stinger78
Jacket by the grace of God.
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 12,542
The first quarter was obvious: PJ was the master of the trick play.
The fourth quarter was not so obvious: PJ was the master of CU's DL. He saw their crash on the A gaps and the DE's pursuit of the pitch, and waited to exploit it with Nesbitt's feet. CU was clueless, never re-adjusted, and couldn't stop it. The rest is history.
I'll never understand why he took so long to do this, or why he insisted on Nesbitt doing a Dan Marino imitation. Perhaps Nesbitt had the read and just insisted on going deep. Who knows. Nesbitt's legs and getting back to the shorter passes was the key adjustment to winning that game.
The fourth quarter was not so obvious: PJ was the master of CU's DL. He saw their crash on the A gaps and the DE's pursuit of the pitch, and waited to exploit it with Nesbitt's feet. CU was clueless, never re-adjusted, and couldn't stop it. The rest is history.
I'll never understand why he took so long to do this, or why he insisted on Nesbitt doing a Dan Marino imitation. Perhaps Nesbitt had the read and just insisted on going deep. Who knows. Nesbitt's legs and getting back to the shorter passes was the key adjustment to winning that game.