7StraightIsGreat
Well-Known Member
I'm with you both. He looked slower. I'm thinking though that it's due to the new system and he is thinking about every move he makes which is slowing him down.
I think if he just went after it he would get much of his speed back. I'm not necessarily thinking he should, but as he gets more comfortable with the plays and system he will speed up. I think it's mental. I don't think a linsfranc injury will slow a player down like that, but what do I know.
Good points. I'm sure Taysom will start to play "faster" within that system once the season rolls on. That's just one of the many reasons I'm glad to be getting BYU in week 2. It's probably a combination of the new slowed down system and at least a little wear and tear from what his body has gone through. I'm really interested to see how BYU's more conventional offense holds up against Utah. Turnovers have absolutely killed them in recent rivalry history and you'd have to think that slowing it down and not being obsessed with the "go fast, go hard" mentality will help them. Under Whitt, Utah has been very good vs the teams that want to line up and slug it out. Performances against teams like Stanford and USC have shown us that. Then again, we've seen 1 game of Ty Detmer running an offense. For all we know, Taysom could line up in the shotgun exclusively against Utah and try to run up tempo, but I doubt it.
I caught a partial interview on DJ & PK this morning with a former BYU player who was on the Cotton Bowl team. Didn't catch who it was, but he had some thoughts that to me were very telling and I'm interested to hear a BYU fans opinion on it. He talked about his biggest perceived difference with BYU now that Sitake is in charge and the differences that it will make in the rivalry going forward. He said that you can just tell that this team now believes they can compete in this game and they "want" it more than before. It's also something I've heard many BYU fans reference since the hiring. I laugh at that notion from the simple stand point that it's not as if players under Bronco didn't "want" to beat Utah. I know many BYU fans have a problem with how Bronco treated that game like any other, but I personally have never watched a Utah-BYU game in which the BYU players didn't act like they wanted it. Now that Sitake is here, it's magically as if BYU was never up for a Utah game in the past 12 years which I think couldn't be further from the truth. If that's the case, did BYU players not "want" to beat Utah during Lavell's last 10 years when the game was basically a toss up each year? Do we honestly believe that wanting to beat Utah during this losing streak wasn't something that the team felt strongly about? I actually think that the reason so many of the games have been close battles is the fact that BYU has actually wanted it very badly and has played pretty determined. Otherwise, I think you'd see Utah win all of those games by 2+ scores.
I feel like that's the problem with the mentality of a large segment of BYU fans and apparently even some of their players. When discussing what's gone wrong in the rivalry, it's never brought up that Utah has created a gap between themselves and BYU in talent and depth during the last 20+ years. It always boils down to goofy excuses about how BYU hasn't wanted it as bad, that Utah has gotten all the lucky breaks, that Utah's DB's are allowed to manhandle BYU receivers, etc. I have no problem admitting that there simply was a time when BYU was flat-out better than Utah. I'm not specifically pointing to any of you in here, but it does seem like the average BYU fan will never allow themselves to admit that in the last 2 decades of this rivalry, Utah has simply been the better team.