[Husker] Punt block attempt
Scott R Lawson
SLawson at uamail.albany.edu
Mon Jan 1 14:51:13 CST 2007
My guess is that it may have actually been Corey McKeon out there (also #13) but I'd have to see the film again.
Scott in NY
-----Original Message-----
From: husker-bounces at tssi.com on behalf of Pat Gaule
Sent: Mon 2007.01.01 15:17
To: husker at tssi.com
Subject: [Husker] Punt block attempt
I really don't like the decision to go for an all-out block and not have
anyone back to receive. Most college football players have wised up to
the fact that the refs will not blow a punt dead until somebody touches
it, thus killing an extra 5-10 seconds. That decision cost us an extra
play from scrimmage, and probably 10-15 yards. It'd be much more likely
for Nebraska to get a good punt return then actually block the punt.
One of the announcers also pointed out that Zac Taylor was in on the
punt block team? If that is true, then that makes this decision even
worse. Taylor is not a threat to block the punt and is essentially a
wasted man. We basically had 10 guys trying to block the punt and
nobody back deep to receive. If the reasoning was that Taylor needed to
be out there to rush the line of scrimmage and spike the ball, then I
have a couple problems with this:
#1: Since these new clock rules went into effect, I have yet to see a
"change of possession" where the QB was unable to be under center at the
"ready to play" signal. In general, the refs are generous about making
sure that everyone is ready before the clock starts.
#2: If all that was needed was somebody to spike the ball, then there
must have been *somebody* on the punt block team with the ability to do
this! Zac Taylor being on special teams is much more of a gamble then
picking some random special teams guy to pound the ball into the ground.
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