As Lamar Jackson would say..."Pretty good for a running back." He has been doing the same sick s**t in the NFL leading to a 45-16 record as a starter. He is the most dazzling quarterback I have ever seen.
I played D1 ball and had buddies who did too. Most of us thought our coaches were stupid af. But we had to do what they said or else they kicked you off the team or relegated you to the bench. They use manipulation because no one is going to listen to players, the administration in mens sports is going to side with the coach and men are also taught not to complain because that’s supposedly a womanly or weak thing to do. So the coaches who are bred by the previous generation of shitty coaches are the same types of coaches. Garbage. Since there is no room for change and dissent, and it’s all about control, there is also no room for INNOVATION. that’s what football needs, innovation. Fluidity, agility, adaptability with the approach of coaches and front offices. But no, they are rocks. Afraid of change (white QB to black QB), spreading the field, trusting your players to manage the game or make decisions. These things are all frowned upon by any level of football coach until a couple young coaches start having success then slowly they lag behind and adopt change. But if you’re not first, your last. These old guys have no clue how much they’re hurting their teams by refusing to change, but that’s why guys like Sean McVay are winning the super bowl.
@@ryanantonellis1335 couldn’t have said it any better. The game is constantly changing, there’s a reason why there’s so many coaching changes within the NFL, especially more than back in the day. Many coaches don’t wanna change their schemes to fit this day in football. It’s a reason why there is a wave of young minded coaches. The old “ground and pound “ game only works to a certain point in this generation of football. Coaches will continue to lose their jobs if they aren’t open to changing.
@@ryanantonellis1335 One of the best takes I've heard on it, I played college football too, and was outraged at how much politics mattered compared to actual know-how in terms of coaching. It really is what's best for them!
@@Ralph__117 no stupid the ravens have always been a run heavy team , wtf do you casuals be getting this info? Like seriously ? It’s so easy to just google this shit
In 2024 and still at a loss for words how 31 teams could have watched this game and said “nah, we’re good”. There needs to be some accountability from scouts and GMs and coaches who said no to this guy. Because the Ravens and Newsome said yes and they arguably got the biggest steal in history next to Patrick mahomes. But to me, watching this film and seeing his production, this is the most mind-boggling miss on a player I’ve ever seen. There’s truly never been a bigger miss by the league and I played D1 football. I’m no pro scout but we have to graduate from thinking about things in the old way and look at the tape and what he can do and did produce at the college level. Football doesn’t change at the pro level it’s still the same field and 11 guys vs 11 guys. If he was this good in college it’s sure as hell gonna translate. People seriously should be fired and gassed for their inability to see greatness in Lamar. What a catastrophic miss by so many teams