Husky Jacks open thread [2019]
Comments
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Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise? -
Doogs are incapable of differentiation. Lots of twisters out here.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise? -
COORDINATION ALSO.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise?
This is why you can see players like Dylan Axelrod (shoutout to Derek) in HS and think they are all world. Because the ability to coordinate movements among limbs is proportional to how much effort it takes to move them. So guys who are at that LB height/weight in HS look like gods, because they are at an optimal point from a size/coordination standpoint.
Kalepo is not my favorite recruit. I'm not sure he will be great, because it's obvious he has a long way to go and there is so much to do.
It is one of the reasons whyat bowdowntowashington.com we have predict a RANGE for recruits rather than just thinking that him being a four-star means he will be better than a three starit's harder to predict guys like him.
The deal with recruits is that they are usually either smaller and coordinated or bigger and uncoordinated.
When you have big and coordinated and you just need technique, you have Kaleb McGary.
When you have big, coordinated and technique you have Clowney.
You get my point.
I'm not here stanning for Kalepo. But if a guy is 6-6, 340 and can move (even if it's not super coordinated movement at this point) you have to take him because by his RS-Soph year, he might really start to bulldoze people. -
I think we managed to get an all caps response from Dennis where he's not yelling at us but with us. Kudos GrunDlz. I think?Dennis_DeYoung said:
COORDINATION ALSO.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise?
This is why you can see players like Dylan Axelrod (shoutout to Derek) in HS and think they are all world. Because the ability to coordinate movements among limbs is proportional to how much effort it takes to move them. So guys who are at that LB height/weight in HS look like gods, because they are at an optimal point from a size/coordination standpoint.
Kalepo is not my favorite recruit. I'm not sure he will be great, because it's obvious he has a long way to go and there is so much to do.
It is one of the reasons whyat bowdowntowashington.com we have predict a RANGE for recruits rather than just thinking that him being a four-star means he will be better than a three starit's harder to predict guys like him.
The deal with recruits is that they are usually either smaller and coordinated or bigger and uncoordinated.
When you have big and coordinated and you just need technique, you have Kaleb McGary.
When you have big, coordinated and technique you have Clowney.
You get my point.
I'm not here stanning for Kalepo. But if a guy is 6-6, 340 and can move (even if it's not super coordinated movement at this point) you have to take him because by his RS-Soph year, he might really start to bulldoze people. -
Where we?re at talent wise for OL, I see zero risk in taking a kid like Kalepo. He'll have all the time he needs to develop. And if he doesn't, that roster spot isn't as crucial as it once was.Dennis_DeYoung said:
COORDINATION ALSO.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise?
This is why you can see players like Dylan Axelrod (shoutout to Derek) in HS and think they are all world. Because the ability to coordinate movements among limbs is proportional to how much effort it takes to move them. So guys who are at that LB height/weight in HS look like gods, because they are at an optimal point from a size/coordination standpoint.
Kalepo is not my favorite recruit. I'm not sure he will be great, because it's obvious he has a long way to go and there is so much to do.
It is one of the reasons whyat bowdowntowashington.com we have predict a RANGE for recruits rather than just thinking that him being a four-star means he will be better than a three starit's harder to predict guys like him.
The deal with recruits is that they are usually either smaller and coordinated or bigger and uncoordinated.
When you have big and coordinated and you just need technique, you have Kaleb McGary.
When you have big, coordinated and technique you have Clowney.
You get my point.
I'm not here stanning for Kalepo. But if a guy is 6-6, 340 and can move (even if it's not super coordinated movement at this point) you have to take him because by his RS-Soph year, he might really start to bulldoze people.
Some of you feegs see a few seconds of Sam Huard and get the full picture of where he's at. I know nothing about QB play and can't see that. I do know a little about line play and like I said, some shit just jumps out at me. I didn't even know it was Kalepo until I looked up the number. -
Lincoln Kennedy was a freshman redshirt because he wasn't ready. He stood out on the sidelines and you'd go wow but he needed that year.
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Facing Dennis in the next circle jerk round, this makes me uneasy.UW_Doog_Bot said:
I think we managed to get an all caps response from Dennis where he's not yelling at us but with us. Kudos GrunDlz. I think?Dennis_DeYoung said:
COORDINATION ALSO.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise?
This is why you can see players like Dylan Axelrod (shoutout to Derek) in HS and think they are all world. Because the ability to coordinate movements among limbs is proportional to how much effort it takes to move them. So guys who are at that LB height/weight in HS look like gods, because they are at an optimal point from a size/coordination standpoint.
Kalepo is not my favorite recruit. I'm not sure he will be great, because it's obvious he has a long way to go and there is so much to do.
It is one of the reasons whyat bowdowntowashington.com we have predict a RANGE for recruits rather than just thinking that him being a four-star means he will be better than a three starit's harder to predict guys like him.
The deal with recruits is that they are usually either smaller and coordinated or bigger and uncoordinated.
When you have big and coordinated and you just need technique, you have Kaleb McGary.
When you have big, coordinated and technique you have Clowney.
You get my point.
I'm not here stanning for Kalepo. But if a guy is 6-6, 340 and can move (even if it's not super coordinated movement at this point) you have to take him because by his RS-Soph year, he might really start to bulldoze people. -
Climpsun won their 2016 Natty with a third of guys that started like Kalepo, a guy like Sam Huard at QB, some try hards, some long-play 3-star kids and a good chunk of 4 and 5 star guys who provided enough talent to make sure they had playmakers.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Where we?re at talent wise for OL, I see zero risk in taking a kid like Kalepo. He'll have all the time he needs to develop. And if he doesn't, that roster spot isn't as crucial as it once was.Dennis_DeYoung said:
COORDINATION ALSO.GrundleStiltzkin said:
Nope. And for the record, again, I was not talking at all about technique.Dennis_DeYoung said:If you are 6-6, 340 and you have A+ technique/coordination at 18yo you are called Orlando Pace and you are the #1 recruit in the country, play three years at Ohio State, get picked first in the draft, dominate the NFL for a decade and go immediately into the Hall of Fame.
Is it a surprise that a 6-6, 340 recruit is not there yet technique/coordination wise?
This is why you can see players like Dylan Axelrod (shoutout to Derek) in HS and think they are all world. Because the ability to coordinate movements among limbs is proportional to how much effort it takes to move them. So guys who are at that LB height/weight in HS look like gods, because they are at an optimal point from a size/coordination standpoint.
Kalepo is not my favorite recruit. I'm not sure he will be great, because it's obvious he has a long way to go and there is so much to do.
It is one of the reasons whyat bowdowntowashington.com we have predict a RANGE for recruits rather than just thinking that him being a four-star means he will be better than a three starit's harder to predict guys like him.
The deal with recruits is that they are usually either smaller and coordinated or bigger and uncoordinated.
When you have big and coordinated and you just need technique, you have Kaleb McGary.
When you have big, coordinated and technique you have Clowney.
You get my point.
I'm not here stanning for Kalepo. But if a guy is 6-6, 340 and can move (even if it's not super coordinated movement at this point) you have to take him because by his RS-Soph year, he might really start to bulldoze people.
Some of you feegs see a few seconds of Sam Huard and get the full picture of where he's at. I know nothing about QB play and can't see that. I do know a little about line play and like I said, some shit just jumps out at me. I didn't even know it was Kalepo until I looked up the number.
Having Bama's roster is great, but not necessary. But it is necessary to have a Climpsun 2016 roster. -
Jack punted left footed beautifully . Could it be that the his he was left handed/armed all along?...minion_doog said:With practice closed, Jakes can get to work on the deciding factor; Who's got the best leg?


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But how did he look behind the bag?RaceBannon said:Lincoln Kennedy was a freshman redshirt because he wasn't ready. He stood out on the sidelines and you'd go wow but he needed that year.





