Browning of course locks on to a receiver almost every play and never gets to a second read even if first option is blanketed.
But the curious thing is that there is no rhyme or rhythym to which receiver he locks onto. Hugh is continually pointing out that the targeted receiver has a bad matchup and there was a different matchup that could have been exploited.
Whatever happened to the pre-snap wizard Browning that supposedly existed in 2016?
I watched it, and thought it was quite good. I'm pretty ambivalent on Hugh, I'll take whatever's good and ignore the rest.
I'm with you. It's kind of funny and even surprises me, but this is the first audio or video of Millen that I've ever turned on. I didn't know what he looked like or how he sounded. Everything I knew about him came from reading posts and arguments about him on msg boards.
So long story TL, I thought it was great. I love the highlighted failures by Fuller, who I now see as a guy who puts in good effort when the ball is coming to him, but runs half assed routes and doesn't show the explosiveness, shiftiness, or heart to make plays that arent spoon fed to him. Baccellia plays harder but has similar athletic limitations. The UW receiver room is sub par as long as those two are good enough to get reps ahead of anyone.
Oh, and I agree with Nacho that Hugh goes way overboard running the tape backward and forward. That's the only annoying thing in the video for me.
I enjoy Hugh's breakdowns because #1- His playing experience #2 - He actually coaches, so he's had to teach the techniques he's referring to #3 - He actually has a real passion and desire about understanding modern football despite his NFL experience, which ended a million years ago. I also understand why he can be grating to some because he's extremely verbose. I get it. But I still think it's worth sifting through as he misappropriates words.
Anyways, I haven't finished it yet but my biggest takeaway is I understand why Andre B gets as much run as he does, all things considered. He's tough, plays with great effort and seems to know what he is doing. Coaches like that.
Lol. Aaron Fuller isn’t a great blocker on the bubble screen. I for one am *shocked* by this revelation.
I take back all the good things I said about Aaron Fuller’s blocking.
Ah come on with the sarcasm. All I'm saying is that Hugh highlights a couple of examples of Fuller playing exactly how I suspect he plays most of the time. Maybe it's not true? I think it's pretty much his game though.
Browning of course locks on to a receiver almost every play and never gets to a second read even if first option is blanketed.
But the curious thing is that there is no rhyme or rhythym to which receiver he locks onto. Hugh is continually pointing out that the targeted receiver has a bad matchup and there was a different matchup that could have been exploited.
Whatever happened to the pre-snap wizard Browning that supposedly existed in 2016?
Smoke and mirrors. And John Ross.
The first 7 games we had: - 3 garbage OOCs. - Stanford with both starting CBs out injured and coming off a grueling, emotionally draining 4Q comeback at UCLA. With a short week. - Historically bad Oregon defense - Oregon State and Arizona.
Utah 2016 was the beginning of the end as Browning made some OK throws but also struggled, throwing a momentum-killing interception when we were up 14-0 and about to plunger them. Just a terrible read and even worse throw that completely rejuvenated Utah and made it a barnburner.
USC of course finally exposed him. One of the worst QB performances you'll ever see. Fouch would have done worse, but not by much.
By Colorado he could barely even throw a forward pass with confidence. And he was likely injured.
If you watch Rutgers 2016 his arm definitely had more zip on it. He never got it back.
Browning of course locks on to a receiver almost every play and never gets to a second read even if first option is blanketed.
But the curious thing is that there is no rhyme or rhythym to which receiver he locks onto. Hugh is continually pointing out that the targeted receiver has a bad matchup and there was a different matchup that could have been exploited.
Whatever happened to the pre-snap wizard Browning that supposedly existed in 2016?
Smoke and mirrors. And John Ross.
The first 7 games we had: - 3 garbage OOCs. - Stanford with both starting CBs out injured and coming off a grueling, emotionally draining 4Q comeback at UCLA. - Historically bad Oregon defense - Oregon State and Arizona.
Utah 2016 was the beginning of the end as Browning made some OK throws but also struggled, throwing a momentum-killing interception when we were up 14-0 and about to plunger them. Just a terrible read and even worse throw that completely rejuvenated Utah and made it a barnburner.
USC of course finally exposed him. One of the worst QB performances you'll ever see. Fouch would have done worse, but not by much.
By Colorado he could barely even throw a forward pass with confidence. And he was likely injured.
If you watch Rutgers 2016 his arm definitely had more zip on it. He never got it back.
As I recall, this play against Oregon State is supposedly what killed whatever arm Jake had
Lol. Aaron Fuller isn’t a great blocker on the bubble screen. I for one am *shocked* by this revelation.
I take back all the good things I said about Aaron Fuller’s blocking.
Ah come on with the sarcasm. All I'm saying is that Hugh highlights a couple of examples of Fuller playing exactly how I suspect he plays most of the time. Maybe it's not true? I think it's pretty much his game though.
Wasn't aimed at you.
But yeah I think you're reading too much into a couple of bubble screens.
Browning of course locks on to a receiver almost every play and never gets to a second read even if first option is blanketed.
But the curious thing is that there is no rhyme or rhythym to which receiver he locks onto. Hugh is continually pointing out that the targeted receiver has a bad matchup and there was a different matchup that could have been exploited.
Whatever happened to the pre-snap wizard Browning that supposedly existed in 2016?
Smoke and mirrors. And John Ross.
The first 7 games we had: - 3 garbage OOCs. - Stanford with both starting CBs out injured and coming off a grueling, emotionally draining 4Q comeback at UCLA. - Historically bad Oregon defense - Oregon State and Arizona.
Utah 2016 was the beginning of the end as Browning made some OK throws but also struggled, throwing a momentum-killing interception when we were up 14-0 and about to plunger them. Just a terrible read and even worse throw that completely rejuvenated Utah and made it a barnburner.
USC of course finally exposed him. One of the worst QB performances you'll ever see. Fouch would have done worse, but not by much.
By Colorado he could barely even throw a forward pass with confidence. And he was likely injured.
If you watch Rutgers 2016 his arm definitely had more zip on it. He never got it back.
As I recall, this play against Oregon State is supposedly what killed whatever arm Jake had
Did it blow up his brain too?
Or was the pre-snap stuff always just a myth since the media and fans needed a story and we knew he didn't have a strong or accurate arm and wasn't a leader?
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I watched more of this and I don't mind if he stopped it, made the comment about the player and continued it from there but he reminds me of a retard I used to work for. This fucker had a nervous habit of always moving the mouse on his computer and it drove me nuts because it was like a form of retard ADHD.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
That's how a lot of corches do it, like it or not. I've been in meetings where you get 15 minutes of that on a single play. Ponderous, man, fucking ponderous.
I'm having an epileptic fucking seizure because Hugh keeps starting, stopping, starting, stopping the fucking tape. Start it, stop and make a point and play again. That shit hurts.
Fucking this.
I spaced out a few minutes into it and subconsciously found myself wanting to smash the screen into 1000 pieces.
Comments
Browning of course locks on to a receiver almost every play and never gets to a second read even if first option is blanketed.
But the curious thing is that there is no rhyme or rhythym to which receiver he locks onto. Hugh is continually pointing out that the targeted receiver has a bad matchup and there was a different matchup that could have been exploited.
Whatever happened to the pre-snap wizard Browning that supposedly existed in 2016?
So long story TL, I thought it was great. I love the highlighted failures by Fuller, who I now see as a guy who puts in good effort when the ball is coming to him, but runs half assed routes and doesn't show the explosiveness, shiftiness, or heart to make plays that arent spoon fed to him. Baccellia plays harder but has similar athletic limitations. The UW receiver room is sub par as long as those two are good enough to get reps ahead of anyone.
Oh, and I agree with Nacho that Hugh goes way overboard running the tape backward and forward. That's the only annoying thing in the video for me.
I take back all the good things I said about Aaron Fuller’s blocking.
Anyways, I haven't finished it yet but my biggest takeaway is I understand why Andre B gets as much run as he does, all things considered. He's tough, plays with great effort and seems to know what he is doing. Coaches like that.
The first 7 games we had:
- 3 garbage OOCs.
- Stanford with both starting CBs out injured and coming off a grueling, emotionally draining 4Q comeback at UCLA. With a short week.
- Historically bad Oregon defense
- Oregon State and Arizona.
Utah 2016 was the beginning of the end as Browning made some OK throws but also struggled, throwing a momentum-killing interception when we were up 14-0 and about to plunger them. Just a terrible read and even worse throw that completely rejuvenated Utah and made it a barnburner.
USC of course finally exposed him. One of the worst QB performances you'll ever see. Fouch would have done worse, but not by much.
By Colorado he could barely even throw a forward pass with confidence. And he was likely injured.
If you watch Rutgers 2016 his arm definitely had more zip on it. He never got it back.
But yeah I think you're reading too much into a couple of bubble screens.
Or was the pre-snap stuff always just a myth since the media and fans needed a story and we knew he didn't have a strong or accurate arm and wasn't a leader?
I spaced out a few minutes into it and subconsciously found myself wanting to smash the screen into 1000 pieces.