Ryan Leaf
๐ค SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, he can.
He's exceptional.
What you have to be able to do is I would suspect is they're going to use the edge rushers and they're going to make sure that they are setting the edge.
They're not going to allow for that to happen.
So I would think that you're going to get a lot of A and B gap pressure.
You're going to get guys that are lined up in those A gaps or B gaps that
and be coming from distance.
So safeties, not so much corners, not so much things where if the blitz comes inside, Caleb could get outside and escape that way and pick up yardage.
You've got to stay contained, make him stay in the pocket, and if he takes off, he's going to take off up the middle where there's someone there to contain that.
That's what I would expect from Jeff Halfley if he's putting together a blitz package to go against Caleb Williams this weekend.
Well, I think once the game slows down for you, you're able to see things better, and then you're able to anticipate better.
Usually anticipation means
you know, touch, you can put more touch on the ball when you are reacting in the moment and seeing somebody flash, you have to fire that thing.
And that's, therefore you have to be extremely accurate in those situations.
So that's just a learning curve.
You know, I think Caleb is more of kind of like a throwback quarterback.
You know, he, he, he attempts passes further down the field than what the average is in the league right now.
I mean, the league average is really minus two to plus two of the line of scrimmage of where passes are attempted on average.
you don't see the ball 7 to 10 yards down the field much because the completion percentages are so high.
But Caleb Williams is sitting around 58%.