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Just thought I would post a link and some parts of a nice breakdown from the O-Zone. Jeff Amey always provides a nice analysis after each game.
http://www.the-ozone.net/football/2005/MichiganState/bythenumbers.htm
"The reality is that Troy has trouble reading and dissecting zone defenses. Michigan and Iowa both played a lot of man coverages against the Buckeyes. Man to man defenses play right into Troy's strengths (defensive backs and some linebackers have their back to the QB and reciever matchups are easier to read). Against zone coverages, he seems unable to recognize where the holes in the defense are and is unable to anticipate when his receivers are going to come open. Couple that with his seeming unwillingness to pull the trigger on his passes unless he sees a receiver wide open, and you have a quarterback that performs like Troy did on Saturday.
One thing that has become clear over the past three games is that the main weapons of this offense going into this season, the wide receivers, have basically become a non-enitity on the field. Justin Zwick may not have all of the athletic skills that Troy Smith has, but he seemed to distribute the ball to all of the weapons on the field and has always seemed to read defenses fairly well. Let's not throw Troy under the bus yet, but let's hope that the Buckeyes don't keep beating their head against a wall when there is a possible solution on the bench if the opposing defenses are able to confuse Troy the same way Penn State did."
http://www.the-ozone.net/football/2005/MichiganState/bythenumbers.htm
"The reality is that Troy has trouble reading and dissecting zone defenses. Michigan and Iowa both played a lot of man coverages against the Buckeyes. Man to man defenses play right into Troy's strengths (defensive backs and some linebackers have their back to the QB and reciever matchups are easier to read). Against zone coverages, he seems unable to recognize where the holes in the defense are and is unable to anticipate when his receivers are going to come open. Couple that with his seeming unwillingness to pull the trigger on his passes unless he sees a receiver wide open, and you have a quarterback that performs like Troy did on Saturday.
One thing that has become clear over the past three games is that the main weapons of this offense going into this season, the wide receivers, have basically become a non-enitity on the field. Justin Zwick may not have all of the athletic skills that Troy Smith has, but he seemed to distribute the ball to all of the weapons on the field and has always seemed to read defenses fairly well. Let's not throw Troy under the bus yet, but let's hope that the Buckeyes don't keep beating their head against a wall when there is a possible solution on the bench if the opposing defenses are able to confuse Troy the same way Penn State did."
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