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248 Squeeze the throat

First, a two-minute and twenty-two-second offensive and defensive showdown ended with a strikeout from the Wildcats defensive team; then a five-minute and three-second offensive and defensive showdown ended with a passing touchdown from the Wildcats' offensive team.

In the first quarter of the 2007 Grand Twelve League championship battle, just halfway through, and the "dark horse" Kansas State University has taken over the game.

It is vaguely possible to detect an invisible hand manipulating behind the back, and the University of Oklahoma is facing a difficult situation.

If we only changed the offense and defense twice so far, the reference samples are still too few, and both sides are still in a warm-up state, which is not enough to explain the problem; then after the attack team's offensive team appeared again, the attack's various constraints can clearly feel the problem.

Indeed, relying solely on talent, the combination of Bradford and Murray is indeed a partner at the NFL professional league level.

As a quarterback, Bradford has excellent passing accuracy and tactical layout skills. He broke a series of records of legendary quarterback Payton Manning in his rookie season. His tactical interpretation ability is exceptional and he can always find the correct passing route in chaos. His Kirin arm can even send super shells with more than fifty yards, easily tear open the defensive team's blockade, and block the throat with one sword and go straight to the end zone.

To be fair, this is indeed an excellent quarterback at the professional league level. Being able to become the No. 1 draft pick in 2010 was not an unexpected choice; having the ability to fight in the rookie season, which indirectly shows that he had known to fully use tactics in college rather than relying solely on his body.

Like a professional player, it is definitely not an easy task, but Bradford did it.

With both ability and wisdom, it can be said that Bradford is the first truly top quarterback in the NCAA the Wildcats encountered this season.

However, Bradford's weaknesses are also very obvious:

First, lack of confrontational ability.

Second, lacks the ability to change the array on the spot.

Regarding the former, to be fair, most quarterbacks lack the ability to confront each other, and the physical fitness of traditional pocket quarterbacks is not outstanding. Compared with the beasts in the defensive team, they can even be said to be thin. After all, the passing feel and mind wisdom are their weapons to gain a foothold on the court.

Bradford is not an exception.

The real problem is that Bradford is afraid of collisions. When faced with impact pressure, he is often prone to panic and makes wrong judgments.

As a result, the passing success rate begins to decline, and the ball rights conversion of interception or drop may occur. The passing choice may make mistakes, and the structure and efficiency of the entire offensive organization will fluctuate significantly.

And the latter is actually somewhat similar.

After interpreting the opponent's tactical intentions through defensive reading, the real tactical masters - such as Payton Manning, can immediately make arrangements and find the correct offensive tactics, either avoid traps, or face tit, or find breakthroughs, and find opportunities to advance again; and Bradford is just... anxious.

This is not accurate. Bradford is not unable to change the formation, but the hasty formation change lacks meticulousness, prone to errors, and cannot coordinate the overall situation, so that the formation change effect is limited. The team may make mistakes on the spot, and then fall into a cocoon, which will destroy the original offensive tactics.

Even Bradford faced similar problems even at his peak in his best NFL form, and this is even more so now as a young rookie who started in the first year.

In fact, such a situation is not uncommon for quarterbacks.

The NCAA often has such players: quarterback data is red, pass success rate, touchdown interception ratio, pass line selection, tactical manual reading ability, etc., all of which are particularly outstanding. The team's own fans think that this is a rare genius.

But scouts will not easily agree with it. They also need to observe the performance of quarterbacks in the face of pressure. When many quarterbacks encounter pressure, they don’t know where to put their hands and feet, and may even give up passing the ball voluntarily, and the passing success rate will drop directly.

This also means that this quarterback is a system player, and thanks to the solid and stable pocket protection of the offensive front line, he can constantly brush up data - of course, the quarterback still has certain abilities, but those data and victory should be attributed to the coach's dispatch.

Compared with those mediocre quarterbacks, Bradford's crisis handling ability is already higher than the average line. He is definitely not just a player in the system. It is certain that he is an excellent quarterback with outstanding abilities, but losing his chain at critical moments is still a stubborn problem.

This season, the Earstocks performed very well in offensive line, and Trent Williams was even more helpless, which made Bradford almost not faced too many shocks, and his passing ability was promoted; however, in this game, Lu Yiqi and Robert will give this pride a good extracurricular tutoring of "pocket footsteps" for this pride.

The Wildcats' defense team prescribed the right medicine and made targeted tactical changes—

The frontcourt part continues Lu Yiqi's defensive tactic changes this season and continues to put pressure on the rise. The purpose is not to sack the quarterback, but to maintain pressure, forcing the quarterback to complete the pass observation under pressure; then wait for the best opportunity to truly play the essence of the "raid".

This part is the biggest transformation of the Wildcats' defensive end throughout the season.

Before Reggie Walker was injured, his interpretation of tactics and grasp of timing were completely in line with Lu Yiqi's defensive tactics, which also made the Wildcats' surprise tactics on the front line effective, and the state and performance of the defensive team were the highlights of the entire season.

After Walker was injured, the Wildcats' timing of the raid tactics appeared many problems, and the defensive effect inevitably fluctuated. But gradually, after Robertson thoroughly understood Lu Yiqi's tactics, his timing of the raid tactics became more and more accurate and correct, and the defensive power returned to a satisfactory state.

This game is the best touchstone.

Facing the offensive tackle Trent Williams at the All-American team level, Robert clearly understood that it was difficult for any Wildcats to have an advantage and it was difficult to make a breakthrough on Trent's side. So they avoided the left side of Trent guarding and broke through from the right side.

Even the defense team may even be bold in dislocation to escape Trent, that is, simply put Trent in an empty space and replace it with the power of the raid in other locations. Such a crazy tactic has achieved incredible results-

The Wildcats have only tried twice since the opening, once successfully sacking Bradford and once successfully creating Murray's ball-holding hitting the wall. The Earsers were completely dizzy.

After the success of the tactics, Robert couldn't help but frequently look towards Lu Yiqi: that pervert.

As for Bradford?
Chapter completed!
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