11-01-2015, 07:13 AM
(11-01-2015, 06:53 AM)Lods link Wrote:For those of us who don't really understand the game it's a bit bizarre.
My gut feeling is that if they'd played to his strengths and given him some extended time running the ball then we would have seen him in a much better light than what we have.
But he really hasn't been given that opportunity so it's a little frustrating.
Still they're obsessed with this ball security....so he'll find it hard.
If another team picks him up will he have to learn a whole lot of new plays?
I cant answer much about NFL, but generally speaking, they all use the same (or similar) plays with a few variances largely centred around the skillset of the teams at the time.
We bang on about the AFL over and over again and game plans, but largely the game plan is not as important as to how well drilled the side is. If they all are on the same page they execute plans and the team plays better more often than not, and the same applies to NFL, or any team sport really.
Hayne will have to learn a few new things at a different club, but largely it would centre around his teammates, and how they play rather than new plans so to speak. They all know each other's plans too, as they have to counter them.
"everything you know is wrong"
Paul Hewson
Paul Hewson

