footballdad wrote: Many moons ago, highly irrelevant to his success or failure today. I would assume a large percentage of these Elite 11 kids never pan out. Would be interesting to go back and track the careers of these guys since the inception of the contest.
leopold wrote:If I remember correctly, the A&M defense played pass early on, probably leading to Padron's bad throws. The success on runs came as a result of the RnS's policy of 'taking what they give you,' catching their D unprepared for a run, and the fact the we had a) a senior laden O-line in the first game of the year, and b) one of the best fullbacks in the nation at the time. Early on the O-line did very well (I remember the commentator commenting on how they were winning the line of scrimmage battle against A&M) but later on A&M's depth and overall talent was too much for us.
That and the center at the time Brad Keishnick I believe, dominated the A&M NG. A&M was really surprised about how physical our o-line was and ZL was as a runner.
As Stallion said, because we aren't going to move to a 2 TE set with a fullback, if the defense wants to stop the run,t hey will be a ble to put numbers in the box and do it. The key to us being able to run the ball is to spread the field enough that it is man-on-man inside.
The late great Keishnick's last year was something like 2005 I believe. I think the center was Blake McJunkin.
“@DeionSandersJr: Freshman/transfer initiation! Gotta jump in the pool from 4 stories high! dcj_7 @that_davisguy #SMU… http://Instagram.com/p/r7USi3pp7Z/â€
SMU-12 NCAA appearances, 1 Final Four 2014-15 & 2016-17 AAC Men's Basketball Champs
footballdad wrote: Many moons ago, highly irrelevant to his success or failure today. I would assume a large percentage of these Elite 11 kids never pan out. Would be interesting to go back and track the careers of these guys since the inception of the contest.
Great Info! Seems like quite of bit of success thru 2008.
2009 was a nightmare group. Zero NFL draftees and 8 of the 12 transferred multiple times. 2010 little success & no-name guys outside of Bridgewater, Walsh and Golson 2011 Winston the only guy. Burcham & Voytik the only others even vying for a starting spot. 2012 Hackenberg the man. Jury still out on the rest.
You'd think with all the time and effort and resources that have been put into this Elite 11 thing by ESPN & Dilfer & staff you'd see more successful guys, not less.
leopold wrote:If I remember correctly, the A&M defense played pass early on, probably leading to Padron's bad throws. The success on runs came as a result of the RnS's policy of 'taking what they give you,' catching their D unprepared for a run, and the fact the we had a) a senior laden O-line in the first game of the year, and b) one of the best fullbacks in the nation at the time. Early on the O-line did very well (I remember the commentator commenting on how they were winning the line of scrimmage battle against A&M) but later on A&M's depth and overall talent was too much for us.
That and the center at the time Brad Keishnick I believe, dominated the A&M NG. A&M was really surprised about how physical our o-line was and ZL was as a runner.
As Stallion said, because we aren't going to move to a 2 TE set with a fullback, if the defense wants to stop the run,t hey will be a ble to put numbers in the box and do it. The key to us being able to run the ball is to spread the field enough that it is man-on-man inside.
The late great Keishnick's last year was something like 2005 I believe. I think the center was Blake McJunkin.
footballdad wrote: Many moons ago, highly irrelevant to his success or failure today. I would assume a large percentage of these Elite 11 kids never pan out. Would be interesting to go back and track the careers of these guys since the inception of the contest.
Great Info! Seems like quite of bit of success thru 2008.
2009 was a nightmare group. Zero NFL draftees and 8 of the 12 transferred multiple times. 2010 little success & no-name guys outside of Bridgewater, Walsh and Golson 2011 Winston the only guy. Burcham & Voytik the only others even vying for a starting spot. 2012 Hackenberg the man. Jury still out on the rest.
You'd think with all the time and effort and resources that have been put into this Elite 11 thing by ESPN & Dilfer & staff you'd see more successful guys, not less.
2009 and on still have players in school, so the jury is still out. Track record is that the Elite 11 is a pretty good indicator of some level of success in college.
The OL is garbage. Worst I've seen in years. Couldn't hold blocks for one second. Baylor never blitzed.
That said, you cant tell if you have something with Neal Burcham or not. There is nothing in Neal Burcham's game to suggest this is going to be any better. He has no arm strength. He's not a leader. You don't see the players rally behind him. There is no body language to say I can do this despite the chaos that's out there. He's not a competitor.
Meanwhile the excuses for Burcham are ridiculous.
1. Well it was his first start at Houston.
2. Well the ice/snow/cold against UCF made it hard for him to do anything.
3. Well Baylor's DL had him on the run because the OL was horrible
When does it end and reality set in, folks?
If you're making excuses for Burcham you're just not willing to admit this is done. Neal Burcham is not a Division I quarterback. THIS EXPERIMENT NEEDS TO END.
Matt Davis may not have great tools to play quarterback -- he made a horrible decision on the pick -- but I saw a kid who wants to compete and lead. At this point SMU needs a competitor to play that position. Burcham won't ever be that guy.