2000s Tennessee All-Bust Team

#59
#59
When you throw the ball all over the place (high, wide, in the grass) as he has that isn't lack of coaching IMO.

I think most of that was just nerves. However, you would think he would have gotten that out of his system by the Auburn game.
 
#61
#61
About Crompton if he doesnt play this year big 5 star bust? Or product of two bad offenses out of four?

If Crompton can't beat out a guy that injured his throwing arm and a sophomore than I'd say he's probably residing near Bustville.
 
#63
#63
When you throw the ball all over the place (high, wide, in the grass) as he has that isn't lack of coaching IMO.

can be a product of play-calling though. Give the QB too much to think about and he can't make proper throws. Same would have happened to Shuler if they had ever forced him to learn more than the first 2 pages of the playbook
 
#67
#67
If Crompton can't beat out a guy that injured his throwing arm and a sophomore than I'd say he's probably residing near Bustville.

but Cut hand-picked that Soph so that's really hard to beat
 
#68
#68
can be a product of play-calling though. Give the QB too much to think about and he can't make proper throws. Same would have happened to Shuler if they had ever forced him to learn more than the first 2 pages of the playbook

Point taken but when a guy is in the flat and the qb pivots, wipes the window as they used to tell us at qb camps, and steps into the throw the last thing on his mind is the play call.

Play calling and scheme, with Shuler and Crompton, would cause them not to know where to throw the ball and interceptions and sacks.

Not making proper throws is correct but when you have an open receiver and you throw it in the dirt, that isn't scheme or play calling. Crompton missed many open receivers last year.
 
#69
#69
im sure confidence has something to do with bad throwing. But of course its also a sign of mental weakness. I'm just going back to spectating because analyzing is hard.
 
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