Best Football Trick Play EVER! August 13
Im pretty sure this is illegal in College and the NFL, but it’s simply brilliant.
I was once told by my Boot Camp Drill Instructor that if you’re not cheating your not trying hard enough.
Well… it’s so true.
Im pretty sure this is illegal in College and the NFL, but it’s simply brilliant.
I was once told by my Boot Camp Drill Instructor that if you’re not cheating your not trying hard enough.
Well… it’s so true.

By the looks of it, this will be part 1 of a multipart series.
Yes, that’s right! The subject at hand is UNC Football QB Joe Dailey. I have faith in my Tar Heels, and Coach Bunting, but COME ON! Look… a QB’s weakness should never be following a receiver, or staring down his receiver with his eyes. That is a very prude fundamental flaw.
Four interceptions in the past two games, one of which cost UNC a potential victory. Two against Virginia Tech (with two more from Cam Sexton) which infuriates me. Now knowing that Virginia Tech leads the ACC in interceptions this decade (if I remember the stat correctly the announcers brought up during the game) why would you attempt questionable passes? Why in the world would you attempt passing in traffic? Why would you try to force a pass?
As a QB one of your main jobs is to pass the ball. Wouldn’t it be pretty obvious that the pass defense, conversely, is trained to combat that job? Wouldn’t a pass defense train to read the QB, and shouldn’t a QB at the college level be cognitive of his oppositions capability? All this being said Dailey’s “weakness” is equivalent to a professional sprinter not being able to line up in the blocks. Dailey’s “weakness” a fundamental intuition almost all QB’s have. To have this as your flaw should earn you a spot back on the pee-wee football squad carrying water… to the bench… from the field house.