+1.... JoseyWales needs to go back and watch some tape.The only thing that bothers me is that his parents were brought down to the tent. Coach could simply be keeping that information close to his vest for scouting and preparation purposes, or he could be telling the absolute truth. I'm not living or dying by this story like a lot, but I will say that we won't score 50 a game without these guys. Hurts played awesome, and it pissed me off clearly seeing the play calling hold him back in the beginning, basically conceding the damn series instead of keeping our foot on their throat. I mean, from TV it looked like they trotted out a guy from the stands and played it conservative due to that, not the fact we trotted out a damn four star guy that led us to two title games already.
It looked like two completely different teams playing in Crimson. #2 threw a couple of great passes but our receivers had to stop and wait for the ball and then run. #13 has spoiled us with his hitting all the receivers in stride thus the long TD's.
The worse mistake by #13 was when he failed to dump the ball off to #22 on the right side of him and then he fumbled. #22 had some room to do some distance.....very unlike #13 to not to have even given the dump off option a look.
Where in the world were all of these passes that the receivers had to "stop and wait for?" I must have missed those... The only two deep balls Jalen got to throw were literally right in the bread basket. In fact, Jeudy's deep ball he had to speed up at the last minute to catch, because the corner grabbed him. The other one, to Ruggs, was in stride.
@BamaBoyJosh
Tua makes guest TV appearance on Monday Night Football (Full transcript) | BamaInsider.com
Tua Tagovailoa won’t be able to make his real debut on Monday Night Football for at least two years. However, that didn’t stop the Alabama quarterback from taking over ESPN’s telecast with a guest appearance at halftime of Monday night’s game between the Green Bay Packers and San Francisco 49ers.
Sitting down for an interview with ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt, Tagovailoa talked about everything from his knee to possible improvements this season. Here’s a full transcript of everything the sophomore quarterback said during his television appearance.
On how his knee is feeling after leaving the game against Missouri
Tagovailoa: "I’m fine. I got to go out to practice today. I’m a lot better actually than I was last week after the Arkansas game. I mean, it looked bad on the field. I re-tweaked it kind of, but we got some treatment after the game following this morning leading up to practice today. So, we’re a lot better. We’re much better."
On getting ready for big moments down the road despite not having taken a fourth-quarter snap this season
Tagovailoa: “Well, I believe it just starts in practice, you know. We practice hard every day of the week every week. It challenges us, but at the same time, we always go in with the mindset that we’ve got to play for 60 minutes every time. And really, it’s just up to the coaching staff to make that decision whether I’m going to be or not.”
On whether head coach Nick Saban and offensive coordinator Mike Locksley have anything to correct in his game
Tagovailoa: “Well, there’s a lot of things that I haven’t done correctly. [Like what?] A lot of things during the Missouri game I missed. And we can take an example — the fumble where I got sacked, the sack fumble. I had a wide-open guy coming across, he had a dig route, and I kind of held onto the ball too long. I couldn’t see, but it was one of those things where it was a timing route and my eyes were focused on the safety and I just didn’t go through my progressions good enough to find Henry [Ruggs III]. It’s just little things like that, and we set a standard for ourselves as an offense. And so, when we don’t accomplish it like we wanted to this past week against Missouri, those are things that our coaches look at that we can kind of better ourselves in.”
On what this year has been like
Tagovailoa: "Blessing. It’s a blessing. This process has been a blessing. The coaching staff has been a blessing. The players have been a blessing. Everything has been a blessing. It’s just work, work in all the right ways I’d say for everyone in this organization. I don’t know how to explain it. We have some many guys that are are really, really good offensively that make me look good. It’s not just me.”
Ah the world of "insider" football knowledge. This is probably the 6th or 7th Bama football board I have been invested in. I have come to the place that this is the only board I go to and certainly the only board I post on. I've seen the old boy in question on several boards going back to a time when I actually had a small source of info coming out of the program. Back during that time I have seen him post things that I knew for a fact were, for lack of a better term, bullshit. I will say he is persistent. He is like a CB who gets torched consistently but still continues to trumpet his abilities.
As far as injuries, I almost puked when Tua went to the tent saturday night. When his parents came down I thought the worst.
The sign of a true liar.
The sign of a true liar.
Actually, and more accurately, a "pathological" liar. They don't just give one reason why something is true or not but are willing to give numerous reasons, often each one more ridiculous and complicated than the other. But still given with great sincerity and conviction. It's this unmitigated conviction that often convinces people, parents, mates, friends, enemies, they are telling the truth even though the substance of what they say often won't hold water. A lot of pathological liars could pass a lie detector test standing on their head. And often do. "Pathological" liar is our word for the day kids.
So, kinda like suggesting someone had their knee scoped on a SUNDAY and not only that but was back practicing Monday and would play less than a week later?
Someone posted up the Tweet from Drew DeArmond and he just attacked DeArmond and suggested he was lying. When it was pointed out that Saban said he was fine and that Tua practiced, his response was "but what did he do at practice?" suggesting that Tua didn't actually PRACTICE (I guess all the pictures and video of him doing drills were fake). Instead of just saying "yeah I had mad info" and moving on, he doubles and triples down. The sign of a true liar.
The only thing that bothers me is that his parents were brought down to the tent. Coach could simply be keeping that information close to his vest for scouting and preparation purposes, or he could be telling the absolute truth. I'm not living or dying by this story like a lot, but I will say that we won't score 50 a game without these guys. Hurts played awesome, and it pissed me off clearly seeing the play calling hold him back in the beginning, basically conceding the damn series instead of keeping our foot on their throat. I mean, from TV it looked like they trotted out a guy from the stands and played it conservative due to that, not the fact we trotted out a damn four star guy that led us to two title games already.
It looked like two completely different teams playing in Crimson. #2 threw a couple of great passes but our receivers had to stop and wait for the ball and then run. #13 has spoiled us with his hitting all the receivers in stride thus the long TD's.
The worse mistake by #13 was when he failed to dump the ball off to #22 on the right side of him and then he fumbled. #22 had some room to do some distance.....very unlike #13 to not to have even given the dump off option a look.
Where in the world were all of these passes that the receivers had to "stop and wait for?" I must have missed those... The only two deep balls Jalen got to throw were literally right in the bread basket. In fact, Jeudy's deep ball he had to speed up at the last minute to catch, because the corner grabbed him. The other one, to Ruggs, was in stride.
+1.... JoseyWales needs to go back and watch some tape.
AlohaShalom