I read the following article in ESPN, but there´s just one part obviously because it is a ESPN Insider article (I hate that).
Does anyone has password or could get the other part of the Thread
" One of the keys to coaching is to figure out the things your players do well and those they don't do well. A good coach will set up a scheme that amplifies the things his players do well and limits the things they don't. The toughest part of this for a coach can be finding out what it is a player can do, and that brings me to the Buffalo Bills' quarterbacking situation.
Mike Mularkey saw enough of Drew Bledsoe last year to realize he wanted to go in a different direction. Bledsoe was very statuesque in the pocket and on the wrong side of 30, so Mularkey decided to bite the bullet and promote J.P. Losman to the starting role. Losman displayed a number of strengths as a college quarterback. He has quick feet, excellent mobility, a fast release and a high level of self-confidence. The issue for Mularkey and offensive coordinator Tom Clements was how to translate these physical traits into his performance. Essentially, they had to find out what Losman does and doesn't do well. A metric analysis of Losman's performance in the first four games of the season shows why he was replaced. A study of Kelly Holcomb's performance also shows what Holcomb is allowing this offense to do that Losman didn't "
Does anyone has password or could get the other part of the Thread
" One of the keys to coaching is to figure out the things your players do well and those they don't do well. A good coach will set up a scheme that amplifies the things his players do well and limits the things they don't. The toughest part of this for a coach can be finding out what it is a player can do, and that brings me to the Buffalo Bills' quarterbacking situation.
Mike Mularkey saw enough of Drew Bledsoe last year to realize he wanted to go in a different direction. Bledsoe was very statuesque in the pocket and on the wrong side of 30, so Mularkey decided to bite the bullet and promote J.P. Losman to the starting role. Losman displayed a number of strengths as a college quarterback. He has quick feet, excellent mobility, a fast release and a high level of self-confidence. The issue for Mularkey and offensive coordinator Tom Clements was how to translate these physical traits into his performance. Essentially, they had to find out what Losman does and doesn't do well. A metric analysis of Losman's performance in the first four games of the season shows why he was replaced. A study of Kelly Holcomb's performance also shows what Holcomb is allowing this offense to do that Losman didn't "
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