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Nebraska vs Purdue (11/2/19 ) BTN Tailgate in West Lafayette


has been less than 100% since game one 2019???. is that the reason for the poor decisions since game one? just want to know because it looked like he didnt want to use his legs until frost jumped all over him. could be but he sure looked alot better when he started taking what was in front of him instead of parking in the pocket.

That was not the question I answered. Just so we keep this in context. Your question thus does not pertain to that

Now answering your question. Baffling as to what his issues are to be blunt. If I knew the answer I would tell you

With that being said Vedreal in my opinion is not an every game starter in a P-5 Conference.
 
This year is obviously a total bust. I didn't think we were division/conference contenders, but I thought we could make it to a bowl game. At this point, I think the team is out to pasture. I really do. I didn't watch the game today (working), but heard enough on radio to surmise that it's the same as it's been. Nothing is going to change this year.

We have to "Drain the Swamp" of players and/or staff that are performing on a mediocrity level. If you surround yourself with winners, there's a pretty good chance you'll win. This is not the case. You heard it from some of the young players last week and it's clear that there are many holdovers from the previous regime that have not bought into the culture of wanting to win. They talk team unity, but it smells like individualism. Entitlement. "What's in it for me?". Charlie Strong had the same problems at Texas. Too many individuals that thought they were entitled for the mere reason that they were a Longhorn. Strong cleared house, but the football team suffered under his presence for it, ultimately costing his job.
There is a saying in Pro-Sports , I heard it said by either Norm Miller (1968 Astros) or Mike "The Shark" Newlin (1970's Houston Rockets) that "The team you have the best chance to make the roster with is the one you are on."

The corollary to this is, from a coaching perspective is: "the players you have the best chance to win with are the one who are on your team right now."

If Frost cannot have won this game with the players he had at his discretion to use, why should young mister four or five star, or even three star, come play for him? You have to prove yourself with what you have right now. Brohm did that today. Fleck has been doing that for three years at Minny. Indiana did it last week.

It is a poor craftsman who blames his tools...
 
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Final Game thoughts.


No need to flush the toilet, our season is now all but officially circling the drain on its own.

Last week Scott Frost said that we keep finding creative ways to lose. Nebraska loses to a 2-6 team with an injured QB, a team missing key players including Rondale Moore, in a game Nebraska should have been ahead by three touchdowns at halftime.

This team refuses to do ANYTHING easy, and the only time they ever execute anything at all is when they are certain that it won’t be enough.

Adrian Martinez was brutally bad today. He was just awful. His throws were over the heads of his receivers or they were straight into the ground. He took two touchdowns off the board by missing wide open receivers (we got one of those back). But it was not seeing the wide open receivers and the mind-numbing poor decisions he made time and time again that really spelled doom for Nebraska. His interception in the first half was an unacceptably bad play and his drop the ball fumble continues a disturbing trend. His stats ended up okay and he did lead the team to two late scores that should have been enough. But he simply waited too long and then on the last final drive, he was brutal again giving the offense absolutely no chance to come back one last time.

Can we stop the Adrian Martinez going pro after his junior year talk? I’m not sure he can hang onto the job for four years the way he is regressing.

He played just well enough to lose to a bad team. Last week, our QB play probably wins this game with ease. This week, it is QB play that dooms us on offense. And so it goes.

Keeping with the theme that this team only makes plays when they know it isn’t going to be enough, the defense with quite the pathetic egg-laying effort in the fourth quarter. Down to their backup QB, Purdue marches down the field like a knife through butter when it counts as the announcers call out the defensive “effort” on play after play throughout the game. Not once, but twice the defense is suddenly inept at crunch time giving up two long scoring drives after Nebraska’s offense awoke from their long slumber and started to actually execute. Unfortunately, the defense did this same egg laying act at the end of both halves. So . . . who is more to blame? The offense for leaving dozens of points on the field? Or the defense for caving in at crunch time?

The truth is . . . this was a total team effort. No heart. No toughness. No accountability.

4-8, here we come . . . again.

On that final TD play that put a knife through the heart of NU’s 2019 season, JoJo Domann did a wonderful job of giving up contain to tackle the wrong guy. There were some other key bad moments by Domann by the way.

I have said a couple of times, we are absolutely the best team in the country at tackling the wrong guy. When the other team fakes a handoff, every single player on our team goes 100% balls to the wall to nail the guy without the ball virtually every time. We deliver vicious hits and make sure tackles. If the guy had the ball, oh what great plays we would be making.

And what is with the helicopter tackling style? We see guys flying in with arms flailing and they unnecessarily leave their feet to dive at the player’s lower leg and then sort of spin around to the ground. Sometimes you do have to leave your feet to make a desperation play when the offense is breaking a big play—but leaving your feet is usually not a good option—just like defense in basketball. But what is frustrating is our players keep doing it when they don’t have to. Another frustration is they don’t do it all the time—just crunch time. Crunch time = time to panic. They did it in the second half against Colorado (after not doing it in the first half) and they keep doing it intermittently in game after game. When you start seeing the helicopter tackling, you know a TD is coming with ease for the other team.

Another thing, when you are a DE or an OLB rushing the passer and the OT takes you wide . . . you need to break down—keep working in from there and maintain containment. Running twenty yards downfield isn’t a good option. There is no way you can run 20 yards downfield, get around the OT, and then come back 15 yards for the sack. When I see this, I think lack of effort. The announcer called us out on this on a play late in the fourth quarter.

Last week we went 1 for 2 in FG tries and our percentage actually went up. This week, we went 2 for 2. But why did we kick FGs there? Both times we were inside the 5 and Scott Frost decided to get cute. We start running all kinds of weird motion plays. Here’s an idea. Let’s try bringing in our physical RB and try to ram our way into the end zone? Or is that just too simple? Don’t get style points for that, I guess.

All game long, Wan’Dale up the middle and Mills wide. Then we wonder why Robinson keeps limping off the field. I don’t understand Frost’s reluctance to pound Mills more frequently and inside. I don’t get it.

Now I know some fans would say, HIO, we can’t be so predictable to run Mills inside and Robinson outside. But we are predictable. We always seem to do the opposite. It is like a hitter knowing on a 3-2 pitch that the guy on the mound is ALWAYS going to go to his fourth best pitch. It makes no sense.

So where do we go from here?

A total team loss against a crippled team on the ropes in a game that showed just how little heart our team really has. I know fans are mad at the coaches, but this team just never will do ANYTHING the easy way. They make everything so dang hard. And then they do just enough to lose in heart-breaking fashion.

We have seen this for 15 years and the coaching carousal has depleted the “guts” of this program. We have a Head Coach who has been fed the lie that all this started 4 years ago and he has gone balls to the wall with that theory. It has taken us 15 years to get here. Personally, I’m tired of talking about firing coaches. I’m tired of listening to it. I’m tired of blaming former coaches. And I am not saying that the coaches and former coaches are good/bad/deserved to be fired or whatever—I’m just tired of it. Each coach firing has generally made the problem worse. Why? Because it is a lie that the problem started four years ago. We need a much more holistic solution than that. But hey, have fun with that.

We have another off week. It is obvious some players aren’t playing for the team. The transition class was a disaster and all of Riley’s classes have largely left the program or have been chased out. We have huge gaps in our program. Last year’s class still holds promise . . . but remember, we brought in 5 top 125 players—four of them are redshirting.

Recruit. Recruit. Recruit.

I expect some players are getting their exit visas ready. I don’t want to name names, but there are a couple of players I have heard about, and sure enough some of those guys didn’t look too engaged today.

Some folks blame the coaches. I generally blame players when I see them clearly giving less than 100% effort.

We are pretty banged up and going into a bye week. Most of our freshman can now play most if not all the remaining games on our schedule and still redshirt. I am not advocating wholesale abandoning this season, but perhaps now might be a good time to try some things. Like moving Benhart to RT and sliding Farniok inside to guard. You would have two weeks to work that wrinkle in and perhaps try to surprise Wisconsin a bit.

This team needs a spark. But it looks like some of the players are too frustrated to keep moving forward. We may be on the verge of our lowest point as a program.

Three games left, and Maryland is certainly winnable. If you can’t beat a crippled Purdue team though, I’m not sure who you CAN beat. But then again, it really is us who keep beating ourselves.

Physically. Mentally. And emotionally.


Take care all.

Great analysis as always
 
Your nostalgia is understandable in light of this season but Scott Frost has the potential to make you get over both. Give him sometime to learn and grow. He’s still young as head coaches go and he’s never encountered an animal like the Big Ten in his coaching career. My prediction (for what it’s worth) is that he’ll be successful here if he’s given the time and I don’t think my head’s in the sand. (My wife will testify that I was quite vociferous about some of his play calling today. I think it cost us this game.)
$Frost$ is same thing as Lincoln 36 age Riley. Okaaay.
 




That was not the question I answered. Just so we keep this in context. Your question thus does not pertain to that

Now answering your question. Baffling as to what his issues are to be blunt. If I knew the answer I would tell you

With that being said Vedreal in my opinion is not an every game starter in a P-5 Conference.

I believe AM isn't one either.



C
 




I disagree but it would be a good conversation none the less

I don't know what you are seeing but what I see is a QB that makes bad reads, poor decisions when he is not being indecisive, over throwing, under throwing, double and triple coverage throws resulting in INT's. And it is not just one game or an anomaly, he has been this way all year and it is the good plays and decisions that are the exceptions.



C
 

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