corn train
Have some of it
Nice boots
I've heard that for the last two years. I've never been that impressed with Bando. MRI played better at the Mike then Bando ever has.
Speaking of speed, he's lost some weight so hopefully that will help him not get burned in coverage by RBs out of the backfield.I expect him to have a breakout year also. He's been slowly coming up to speed, going to bust out of the chute this year.
Interesting. I thought he played pretty good last year.
He must have took your bike or something.
Yeah. It's been thrown out that we should line up with ten guys and no punter and then just let the play clock run out. I think a better tribute would be to just not have to use the punter all year.That would be cool. But how would they do it? No punter?
Yeah. It's been thrown out that we should line up with ten guys and no punter and then just let the play clock run out. I think a better tribute would be to just not have to use the punter all year.
That's what his dad said he would want. The missing man would be cool too.Yeah. It's been thrown out that we should line up with ten guys and no punter and then just let the play clock run out. I think a better tribute would be to just not have to use the punter all year.
Mostly like don't want us to do it because I get a serious case of seasonal allergies just thinking about it. I would lose it if it ended up happening.That's what his dad said he would want. The missing man would be cool too.
Yeah. It's been thrown out that we should line up with ten guys and no punter and then just let the play clock run out. I think a better tribute would be to just not have to use the punter all year.
With him it is somewhat 6 in one hand, half dozen in the other. People forget that in addition to his 12 INTs the year before, he fumbled 10 times (losing 5) when he ran more.If they allow TA to pass for 40 to 50 times per game they wouldn't have to punt! lol
also, this sort of stuff really makes me think our secondary will have a big jump this year in their level of play. hope it happens.Nebraska’s defensive backs coach was watching film of his cornerbacks one day over the summer when he noticed an important detail.
His guys were changing directions — transitioning from their backpedal to a full sprint, for example — but it was taking too many steps to reach top speed. Assistant coach Brian Stewart wanted to know why.
So he called Dr. Jack Ransone, director of the Nebraska Athletic Performance Laboratory.
Soon, Stewart and some defensive backs were in the state-of-the-art training center inside the east grandstand of Memorial Stadium. The players were cutting and running on the artificial turf as motion-capture cameras tracked their movements and force plates installed under the surface measured their power output. They got the results right away.
And indeed Stewart was right. The way the cornerbacks were planting their feet limited their ability to burst — a flaw Stewart eventually realized was an unintentional consequence of drills he had used to imprint other unrelated techniques.