Yep...transfer2BGSU wrote:Offense wins games; defense wins championships.
We've been 37-12 (I think) in the past 4 years, and not one championship

Wow hammb, very well said. I too thought we lost a great deal using him at safety. It is not his natural position, and because of it he made mistakes there that an average player makes. Of course he was not an average safety, he was a pretty good one, but why have a good safety over an exceptional CB? I guess I am just repeating you at this point and I'm not going say it any better than you just did so I will stop.hammb wrote:My take on this is that he was yet another of our defensive players that was not put in the best positions to succeed. Keon is & was a CB. A great CB. A shutdown CB who could cover any WR in this league. Even when he was struggling his sophomore year he was usually in good position, but made some dubious plays when the ball was in the air. His Junior year he corrected that and then towards the end was moved to the safety spot out of necessity because of injuries. While there we found out he was also a very sound tackler.BelieveNBG wrote:No surprise to me. Great player, no doubt, but sometimes a gamble at the safety spot will cost you the big one down the field. Once they catch you sleeping, it can go for a homerun. It may look like the corner because they are in the vacinity, but many times not the case.
Now, coach Brandon sees that he's a good tackler and makes the comment that "CBs don't lead your team in tackles" which led to him playing Keon exclusively at safety. That was a major mistake, IMO. Every team in every level of football generally knows that you put your best cover guy at CB. Sure he might be your best safety if you put him there as well, but you STILL put him at CB. You could make an argument that CB is the most important position on a defense, and certainly one of the most difficult to fill adequately. Here we took our best DB, who was without a doubt our best coverman, and made him a Safety, because he was a good tackler and could lead our team in tackles from there. That just flat out doesn't make sense. Besides, if your safeties lead your team in tackles your front 7 just plain isn't doing its job.
Beyond that Keon was only above average at safety. He was a gambler. Why? Because he was a CB, with a CB's mentality. CBs can gamble. Safeties cannot. They have to be the last line of defense and have to be there to make a play; they don't have room to gamble. He also went through the entire year without learning that you cannot expect to strip the ball every time you hit somebody. That works okay on the corner when you're trying to pull it out of a WR's hands who isn't holding the ball correctly; it doesn't work so well when you're trying to pull it out of the hands of the RB who has a full head of steam after burning through your front 7 like a hot knife through swiss cheese.
I voiced my displeasure over the decision to move Keon to Safety this past summer, and my opinion did not change after seeing it for a season. We took a potentially great CB, made him a darn good S, and lived with crappy CB play. It just doesn't make sense.

I don't think Jason Wright received this memo prior to the 2003 Motor City Bowl. Keon popping that ball out of his hands was the difference in the game. I do believe he was playing CB for that particular game, but he still popped it out of a RBs hands that had a hell of a lot of steam. He also had a forced fumble in the 2nd quarter.hammb wrote:He also went through the entire year without learning that you cannot expect to strip the ball every time you hit somebody. That works okay on the corner when you're trying to pull it out of a WR's hands who isn't holding the ball correctly; it doesn't work so well when you're trying to pull it out of the hands of the RB who has a full head of steam after burning through your front 7 like a hot knife through swiss cheese.
Yes, I'll give him credit for that, and it was a great play. However, on that play I seem to recall that Wright carried him for about 10-15 yards as Keon was trying to get that ball out. That was also the only time I can remember him forcing a fumble on a RB downfield like that. That was not the only time I saw a RB get additional yardage as Keon TRIED to strip the ball out. It is a gambling play that is not typical of a safety. A safety tries to make the hit, wrap up, and minimize damage. Forcing turnovers is a result of ballhawking on a pass over the middle or a well timed big hit. The constantly trying to rip the ball out of the RB hands is not a play that a true instinctual safety makes.FalconKing wrote:I don't think Jason Wright received this memo prior to the 2003 Motor City Bowl. Keon popping that ball out of his hands was the difference in the game. I do believe he was playing CB for that particular game, but he still popped it out of a RBs hands that had a hell of a lot of steam. He also had a forced fumble in the 2nd quarter.hammb wrote:He also went through the entire year without learning that you cannot expect to strip the ball every time you hit somebody. That works okay on the corner when you're trying to pull it out of a WR's hands who isn't holding the ball correctly; it doesn't work so well when you're trying to pull it out of the hands of the RB who has a full head of steam after burning through your front 7 like a hot knife through swiss cheese.
The guy was just an absolute ball hawk and is going to be tough to replace as a DB. He really deserves a shot at the next level.





Okay then, what is the problem then?BelieveNBG wrote: The best line up was the 4 guys on the field and I think Brandon and his staff have been doing this long enough to know how to put the best players on the field.