Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That seems to be the take. The coaches can't work directly with the players yet anyway.If it is making him better and the current staff is not upset about it, this is a non story for those who would otherwise be upset. Find ways to get yourself better.
Independant instruction can only make him better. No different than a QB going to a QB camp or having an outside QB coach. Likewise, regardless of how you feel about KW's off field issues it's hard to argue his coaching ability.
Interesting that you bring up the QB coach, because I believe Frost stated after Spring that he basically didn’t want our QBs working with an outside QB coach.Independant instruction can only make him better. No different than a QB going to a QB camp or having an outside QB coach. Likewise, regardless of how you feel about KW's off field issues it's hard to argue his coaching ability.
I'm more concerned about him running a 180 where he has to pivot on freshly cut grass. Hope he doesn't injure himself.
Must have missed that comment. Probably the difference between actually having a qualified QB coach and what we had under Pelini/Riley.I think that is changing in the QB department. I think Frost and Coach V frown upon that, and they want to work on their mechanics.
Consistency of instruction is good if the instruction is good. Verduzco is SFs handpicked dude for his QBs and appears to know what he’s doing. KW has a prior coaching relationship with Tyjon and trains Pros. Good atmosphere for Tyjon to be in.Verduzco gave a long explanation in an interview about not wanting guys working with private QB coaches. I can see both sides but his main thing was “consistency of instruction” which I think is probably more particular to QB vs other positions.
The QBs should be able whatever they want in their free time. The QB gurus seem to work for all other schools.
Verduzco is a self professed odd duck as a QB coach.
My guess is that the staff doesn't want folks like young Martinez to go get a "traditional" QB education where he's going to spend the summer being beaten if he throws late acroos the middle and then he shows up in August and Verduzco is going to want him to make some plays doing just that.
I don't really think it has anything to do with the fact that Frost or Verduzco really thinks he's the best qb coach on Earthbut it's clear his method is at odds with most of the available options for individual study.
I bet they can do what they want in their off time within team rules. But, if the qb's get de-programmed by another coach and coaches SF and V don't like what they see, the qb simply doesn't play, and from what we seem to be seeing, can feel free to find another program, saving the scholarship for another.
It is still a free country for the most part. The kids can do what they want, then reap the consequences. SF will continue to be head coach and will, obviously, continue to decide what he thinks is best for the program. This isn't smilin' mike's team anymore, and entitlement, it appears, will not be promised, thank goodness.
QBs frequently work with outside coaching consultants during breaks and vacations. Why not WRs?
Extremely well stated Redondo.
He said in an interview with severe that they tell all qbs to dump any personal gurus once they are a husker....he compared it surgery . He said would you want a doctor to perform surgery or someone who read a bunch of do it yourself books and call themselves a doctor He said he is a qb doctorVerduzco is a self professed odd duck as a QB coach.
My guess is that the staff doesn't want folks like young Martinez to go get a "traditional" QB education where he's going to spend the summer being beaten if he throws late acroos the middle and then he shows up in August and Verduzco is going to want him to make some plays doing just that.
I don't really think it has anything to do with the fact that Frost or Verduzco really thinks he's the best qb coach on Earthbut it's clear his method is at odds with most of the available options for individual study.
kinda surprised he can do that when he's getting money from Nebraska.
If he is, then fine. I certainly have no way of knowing. I am just giving you my gut feeling about a young player still hanging out with his former coach. Doesn't pass my smell test.Who says Walters isn’t 100% on board?
Verduzco gave a long explanation in an interview about not wanting guys working with private QB coaches. I can see both sides but his main thing was “consistency of instruction” which I think is probably more particular to QB vs other positions.
Verduzco is a self professed odd duck as a QB coach.
My guess is that the staff doesn't want folks like young Martinez to go get a "traditional" QB education where he's going to spend the summer being beaten if he throws late acroos the middle and then he shows up in August and Verduzco is going to want him to make some plays doing just that.
I don't really think it has anything to do with the fact that Frost or Verduzco really thinks he's the best qb coach on Earthbut it's clear his method is at odds with most of the available options for individual study.
Our most recent experience with that was the unprofessional attitudes & "poisoning of the wells" off of Pelini's staff. But "the code" of the coaching profession is to never say a bad word about the next staff and to totally support your fellow coaches. Keith Williams seems to be made up of that ilk. It appears to me that Coach Williams has a good relationship with the new staff and he does still have a great reputation as a skilled & knowledgeable position coach.If he is, then fine. I certainly have no way of knowing. I am just giving you my gut feeling about a young player still hanging out with his former coach. Doesn't pass my smell test.
QBs get beat up bad enough by Verduzco. You wouldn't think it, but Verduzco is a hard ass on QBs. I guess he lets the expletives fly if you aren't on point with your performance. His thought process is that "if you aren't tough as hell, we don't want you." Sorta refreshing if you ask me.
There have been several reports stating that sort of thing is contrary to Frost's operating parameters. Word is he doesn't go for that stuff in the program. Are you sure about what you heard of Verdusco?
Yep, and it's a good thing. Kids need a little kick in the ass sometimes. He also builds them up, but he teaches them well and expects them to get it right.
One of my good friends saw him in action and was pretty surprised. But you have to look at the results. He's good at what he does.
So we he told this to the media, it was just bull shit.
In a recent news conference, Frost explained why he won’t “yell and scream at kids.” He also mentioned his staff won’t “cuss at kids.” It’s a thought-provoking theory for coaches at all levels of football.
“One of our sayings is, ‘Have a desire to excel and no fear of failure,’” Frost told reporters, as relayed by KOLN-TV’s Dan Corey. “Part of that is the coaches’ responsibility. And I mentioned that we’re not going to yell and scream at kids, and weren’t not going to cuss at kids. I don’t think that’s the right thing to do, and I also don’t want to make kids afraid to go make a great play.
“If someone misses a tackle or drops a ball, they don’t need to be yelled at. They need to be taught the right way to do it so it doesn’t happen again. And once you take away that fear of what might happen if you make a bad play, it really frees you up to go make great plays.”
Yep, you are correct, sir. He cussed...a 'goodly' amount. But what coach doesn't? Any coach that has a competitive team is going to cuss, except maybe TO.
Look at some of his interviews. He used "friggen" and "what the hell" in front of the cameras in a short interview I watched, which indicates that he is going to use more colorful language when he's off camera.
I don't have a problem with it at all, but don't say something like that to the media and then turn around and go the opposite direction with it. In the few interviews I have heard from Coach V, I can see him dropping the F-Bomb on a pretty regular basis just in conversation, let alone in practice or on the sideline.
I get it, there is a huge amount of cussing in coaching in general, and for the most part it doesn't bother me. I am 3 episodes in on the new season of Last Chance U and the first episode was pretty tough to listen to. This coach at Independence CC dropped the F-Bomb a ton.
I think it is almost comical how a coach drops a profane filled pre-game speech and at the end say, everyone take a knee and then they pray. See The Ben Show Football Halftime Speech.
I think Frost and his staff will be excellent builders of character, and there is no other coach out there that I would rather have on our sideline, but let's be honest, football is an emotional team sport, and coaches cuss. Coach V drops F-bombs. I'm sure the other coaches do too. As long as they move this program forward, I'll forgive them for a few (or a lot) cuss words here and there.
I think this is huge, and huge for building up the mental strength of this team. You see some coaches who are out of control and act like maniacs, and the team will play out of control. You also see coaches who let players and recruits walk all over them. Frost is different in that he has a quiet confidence about him, and I think the players will take after that.So we he told this to the media, it was just bull shit.
In a recent news conference, Frost explained why he won’t “yell and scream at kids.” He also mentioned his staff won’t “cuss at kids.” It’s a thought-provoking theory for coaches at all levels of football.
“One of our sayings is, ‘Have a desire to excel and no fear of failure,’” Frost told reporters, as relayed by KOLN-TV’s Dan Corey. “Part of that is the coaches’ responsibility. And I mentioned that we’re not going to yell and scream at kids, and weren’t not going to cuss at kids. I don’t think that’s the right thing to do, and I also don’t want to make kids afraid to go make a great play.
“If someone misses a tackle or drops a ball, they don’t need to be yelled at. They need to be taught the right way to do it so it doesn’t happen again. And once you take away that fear of what might happen if you make a bad play, it really frees you up to go make great plays.”