I imagine that Manie Robinson, a sportswriter for the Greenville news covering Clemson who is also a Furman grad, will have a few stories out in the next few weeks.
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Furman's offensive staff tends to think outside the box. They rotate linemen, backs, receivers, shift guys around, play guys out of position, etc. Maybe they can find a matchup efficiency in a two QB look.sluggo wrote: ↑Thu Aug 16, 2018 2:09 pmQB situation reminds me of Charpia and Lamb in the '80s
Both played and it worked great.
The "one QB thing" seems to be more about the media wanting to fixate on a single player.
Every other position on the field is rotated without a word spoken.
So rotating QB's is way over hyped as something negative when its probably an advantage.
Most college and pro teams don't stick WRs at RB and RBs at WR. We do. We are different.apaladin wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 10:43 amI completely disagree. There is only one QB position and he is the only one that interacts with the whole offense. There are multiple running backs, receivers, o-linemen etc, but only one QB. You need consistency from this position more than any other, from simple things like handing off and the type of spiral he puts on the ball. When you start running in different QB's you lose consistency and are asking for trouble. Like I said, simple things like handing off can become a problem. IF it is a good thing why do hardly any pro or college teams use a 2 QB system?
I like the idea of replacing more than rotating - although I am not opposed to that either. We all have bad days, I don't see anything wrong with replacing any player who is in the midst of one and the Alabama case you cite is a perfect example of that. It should not mean that the player being replaced loses his spot permanently and, once again, in the Alabama situation it does not appear that the QB who was replaced in that game is losing his starting job. But, Saban felt he needed to do something on that particular night at QB and he did...brilliantly. Guess that is why he is Nick Saban. We see QB changes in practice all the time without any drastic problems with handoffs, snaps, etc. I have faith in this staff to do what is best for the team.Paul C wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 10:55 amThe “Alabama” case study from last years Nat Champ game is an interesting one. Now granted, that wasn’t really rotating, it was replacing. But the issues are still the same. And it worked. While I agree with some of your logic around rhythm and timing, I’m not against it.
Agree - I have definitely seen 2 QBs work.. and I have seen it be the worst thing possible. Good coaches will sometimes say "if you have 2 QBs, you don't have a QB" or something like that. I could see 2 QBs leading to confusion for an opposing defense (great!) but also for our OL - snap count mistakes etc. Some FBS team I was watching years ago rotated 2 Qbs for the first few games and couldn't hardly snap the ball without a false start on each series... once they went to one QB the false starts declined greatly and they won more.FUBeAR wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 11:53 amIf 2 QB’s are the right kind of guys...AND both of their Mama’s are the right kind of Mama’s (trust me...that matters with QB’s today), AND both of them are able to both Move AND Throw (albeit with varying degrees of competency); then 2 QB’s with differing skill sets can, most definitely, be utilized to enhance an Offense.
If ANY of those things are less than solid, using 2 QB’s can tank a season. It’s a risky proposition, but, if we see it at Furman, I’m confident the Coach Quarles & Coach Hendrix will have determined those variables are properly aligned...and we will see the benefits.
On a related note....I’m going to project we may see multiple QB ‘systems’ from several SoCon Teams this season - perhaps from Furman (as discussed), Wofford (Newman & Mosley), WCU (Adams & Jones), Chatt (Tiano & James), ETSU (Herink & Marchi (Temple Transfer)), VMI (Udinski & Coulling), and even from Mercer (Riley & Riddle).
Heck, since there is now a “Hatcher” on the Samford roster with the letters “QB” beside his name, we may even see it from Samford. Remember what I said about those QBs’ Mama’s. That doesn’t even account for a situation where the Head Coach is married to that Mama!
Really, only El Cid (ok...and maybe Samford) is, IMO, 100% ‘set’ at QB this year...and with the bellhops running ‘hard-core’ triple option, their QB’s continuity must always be in question.
Coach made that note in his comments about our inside linebackers - they have to defend a pretty complicated offense every day. If Furman doesn't throw it at you in practice, it probably isn't a thing.DeepPurple wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 2:31 pmI would hate to have the responsibility to DEFEND our offense. It ought to be fun this year.
I don't think it much matters to the OL. Those guys block the play based on the formation and the defensive set up. They aren't focused on where the receivers lineup or who is in the backfield.gofurman wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 2:46 pmAgree - I have definitely seen 2 QBs work.. and I have seen it be the worst thing possible. Good coaches will sometimes say "if you have 2 QBs, you don't have a QB" or something like that. I could see 2 QBs leading to confusion for an opposing defense (great!) but also for our OL - snap count mistakes etc. Some FBS team I was watching years ago rotated 2 Qbs for the first few games and couldn't hardly snap the ball without a false start on each series... once they went to one QB the false starts declined greatly and they won more.FUBeAR wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 11:53 amIf 2 QB’s are the right kind of guys...AND both of their Mama’s are the right kind of Mama’s (trust me...that matters with QB’s today), AND both of them are able to both Move AND Throw (albeit with varying degrees of competency); then 2 QB’s with differing skill sets can, most definitely, be utilized to enhance an Offense.
If ANY of those things are less than solid, using 2 QB’s can tank a season. It’s a risky proposition, but, if we see it at Furman, I’m confident the Coach Quarles & Coach Hendrix will have determined those variables are properly aligned...and we will see the benefits.
On a related note....I’m going to project we may see multiple QB ‘systems’ from several SoCon Teams this season - perhaps from Furman (as discussed), Wofford (Newman & Mosley), WCU (Adams & Jones), Chatt (Tiano & James), ETSU (Herink & Marchi (Temple Transfer)), VMI (Udinski & Coulling), and even from Mercer (Riley & Riddle).
Heck, since there is now a “Hatcher” on the Samford roster with the letters “QB” beside his name, we may even see it from Samford. Remember what I said about those QBs’ Mama’s. That doesn’t even account for a situation where the Head Coach is married to that Mama!
Really, only El Cid (ok...and maybe Samford) is, IMO, 100% ‘set’ at QB this year...and with the bellhops running ‘hard-core’ triple option, their QB’s continuity must always be in question.
The argument that other positions rotate (WR, RB) and QB should too is a little strange to me. I mean the Patriots are great in the NFL and they rotate RBs and WRs and you better believe Brady stays in the game. As w most NFL teams. I guess where I am going is QB is such a timing position on the throw and snap count / hand off and everything - it matters so much. You can switch a RB for a better blocking RB on a passing play and that helps give the QB more time. At other positions the changes don't necessarily matter quite as much (such as the RB changing for one play due to situation)
Mostly correct, but gf is correct about variations in snap count...BUT...that’s why they have Coaches & you can be certain that the OLmen will very quickly ‘Coach up’ a young QB, who is throwing things off with his snap count. FatBoys will not accept anything that keeps them from getting off the ball in a ‘timely’ & ‘efficient’ manner.The Jackal wrote: ↑Fri Aug 17, 2018 2:49 pmI don't think it much matters to the OL. Those guys block the play based on the formation and the defensive set up. They aren't focused on where the receivers lineup or who is in the backfield.