07-31-2018, 03:38 AM
(07-30-2018, 05:23 PM)StrictlyBiz Wrote:When you take the snap and immediately stare at a receiver and don't look anyone off, any player is going to go right where he's looking, making it an easy interception! How are you not understanding that?!
Lol, there is no time to STARE down a receiver on that play. It's literally bang-bang. That ball was in Harrisons hands in less than 2 seconds after it was snapped. Warner had less than 1 second to make up his mind to throw the ball. Harrison is a known rusher. Harrisons assignment was to rush. Harrisons first step was toward the backfield which was within that first second when Warner had to make his decision. Harrison sold it. It was a great play. Everyone knows it. You're on an island here, but you always are.
Maybe your lack of knowledge is why you stopped playing QB in 9th grade and was relegated to water boy?
Harrison saw where he was looking because he was looking there the entire time and Warner threw it right to him and he was easily intercepted.
By the way, I was starting JV Qb in the 9th grade and was backup to the varsity QB, but then decided that I liked making plays in the open field more, and I didn't want to wait for the varsity QB to graduate (he was only a junior), so I played the last two games and the playoff games at varsity free safety (was the first freshman to ever start varsity on one of the best programs in the state.... so that kind of backfired on you).
(07-30-2018, 05:51 PM)StrictlyBiz Wrote: Lol, you speak in definitives, get owned by a picture, then say that it's different.
Again, is there any wonder why you never took a snap after your freshman year?
In that situation, the read would be to both corners because there was no strong side linebacker on that play, and Butler was playing so off of him that he's the only one that could make the play so he would be the read.
Everything is not always black and blue, which you can't see and that's why your'e so clueless to football knowledge.