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My thoughts on the Bowling Green game

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  • DJDuck
    DJDuck Member Posts: 5,970
    edited September 2018
    SUNDAY NOTEBOOK: THE DECISIVE MOMENTUM SHIFT, YOUNG PLAYMAKERS AND MORE


    ROB MOSELEY


    Passes were being dropped, tackles were being missed, and substitutions were chaotic.

    No doubt, the first few minutes of Oregon's 2018 season opener provided some tense moments for Duck fans. But everything changed midway through the first quarter, after a pep talk from a member of the defensive coaching staff, and a big play from Oregon's Heisman Trophy contender at quarterback.

    After falling behind by 10 points to Bowling Green on Saturday in Autzen Stadium, the UO football team scored the next 37 in a row on the way to a 58-24 victory. The offense got going thanks to a clutch, fourth-down TD pass from Justin Herbert, while the defense was galvanized by a sideline meeting with co-defensive coordinator Keith Heyward.

    Bowling Green had just driven to a touchdown and a 10-0 lead — a series UO nose tackle Jordon Scott missed while having a minor injury addressed — when Heyward huddled the defense on the sideline and grabbed a white board. The Falcons had given the Ducks trouble with the way they used their tight ends as blockers in the run game, UO coach Mario Cristobal said, and ran plays out of empty backfield formations that forced UO linebackers into pass coverage.





    That was made easier by the offense's breaking out of its own early game doldrums. After at least the third pass of the game already that a receiver had a shot at but couldn't bring down, Herbert faced fourth-and-14 at the Bowling Green 33-yard line with 3:18 left in the first quarter and the score still 10-0. His next attempt was a missile to Jaylon Redd in the end zone, which the sophomore receiver caught to spark the run of 37 straight points for the Ducks.

    Just as the defense tightened up after that point, the offense was sharper as well, particularly the connection between Herbert and his wideouts.

    "We just came out a little shaky; not sure why," sophomore receiver Johnny Johnson III said. "We just had to refocus, know what the plan was and what we wanted to get done."



    Redd's touchdown reception was his first of two in the game, and continued a string of big plays for the sophomore since his late-season surge last fall.

    Over his last three regular-season games, Redd has 186 yards on seven touches, averaging 26.6 yards. He also scored a touchdown in the Las Vegas Bowl. Redd's TD receptions of 33 and 48 yards Saturday capped a practice week in which he was a consistent playmaker, rebounding from two weeks of preseason camp during which he'd been sidelined.

    "I had to get back healthy and get my mind right," Redd said. "Focus on everything that was going on, so I wasn't focused on an injury or anything like that, get my connection right again with my quarterback."



    Redd also had a key block down the field on a 53-yard gain by Tony Brooks-James on a screen pass. He timed the block perfectly, waiting until he had the proper angle to avoid a block in the back.

    The big plays helped Redd rebound from an early dropped pass Saturday, which did nothing to hurt Herbert's confidence in him on the fourth-down play that resulted in Oregons first touchdown.

    "That was a big play for sure, but I knew I had a guy like Jaylon Redd out there," said Herbert, who surpassed 4,000 career passing yards in the game, and set a UO record for a season opener with his five TD passes.
    *************************************************
    "He's a great receiver and he ran a good route. He's a guy you trust, and on fourth down you go to."
    *************************************************
    Redd's big day resulted in limited reps for graduate transfer Tabari Hines, the other member of the two-deep at slot receiver. Despite those circumstances Saturday, Cristobal said, "we expect (Hines) to be a major player, and have a major role on this team."

    The 53-yard gain on the screen pass by Brooks-James exceeded his rushing total for the game, though the senior was Oregon's starting running back.

    Brooks-James finished with 27 rushing yards on five carries. That ended up fifth on the team, behind Herbert and also backup running backs CJ Verdell, Darrian Felix and Travis Dye. The only rushing touchdown from a running back was by yet another, Cyrus Habibi-Likio, and a sixth running back, Taj Griffin, accounted for the longest play of the day when he scampered 83 yards on another screen pass.


    .

    "We're all capable of doing what starting running backs are capable of doing," Felix said. "It is what it is; let's roll."

    Dye was the first running back off the bench, replacing Brooks-James for the third series of the game — the one that ended with the touchdown pass to Redd on fourth down.

    Like Redd, Dye was limited somewhat by a minor injury midway through preseason camp. But he returned with vigor over the last week or 10 days, demonstrating a fearless style and explosive cutting ability.



















    https://goducks.com/news/2018/9/2/football-sunday-notebook-the-decisive-momentum-shift-young-playmakers-and-more.aspx
  • DJDuck
    DJDuck Member Posts: 5,970
    edited September 2018
    ntxduck said:

    DJDuck said:

    I was at Bowling Green Game it #3 son.

    -The lack of penalties was great to see
    -Our Young running backs are awesome
    -Herbert was even better than his stats
    -DB play was inconsistent. They made great plays and then missed an assignment. Amadi is the only senior I believe mostly sophomores with a few freshmen, they will learn. Amadi, Graham, Breeze played well
    -Hollins, Troy Dye, Scott, Faoliu, Jelks are beasts
    -Jalen Redd is a weapon
    -Both Taj and TBJ had their amazing moments

    Jalen Redd is a weapon? Weapons can catch the ball.

    Tbj looked awful. What was his amazing moment?
    The 53-yard gain on the screen pass by Brooks-James exceeded his rushing total for the game, though the senior was Oregon's starting running back.-Rob Mosley
  • dtd
    dtd Member Posts: 5,788 Standard Supporter
    Balls fast true sophs getting open for 8 TDs and dropping 6 of them is actually an awesome thing. Redd is going to put up more stats in the passing game than DAT. What's not awesome is the senior LBs shitting all over the fucker carpet in run D and then getting praised like the fucking messiah because they bull rushed a 250lb offensive tackle. According to Oregon fans our lines were dominant, while we gave up more first downs and couldn't rush for more yards than bowling green? allowed in 8 games last year against whatever the fuck opponents they played. Run the ball, stop the run. WE didn't do either. I fucking hate Oregon football.
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,573
    This is embarrassing...
  • DJDuck
    DJDuck Member Posts: 5,970

    DJDuck said:

    SUNDAY NOTEBOOK: THE DECISIVE MOMENTUM SHIFT, YOUNG PLAYMAKERS AND MORE


    ROB MOSELEY


    Passes were being dropped, tackles were being missed, and substitutions were chaotic.

    No doubt, the first few minutes of Oregon's 2018 season opener provided some tense moments for Duck fans. But everything changed midway through the first quarter, after a pep talk from a member of the defensive coaching staff, and a big play from Oregon's Heisman Trophy contender at quarterback.

    After falling behind by 10 points to Bowling Green on Saturday in Autzen Stadium, the UO football team scored the next 37 in a row on the way to a 58-24 victory. The offense got going thanks to a clutch, fourth-down TD pass from Justin Herbert, while the defense was galvanized by a sideline meeting with co-defensive coordinator Keith Heyward.

    Bowling Green had just driven to a touchdown and a 10-0 lead — a series UO nose tackle Jordon Scott missed while having a minor injury addressed — when Heyward huddled the defense on the sideline and grabbed a white board. The Falcons had given the Ducks trouble with the way they used their tight ends as blockers in the run game, UO coach Mario Cristobal said, and ran plays out of empty backfield formations that forced UO linebackers into pass coverage.





    That was made easier by the offense's breaking out of its own early game doldrums. After at least the third pass of the game already that a receiver had a shot at but couldn't bring down, Herbert faced fourth-and-14 at the Bowling Green 33-yard line with 3:18 left in the first quarter and the score still 10-0. His next attempt was a missile to Jaylon Redd in the end zone, which the sophomore receiver caught to spark the run of 37 straight points for the Ducks.

    Just as the defense tightened up after that point, the offense was sharper as well, particularly the connection between Herbert and his wideouts.

    "We just came out a little shaky; not sure why," sophomore receiver Johnny Johnson III said. "We just had to refocus, know what the plan was and what we wanted to get done."



    Redd's touchdown reception was his first of two in the game, and continued a string of big plays for the sophomore since his late-season surge last fall.


    Over his last three regular-season games, Redd has 186 yards on seven touches, averaging 26.6 yards. He also scored a touchdown in the Las Vegas Bowl. Redd's TD receptions of 33 and 48 yards Saturday capped a practice week in which he was a consistent playmaker, rebounding from two weeks of preseason camp during which he'd been sidelined.

    "I had to get back healthy and get my mind right," Redd said. "Focus on everything that was going on, so I wasn't focused on an injury or anything like that, get my connection right again with my quarterback."



    Redd also had a key block down the field on a 53-yard gain by Tony Brooks-James on a screen pass. He timed the block perfectly, waiting until he had the proper angle to avoid a block in the back.

    The big plays helped Redd rebound from an early dropped pass Saturday, which did nothing to hurt Herbert's confidence in him on the fourth-down play that resulted in Oregons first touchdown.

    "That was a big play for sure, but I knew I had a guy like Jaylon Redd out there," said Herbert, who surpassed 4,000 career passing yards in the game, and set a UO record for a season opener with his five TD passes.
    *************************************************
    "He's a great receiver and he ran a good route. He's a guy you trust, and on fourth down you go to."
    *************************************************
    Redd's big day resulted in limited reps for graduate transfer Tabari Hines, the other member of the two-deep at slot receiver. Despite those circumstances Saturday, Cristobal said, "we expect (Hines) to be a major player, and have a major role on this team."

    The 53-yard gain on the screen pass by Brooks-James exceeded his rushing total for the game, though the senior was Oregon's starting running back.

    Brooks-James finished with 27 rushing yards on five carries. That ended up fifth on the team, behind Herbert and also backup running backs CJ Verdell, Darrian Felix and Travis Dye. The only rushing touchdown from a running back was by yet another, Cyrus Habibi-Likio, and a sixth running back, Taj Griffin, accounted for the longest play of the day when he scampered 83 yards on another screen pass.


    .

    "We're all capable of doing what starting running backs are capable of doing," Felix said. "It is what it is; let's roll."

    Dye was the first running back off the bench, replacing Brooks-James for the third series of the game — the one that ended with the touchdown pass to Redd on fourth down.

    Like Redd, Dye was limited somewhat by a minor injury midway through preseason camp. But he returned with vigor over the last week or 10 days, demonstrating a fearless style and explosive cutting ability.



















    https://goducks.com/news/2018/9/2/football-sunday-notebook-the-decisive-momentum-shift-young-playmakers-and-more.aspx

    image

    It figures that's why your so f***ing ignorant.
  • DJDuck
    DJDuck Member Posts: 5,970
    dtd said:

    Balls fast true sophs getting open for 8 TDs and dropping 6 of them is actually an awesome thing. Redd is going to put up more stats in the passing game than DAT. What's not awesome is the senior LBs shitting all over the fucker carpet in run D and then getting praised like the fucking messiah because they bull rushed a 250lb offensive tackle. According to Oregon fans our lines were dominant, while we gave up more first downs and couldn't rush for more yards than bowling green? allowed in 8 games last year against whatever the fuck opponents they played. Run the ball, stop the run. WE didn't do either. I fucking hate Oregon football.

    I don't know if there is another site where the posters are so unprepared when commenting about things they know nothing about and refuse to edify themselves by reading and research.

    Oregon doesn't have "Senior LB's". They have ONE senior linebacker and he rotated in the game with a RS Freshman.

    The coach addressed any linebacker problem that you might want to know about but then you don't care except to b!tch and belittle.
  • TierbsHsotBoobs
    TierbsHsotBoobs Member Posts: 39,680
    DJDuck said:

    DJDuck said:

    SUNDAY NOTEBOOK: THE DECISIVE MOMENTUM SHIFT, YOUNG PLAYMAKERS AND MORE


    ROB MOSELEY


    Passes were being dropped, tackles were being missed, and substitutions were chaotic.

    No doubt, the first few minutes of Oregon's 2018 season opener provided some tense moments for Duck fans. But everything changed midway through the first quarter, after a pep talk from a member of the defensive coaching staff, and a big play from Oregon's Heisman Trophy contender at quarterback.

    After falling behind by 10 points to Bowling Green on Saturday in Autzen Stadium, the UO football team scored the next 37 in a row on the way to a 58-24 victory. The offense got going thanks to a clutch, fourth-down TD pass from Justin Herbert, while the defense was galvanized by a sideline meeting with co-defensive coordinator Keith Heyward.

    Bowling Green had just driven to a touchdown and a 10-0 lead — a series UO nose tackle Jordon Scott missed while having a minor injury addressed — when Heyward huddled the defense on the sideline and grabbed a white board. The Falcons had given the Ducks trouble with the way they used their tight ends as blockers in the run game, UO coach Mario Cristobal said, and ran plays out of empty backfield formations that forced UO linebackers into pass coverage.





    That was made easier by the offense's breaking out of its own early game doldrums. After at least the third pass of the game already that a receiver had a shot at but couldn't bring down, Herbert faced fourth-and-14 at the Bowling Green 33-yard line with 3:18 left in the first quarter and the score still 10-0. His next attempt was a missile to Jaylon Redd in the end zone, which the sophomore receiver caught to spark the run of 37 straight points for the Ducks.

    Just as the defense tightened up after that point, the offense was sharper as well, particularly the connection between Herbert and his wideouts.

    "We just came out a little shaky; not sure why," sophomore receiver Johnny Johnson III said. "We just had to refocus, know what the plan was and what we wanted to get done."



    Redd's touchdown reception was his first of two in the game, and continued a string of big plays for the sophomore since his late-season surge last fall.


    Over his last three regular-season games, Redd has 186 yards on seven touches, averaging 26.6 yards. He also scored a touchdown in the Las Vegas Bowl. Redd's TD receptions of 33 and 48 yards Saturday capped a practice week in which he was a consistent playmaker, rebounding from two weeks of preseason camp during which he'd been sidelined.

    "I had to get back healthy and get my mind right," Redd said. "Focus on everything that was going on, so I wasn't focused on an injury or anything like that, get my connection right again with my quarterback."



    Redd also had a key block down the field on a 53-yard gain by Tony Brooks-James on a screen pass. He timed the block perfectly, waiting until he had the proper angle to avoid a block in the back.

    The big plays helped Redd rebound from an early dropped pass Saturday, which did nothing to hurt Herbert's confidence in him on the fourth-down play that resulted in Oregons first touchdown.

    "That was a big play for sure, but I knew I had a guy like Jaylon Redd out there," said Herbert, who surpassed 4,000 career passing yards in the game, and set a UO record for a season opener with his five TD passes.
    *************************************************
    "He's a great receiver and he ran a good route. He's a guy you trust, and on fourth down you go to."
    *************************************************
    Redd's big day resulted in limited reps for graduate transfer Tabari Hines, the other member of the two-deep at slot receiver. Despite those circumstances Saturday, Cristobal said, "we expect (Hines) to be a major player, and have a major role on this team."

    The 53-yard gain on the screen pass by Brooks-James exceeded his rushing total for the game, though the senior was Oregon's starting running back.

    Brooks-James finished with 27 rushing yards on five carries. That ended up fifth on the team, behind Herbert and also backup running backs CJ Verdell, Darrian Felix and Travis Dye. The only rushing touchdown from a running back was by yet another, Cyrus Habibi-Likio, and a sixth running back, Taj Griffin, accounted for the longest play of the day when he scampered 83 yards on another screen pass.


    .

    "We're all capable of doing what starting running backs are capable of doing," Felix said. "It is what it is; let's roll."

    Dye was the first running back off the bench, replacing Brooks-James for the third series of the game — the one that ended with the touchdown pass to Redd on fourth down.

    Like Redd, Dye was limited somewhat by a minor injury midway through preseason camp. But he returned with vigor over the last week or 10 days, demonstrating a fearless style and explosive cutting ability.



















    https://goducks.com/news/2018/9/2/football-sunday-notebook-the-decisive-momentum-shift-young-playmakers-and-more.aspx

    image

    It figures that's why your so f***ing ignorant.
    I don't give a fuck about scrimmages.