TIM TEBOW-an early look-by J.P. Fox for Football Reporters Online
As probably the most celebrated player coming out of college in I don’t know how long, Tim Tebow should be on his way to stardom in the NFL. But as we all know, college success doesn’t automatically translate into success in the NFL. Tebow isn’t your prototypical quarterback. He might have a run-first mentality, which isn’t what NFL Scouts look for in a franchise QB. In college, he focused on short-to-intermediate routes but did have an outstanding 67% completion percentage with a mind-boggling 88:15 TD to INT ratio. With those numbers, you would think he is at the top of the draft boards of NFL executives. The debate begins….. Is Tebow a franchise QB?? Is Tebow destined for another position in the NFL?? Is he a Pat White type of player, strictly running the wildcat?? There are many different views.
Tim Tebow won two BSC National titles, as a freshman and a junior. He also captured the Heisman Trophy as a sophomore. With that on your resume, and his knack for being the team leader, that’s things you look for in a QB. Can he lead his team to championships? Yes. Can he throw the ball with accuracy? Yes, 67% completion percentage is not too shabby. Can he improvise? Yes, his 57 rushing touchdowns in his career broke the all-time SEC record. So why are there so many doubters?? Well, Tebow has a long, slow, elongated delivery when throwing the ball. The NFL looks for QB’s to have short, quick releases and that is not something that Tebow possesses. When Philip Rivers came out of college, people knocked him for having an unusual delivery. Look at how he turned out in the NFL: He was an MVP candidate down the stretch for the Chargers. Tebow also has taken a beating in college. Not by getting sacked a lot, but by the way he runs with the football. He is a competitor, and he prefers to play "smash mouth" football, running guys over instead of sliding.
With his bullish mentality, some people believe Tebow is destined to be a tight end, fullback, H-Back, or even a linebacker or safety. He’s 6’3 240 pounds and that could be a perfect size for an H-Back or linebacker. But would the transition to another position be that much worth the while for a team to take a chance on, rather than keeping him at his natural position and teaching him proper mechanics?? That’s where everybody wonders and wonders about him. I’d like to see somebody take a chance on him as a quarterback. His statistics don’t lie. With the numbers he put up, and his ability to make things happen, he’s like a bigger Vince Young. In the BCS National title game that Vince Young played in against USC, he had the game of his life. Also, like Young in a big-time game, Tebow put up the game of his life in the 2010 Sugar Bowl against Cincinnati, posting 533 total yards and 4 touchdowns. He was 31 of 35 passing with 482 yards. That had people talking and probably had some NFL GM’s rethinking their view on him as a QB. I know you can’t judge somebody on one game, but that was a big step in the right direction.
Starting at linebacker, #55, Tim Tebow….. Doesn’t that just sound weird?? Tebow has been a quarterback his entire life, and making him switch to another position, teaching him all the new techniques, that might ruin a player. He has already said that he will do everything in his power to be a quarterback at the next level. Working hard, changing his throwing motion, listening to coaches, and more. Changing a QB’s throwing motion could be disastrous. It could ruin his confidence and make him think too much. But changing his position entirely might not be the worst thing either, on the flip side. He is a huge guy, a freak physical specimen, and a team-first player. If somebody drafted him to be an H-Back or Tight End, I’m sure he wouldn’t object. But I know, in his heart and his mind, he’d love the opportunity to be a quarterback. In my mind, a team that has a QB that he can sit behind for a few years to learn and work on his game would be the ideal fit. I truly believe he will be a successful QB at the next level and I really would like to see that happen. I grew up watching him play quarterback and be successful at it, and I’d like to continue watching him do that. But if he has to play a new position, I wish him all the best in that endeavor as well.
The Tim Tebow watch continues……
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Showing posts with label Tim Tebow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Tebow. Show all posts
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The 2009 SEC Championship: Of Sugar, Roses and Inner Peace

The 2009 SEC Championship: Of Sugar, Roses and Inner Peace
By Drew Moss-special to Football Reporters Online
Photo: Tim Tebow with his 2007 Heisman. Does he get to win another one?? (by Dr. Bill Chachkes)
Judging by his spiritual eye black (consult your nearest Good Book for John 16:33), Florida Gators southpaw phenom Tim Tebow has an inner fortitude usually reserved for monks and wise men.
After yesterday's heartbreaking 32-13 pasting at the hands of Nick Saban's methodical, mechanical Alabama Crimson Tide, he's going to need it.
Previously ranked #1 Florida will have to settle for a bridesmaid's Sugar Bowl matchup with Big East comeback kids Cincinnati in New Orleans on New Year's Day, while Saban's well- oiled, fine tuned "big red machine" gears up for it's shot at the BCS Championship on January 7th in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, CA vs. Heisman hopeful Colt McCoy the #2 ranked Texas Longhorns, who eked out an ugly 13-12 win over Nebraska in the Big 12 Championship.
Tebow may very well have the All-American profile, the off-season integrity, the matinee looks and the gridiron goods to back it all up, but Saturday night's SEC Championship belonged to Saban, his stubborn, disciplined defense and his offensive playmakers.
Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy matched Tebow and then quickly bested him, with a highly efficient 12-18 passing performance for 239 yards and a touchdown. But perhaps most telling was McElroy's high wire sideline hustle for a first down with 8:30 remaining in the first half. It was an athletic, determined and tone setting play that sent the Tide's - and Saban's - overall message: Alabama was not to be denied.
"We had a meeting (last offseason and told the players) everything you do, every time you go to work, every time we lift weights, it's not to be as good as the guy you're playing against, it's to be as good as the guy you have to beat to be the champions," Saban said.
In yesterday's SEC Championship, that proverbial "guy" was Tebow and the Gators.
A chance to play for the National Championship was not all that may have brought Tebow to post-game tears. His 4th Quarter coffin closing pick combined with Alabama running back Mark Ingram's big day in a big spot (28 rushes for 113 yards and three touchdowns) did everything to hurt Tebow's chances at snagging his second Heisman Trophy - and everything to help Ingram's chances for a first.
Not that he's thinking about it. Saban would never have it and Ingram seems to know it.
"Coach Saban has a philosophy of hard work and discipline," Ingram said. "And you can't have self-indulgent behavior. It's about doing everything you can, every chance you have, to make the team better."
On Thursday night January 7th in Pasadena, while Tebow's already done "sugarcoating" and meditating on his very bright future; Saban, McElroy, Ingram and the Tide will forget about getting better - they will be looking to be the best.
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