to him. And both mike and ray are guys whose teammates absolutely knew would do their part, and guys who their teammates didnt want to let them down.Combining the two + Ray Lewis' mentality = Jordan.
Had to add whatever special thing Jordan had in his uncompromising brain.
No doubt, though I think of reed as bringing a lot of that too. Maybe also it's a difference between hoops and football. Ray's more of a rally the troops guy than mj ever was. Ray might be the best team leader/motivator ever. Mike was a look you in the eye to motivate you guy, and a lead from the front general. But mike was probably the bitterest competitor ever. He just needed to win more than anyone else. I've never seen anyone illustrate "wanting it more" better than him, or even close to him. And both mike and ray are guys whose teammates absolutely knew would do their part, and guys who their teammates didnt want to let them down.Combining the two + Ray Lewis' mentality = Jordan.
Had to add whatever special thing Jordan had in his uncompromising brain.
Taylor was a freak athlete, no doubt. Maybe the best I've ever seen on a football field. Certainly one of the few best.I'll weigh in with take Taylor every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
Great instincts + great athletic abilities.
Reed may have unique understanding, but he's one of a kind. You can't go find that. It's incredibly rare.
But 98% of football is instincts, skills and athletic ability, and Taylor had them in spades. And you can find kids with great athletic ability and who make plays and look to have the potential for great instincts. Getting them to sign with us is another matter, unfortunately.
I was asked my choice. I'd obviously recruit Sean Taylor or anyone like him, lol. Especially since he literally jumped over members of my HS football team. Literally.
Sean Taylor could have realistically played Corner in a pinch. He could have realistically played LB in a pinch. That's just weird.
But my point wasn't between ST and ER, more that the Taylor model (athlete + instincts) is a lot easier to identify and recruit than the Reed model (Jedi understanding). I expect I'll see another ST level athlete at S before I see another Reed-level Obi Wan.
Jedi? Sands saying it's easier to find a Darth Vader than it is to find Yoda.
But mike was probably the bitterest competitor ever. He just needed to win more than anyone else. I've never seen anyone illustrate "wanting it more" better than him, or even close to him.Combining the two + Ray Lewis' mentality = Jordan.
Had to add whatever special thing Jordan had in his uncompromising brain.
Taylor was a freak athlete, no doubt. Maybe the best I've ever seen on a football field. Certainly one of the few best.I'll weigh in with take Taylor every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
Great instincts + great athletic abilities.
Reed may have unique understanding, but he's one of a kind. You can't go find that. It's incredibly rare.
But 98% of football is instincts, skills and athletic ability, and Taylor had them in spades. And you can find kids with great athletic ability and who make plays and look to have the potential for great instincts. Getting them to sign with us is another matter, unfortunately.
I was asked my choice. I'd obviously recruit Sean Taylor or anyone like him, lol. Especially since he literally jumped over members of my HS football team. Literally.
Sean Taylor could have realistically played Corner in a pinch. He could have realistically played LB in a pinch. That's just weird.
But my point wasn't between ST and ER, more that the Taylor model (athlete + instincts) is a lot easier to identify and recruit than the Reed model (Jedi understanding). I expect I'll see another ST level athlete at S before I see another Reed-level Obi Wan.
Jedi? Sands saying it's easier to find a Darth Vader than it is to find Yoda.
Based on his post he don't know...It's obvious he doesn't undertand what instinct is since understanding the game and instinct go hand in hand. You can't be insticntive without understanding the game. It all comes down to understanding how to prepare, film study ( recognizing route combinations, player tendencies, player habits, where/how they line in doing certain things technoque or play wise up etc)...all these factor into you ability to look instictive. Instincts mean you have an understanding for the game and you understand prepapration.
Honestly, were I picking safeties, I put a high premium on their ability to cover. I think intimidation is overrated and having big guys back there is overrated as well IMO. Tackling is not. I'd be fine taking an undersized, tough guy who can tackle but has the athleticism to cover. If you have that, you have the flexibility to run practically any defense you want to run except perhaps one that is reliably an 8 man front. Problem #1 with our current safeties IMO is that they aren't athletic enough to cover--be it covering man up or covering a lot of ground single high. That limits what you can do defensively. A guy like Brandon Meriweather allows you to do almost anything you want defensively. Ray Ray Armstrong does not--you cannot put him on a receiver unless the ball is coming out in microseconds. Meriweather is probably the last guy that we had that you could expect to cover somebody man up or to be able to run with a receiver passed to him.
D'Onofrio's done a decent job mixing things up but his truest limitation is that he can only reliably get away with straight zone. If he wants to blitz, he needs to be playing 3 under 3 deep behind it or 4 under 2 deep. Anything else is a colossal risk. If he gets more athletic at safety he'll be able to do more.
He's just trolling.Taylor was a freak athlete, no doubt. Maybe the best I've ever seen on a football field. Certainly one of the few best.I'll weigh in with take Taylor every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
Great instincts + great athletic abilities.
Reed may have unique understanding, but he's one of a kind. You can't go find that. It's incredibly rare.
But 98% of football is instincts, skills and athletic ability, and Taylor had them in spades. And you can find kids with great athletic ability and who make plays and look to have the potential for great instincts. Getting them to sign with us is another matter, unfortunately.
I was asked my choice. I'd obviously recruit Sean Taylor or anyone like him, lol. Especially since he literally jumped over members of my HS football team. Literally.
Sean Taylor could have realistically played Corner in a pinch. He could have realistically played LB in a pinch. That's just weird.
But my point wasn't between ST and ER, more that the Taylor model (athlete + instincts) is a lot easier to identify and recruit than the Reed model (Jedi understanding). I expect I'll see another ST level athlete at S before I see another Reed-level Obi Wan.
Jedi? Sands saying it's easier to find a Darth Vader than it is to find Yoda.
Based on his post he don't know...It's obvious he doesn't undertand what instinct is since understanding the game and instinct go hand in hand. You can't be insticntive without understanding the game. It all comes down to understanding how to prepare, film study ( recognizing route combinations, player tendencies, player habits, where/how they line in doing certain things technoque or play wise up etc)...all these factor into you ability to look instictive. Instincts mean you have an understanding for the game and you understand prepapration.
Nites,
The distinction that was made between "instinct" and "understanding" was really about athleticism. Basically, quick reactions come predominantly from the mind or body. That's how I interpreted the distinction.
develop cover ability? i don't care how bad you may want a guy to "develop" cover ability but they're either going to have it or not man.Honestly, were I picking safeties, I put a high premium on their ability to cover. I think intimidation is overrated and having big guys back there is overrated as well IMO. Tackling is not. I'd be fine taking an undersized, tough guy who can tackle but has the athleticism to cover. If you have that, you have the flexibility to run practically any defense you want to run except perhaps one that is reliably an 8 man front. Problem #1 with our current safeties IMO is that they aren't athletic enough to cover--be it covering man up or covering a lot of ground single high. That limits what you can do defensively. A guy like Brandon Meriweather allows you to do almost anything you want defensively. Ray Ray Armstrong does not--you cannot put him on a receiver unless the ball is coming out in microseconds. Meriweather is probably the last guy that we had that you could expect to cover somebody man up or to be able to run with a receiver passed to him.
D'Onofrio's done a decent job mixing things up but his truest limitation is that he can only reliably get away with straight zone. If he wants to blitz, he needs to be playing 3 under 3 deep behind it or 4 under 2 deep. Anything else is a colossal risk. If he gets more athletic at safety he'll be able to do more.
probably one thing i liked that randy did was bring in safeties and start them at cb as soon as they came in to develop some sort of covg ability. I mean like you said Ray Ray and Telamaque both have ball skills...but those two guys both run 4.7 40's.
The problem i see is we havent addressed it in recruiting yet..(unless rashawn Jenkins has showed that ability)...Deon Bush is a guy who probably can ...but he wants to start at cb....Right now i seriously dont think we have ONE safety that can cover a wr one on one.
Honestly, were I picking safeties, I put a high premium on their ability to cover. I think intimidation is overrated and having big guys back there is overrated as well IMO. Tackling is not. I'd be fine taking an undersized, tough guy who can tackle but has the athleticism to cover. If you have that, you have the flexibility to run practically any defense you want to run except perhaps one that is reliably an 8 man front. Problem #1 with our current safeties IMO is that they aren't athletic enough to cover--be it covering man up or covering a lot of ground single high. That limits what you can do defensively. A guy like Brandon Meriweather allows you to do almost anything you want defensively. Ray Ray Armstrong does not--you cannot put him on a receiver unless the ball is coming out in microseconds. Meriweather is probably the last guy that we had that you could expect to cover somebody man up or to be able to run with a receiver passed to him.
D'Onofrio's done a decent job mixing things up but his truest limitation is that he can only reliably get away with straight zone. If he wants to blitz, he needs to be playing 3 under 3 deep behind it or 4 under 2 deep. Anything else is a colossal risk. If he gets more athletic at safety he'll be able to do more.
develop cover ability? i don't care how bad you may want a guy to "develop" cover ability but they're either going to have it or not man.Honestly, were I picking safeties, I put a high premium on their ability to cover. I think intimidation is overrated and having big guys back there is overrated as well IMO. Tackling is not. I'd be fine taking an undersized, tough guy who can tackle but has the athleticism to cover. If you have that, you have the flexibility to run practically any defense you want to run except perhaps one that is reliably an 8 man front. Problem #1 with our current safeties IMO is that they aren't athletic enough to cover--be it covering man up or covering a lot of ground single high. That limits what you can do defensively. A guy like Brandon Meriweather allows you to do almost anything you want defensively. Ray Ray Armstrong does not--you cannot put him on a receiver unless the ball is coming out in microseconds. Meriweather is probably the last guy that we had that you could expect to cover somebody man up or to be able to run with a receiver passed to him.
D'Onofrio's done a decent job mixing things up but his truest limitation is that he can only reliably get away with straight zone. If he wants to blitz, he needs to be playing 3 under 3 deep behind it or 4 under 2 deep. Anything else is a colossal risk. If he gets more athletic at safety he'll be able to do more.
probably one thing i liked that randy did was bring in safeties and start them at cb as soon as they came in to develop some sort of covg ability. I mean like you said Ray Ray and Telamaque both have ball skills...but those two guys both run 4.7 40's.
The problem i see is we havent addressed it in recruiting yet..(unless rashawn Jenkins has showed that ability)...Deon Bush is a guy who probably can ...but he wants to start at cb....Right now i seriously dont think we have ONE safety that can cover a wr one on one.
develop cover ability? i don't care how bad you may want a guy to "develop" cover ability but they're either going to have it or not man.Honestly, were I picking safeties, I put a high premium on their ability to cover. I think intimidation is overrated and having big guys back there is overrated as well IMO. Tackling is not. I'd be fine taking an undersized, tough guy who can tackle but has the athleticism to cover. If you have that, you have the flexibility to run practically any defense you want to run except perhaps one that is reliably an 8 man front. Problem #1 with our current safeties IMO is that they aren't athletic enough to cover--be it covering man up or covering a lot of ground single high. That limits what you can do defensively. A guy like Brandon Meriweather allows you to do almost anything you want defensively. Ray Ray Armstrong does not--you cannot put him on a receiver unless the ball is coming out in microseconds. Meriweather is probably the last guy that we had that you could expect to cover somebody man up or to be able to run with a receiver passed to him.
D'Onofrio's done a decent job mixing things up but his truest limitation is that he can only reliably get away with straight zone. If he wants to blitz, he needs to be playing 3 under 3 deep behind it or 4 under 2 deep. Anything else is a colossal risk. If he gets more athletic at safety he'll be able to do more.
probably one thing i liked that randy did was bring in safeties and start them at cb as soon as they came in to develop some sort of covg ability. I mean like you said Ray Ray and Telamaque both have ball skills...but those two guys both run 4.7 40's.
The problem i see is we havent addressed it in recruiting yet..(unless rashawn Jenkins has showed that ability)...Deon Bush is a guy who probably can ...but he wants to start at cb....Right now i seriously dont think we have ONE safety that can cover a wr one on one.
As far as I'm concerned the Shannon safety-at-corner thing is basically fallacy. It started somewhere (maybe even from him) and just became jargon but was essentially untrue. For the most part, Shannon played guys at corner who could contribute at corner. Meriweather started as a corner here because he was 170 lbs and better suited to play dime corner for his early teams. Randy Phillips started at corner because he was small for a safety and could contribute in 2005 as a dime corner. Taylor never played corner. Sikes never played corner. Threat, Ponder, Willie Cooper, Nicolas, Armstrong--never played corner. He didn't routinely start guys off playing corner. I do think you can improve guys' coverage skills by forcing them to do so but you also have to recruit guys who can cover. Ray Ray is not suited to cover anybody. Telemaque probably once could but he's kind of thicker and slower now. Nicolas is a bit stiff but better than those guys and has not coincidentally been the most valuable safety on the team recently.