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tmacirish
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What do you guys think about Darren Walls, and Raeshon McNeil playing this year? or starting?
tmacirish said:FI, whats going on man? you still post on the espn boards at all? i kinda hope they get some playing time, whether it just be for expierence or whatever. weis did say that the best will play. howre they doin in preseason practices?
Someone said it to me the other day, which was a day after someone else had said it to me, “The problem with Notre Dame’s secondary is they don’t have enough speed. Look what Ohio State did to them!”
...
And yet, is it really a lack of speed, or is it the inability to execute one of the most difficult aspects of football on the highest level of intercollegiate football? I can see both sides.
There’s a lot of talk about Darrin Walls and Raeshon McNeil coming in and making an impact in the Irish secondary. They certainly have the athletic skills to do so.
But the odds of Walls and/or McNeil beating out either Richardson or Wooden are extremely high. (I think he means low) They may play because of injuries to the starters and the backups. But it’s very unlikely either will move ahead of Richardson and Wooden in 2006, especially in a season in which Notre Dame has a legitimate chance to win a national championship.
If neither Walls nor McNeil start a game in 2006, that doesn’t necessarily mean they weren’t as good as we thought they were. Chances are it will be because they simply haven’t mastered the technique or the complexities of the coverages coming from the high school level.
Speed in the secondary is only part of the problem. In these four plays there is only one example of a guy truly getting beat in a footrace -- Holmes outrunning Ndukwe on the play-action. We didn't see much of Richardson in these plays; on the Ginn bomb, Wooden never tried running step-for-step with him, so that doesn't tell us much about our backfield wheels. Although he didn't make any tackles, Zibby showed great closing speed, and seemed at least as fast Holmes. Ndukwe is the only player you could point to as being a step slow, and right now he's shedding pounds like a wrestler trying to make his weight for the next match. Hopefully it'll pay off, and he'll be a few steps quicker this year.
Read and react. Apart from physical issues, we made some grievous mental mistakes: we blew the coverage on the bomb, we were suckered by the play-action, we didn't identify nor contain on the reverse, we didn't fill the gap on the Pittman run. Weis cited miscommunication on defense as a big problem last year, and it appeared there was plenty of confusion in the bowl game. Unfortunately this goes to coaching and preparation as much as anything else; it's a little disappointing to see this in the twelfth game of the season.
lattedatte said:OK, I might make some people sad with this post but I'm not big on Walls... But I'd be suprised if he's a major contributor next year note neither was Todd Light his freshman year. ... I call 'em as I see 'em.
BGIF said:Either you didn't get to see Tood Lyght's freshman year or you figure a player has to make All-American to be a major contributor.
I'm just saying that don't rely on Walls(especially) or McNeil to come in and fix the secondary problems. Plus, I'm going to go off a little here, becuase I'm sick of people putting all the blame on the DB's. The best ways to fix one on the worst pass defenses in the country is to get pressure on the QB's. Our "All-American" DE needs to step up and not just on the last drive of the game against Stanford. Abiamiri disappeared in so many huge situations last year. If you let D1 QB's sit back and survey the situation most will make you pay. I put the blame more on the front 4. Look at what happend when the Colts faced pressure last year (and in past years) against San Diego and the Steelers. As a defender you automatically at a disadvantage becuase the offense knows where they are going pre-snap. You need to disrupt this by putting heat on the QB's. I don't care if we had Ty Law, Deion, Rod Woodson and Polamalu as our secondary.