Sentences with phrase «get to the quarterback because»

In past installments it was extremely difficult at times to get to the quarterback because offensive linemen would become bunched up at times, but that is not the case this year.

Not exact matches

In March, Trump took credit for the free agency of Kaepernick and bragged that NFL owners were afraid to pick up the quarterback because they didn't want «to get a nasty tweet from Donald Trump.»
Since we are discussing rules, there's one more I can't stand — a quarterback under throws a receiver by 3 - 5 yards and gets a PI call because the wide receiver tries to run through the defensive back for the catch, when there's no chance for a catch.
It's probably because of those years of hard work on his skill and technique, repping and drilling it over and over, that he still has the kind of incredible muscle memory to come in off the street and get right to work kicking offensive linemen's asses and putting quarterbacks on the ground.
The problem is it's hard for McCoy to get sacks when the Bucs are blitzing and stunting so much because he either is getting double and triple teamed or the end to his side is losing contain and letting the quarterback escape away from him.
But he's held on to Brady because smart people know not to get rid of a good quarterback.
Pitt could absolutely win three of four to finish and win a tie - breaker at 5 - 2 (meaning they would get to a BCS bowl at a smoking 7 - 5; or to put it another way, they can overcome Graham's injury because the Big East is semi-awful), but losing Graham obviously puts quite a bit more pressure on quarterback Tino Sunseri, who has been getting sacked at break - neck rates this year.
He's best at getting to the quarterback, but his sack numbers dropped from 10 in 2016 to 1.5 in 2017 because of a defensive scheme change.
Because they fall apart when the physical part of the game comes and they've been working on playing quarterback against air and no pads for most of the year at specialized quarterback camps or whatnot, trying to get the fundamentals down and all that.
While this may be frustrating for the books, it's beneficial to us because we get to see exactly how oddsmakers value key college football quarterbacks.
How in the world can a quarterback accidently throw to the wrong receiver just because he got confused about who he was throwing to??
For example, if the value of the condo skyrockets because the quarterback of the Miami Dolphins decides to buy a condo down the hall a week after the contract is singed, then the buyer gets that benefit, not the seller.
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