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Dan Morgan and Brandt Tilis press conference


TheSpecialJuan
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This past Monday, the Panthers brought in safeties Julian Blackmon and Marcus Williams for free-agent visits. Both, however, left the building without striking a deal.

So, what do these types of meetings provide to the team? Tilis was asked that during his press conference on Wednesday.

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"Just how they fit with our coaching staff and just getting to know the person a little bit better," Tilis said of the visits. "At this point in free agency, players are signing for opportunities—so let's all make sure that we all agree on what this opportunity looks like."

 

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    • https://support.google.com/phoneapp/thread/334555322?hl=en&sjid=3321411729631838448-NA
    • So 2 years ago, a Freshman doesn't say he doesn't watch film at all, just that he doesn't watch it on his own because they do it as a group. And that is what is turning people off of him now? Good lord, don't want to draft a player if you don't want to, but this is such an asinine reason to jump on. Even just setting aside that it's not like he said he doesn't watch film at all, it's also ignoring that WR is the one position on the field that for the most part, doesn't really require a player to be a film junkie to be elite.  It's the one position on the field where players almost never make their own decisions of what to do, and in fact, if they are making their own decisions, it's more likely to end up costing the team than helping them. Every other position needs to understand what the other team is likely to do so they know what they should do in return.  The OL/DL needs to be able to recognize what the other's tendencies are and what they're planning on doing so they know who to pick up or what to look for.  RB's need to recognize what the defenders are doing pre-snap so they know where their lanes are likely to open up.  LB's and DB's need to recognize what the offense is planning on doing so they can try and beat the offensive player to the spot to make a play.  And QB's of course need to know everything. But WR's, not so much.  Sure it would be good for them to recognize the coverage they're facing, but for the most part, that's not that hard, not to the point where the player needs to be a film junkie on their own. And more to the point, WR's aren't supposed to be making their own decisions based on what they're seeing, because the QB needs to trust them to be exactly where the QB expects them to be.  It's why they run the routes for the play that is called and it's on the QB to alter their route pre-snap, and if the QB does that, it's still on the WR to run the route the QB told them to, not whatever they want, because if they don't, you run the risk of INT's. Most WR film study is to see what specific DB's will do to them, and really, that type of film is best watched with coaches anyways so they can advice on how to best attack said technique/strategy from the DB. This video is a big fat nothing burger.
    • True. As soon as I saw that bench press I knew it was bologna.   Plus I had an edge over others given I am Dan Morgan’s alt account.  
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