Something I want to touch on with Pryor's first start was the play that was nullified by Robo being OB. This play was TP all the way, the play broke down and instead of just tucking and running, or trying to, he was able to move around the pocket, got to the outside, and kept his eyes downfield. He broke a tackle and also pump faked to get the defender off his feet, at this point TP probably could have tucked and at least got to the LOS, however, he continued to keep his eyes downfield, had the awareness to know where the LOS was and stayed behind, then rifled what would have been a first down pass to Robo; negated by the receiver being OB and then touching the ball first once he was in bounds.
This play shows to me that Pryor is really working on keeping a play alive without him always running. Same thing happened on his nd TD pass to Hartline. He felt the pressure, the pocket collapsed, and there were running lanes, he could have tucked and ran, and the D in their zone stepped up to close these running lanes, which left the middle of the field open for Hartline to sneak into. Again, Pryor kept his eyes downfield and it resulted in one of his four TD passes.
Subtle plays like this are what makes dual-threat QB's. As soon as the D steps up to stop the run attack, the field is open behind the first and second levels. When the D drops back to defend the pass, the QB can get past the first level and depending on how deep the LB's are nearly five yards a pop every time. When the O spreads out, it allows even more possibilities. Try spying the QB, your taking a LB or corner out of coverage, one less on man, one less in zone, which leaves mismatches and gaps, if the QB can find these mismatches, or if his WR's can make zone reads, an attack like this is nearly impossible to defend. Couple this with any running game, and possibilities continue to grow.
TP's arm strength was on display against Troy, he had some good touch on his throws as well, but passes like his last TD to Hartline are little high and hard. His touch will come with time, and so will his ability to read the defense.
The future is bright.