
Monday March 29, 2010
Mr. Popular
Mr. Popular
A football cliché says the most popular man on campus is the second team quarterback. At Clemson we have fallen into that scenario many times in my days of following Tiger football.
I can remember in the 1975 and 76 seasons where it was the major topic of discussion on the stands at Death Valley. There was a three headed monster at quarterback in those two seasons so one of my first memories of Clemson football was quarterback controversy. Some fans wanted Willie Jordan. Some casts their lot with Mike O’Cain. Others were Steve Fuller fans. As it turns out Fuller won the job as a junior and senior in 1977 and 78 and led the Tigers to two of the best seasons on school history. He was a Heisman candidate as a senior in 1978 but the 75 and 76 seasons were filled with Tiger fans disagreeing on the subject of the starting quarterback.
In 1980 Mike Gasque had his fans that supported him over Homer Jordan. In 1985 Randy Anderson and Rodney Williams had their supporters in their battle. Even after Williams won the job and won a bunch of games in his first three years, there were some fans that thought freshman hot-shot Michael Carr would beat him out.
The 1989 season saw DeChane Cameron as the popular guy even though Chris Morocco had a great season. Patrick Sapp had to hear about Dexter McCleon and Louis Solomon.
Woody Dantzler was much more popular with some when he was Brandon Streeter’s back-up and he was when he was fighting off Willie Simmons when Dantzler was the starter. Simmons was more popular with some as the back-up than he was as the starter when he was trying to hold off the popular Charlie Whitehurst.
Whitehurst had Proctor. Proctor had Harper. Harper had Korn. Now Kyle Parker has Tajh Boyd.
The starting quarterback position in college football is about a multitude of attributes and it is extremely difficult for someone who has never taken a snap in college to know what is required. Many of the great ones had some physical tools that helped set them apart. It may be arm strength. It may be accuracy. It may be athletic ability or the ability to make plays with the feet. But most have some physical tool or tools that allow them to be a good player.
It is the attributes other than physical ability that sets the great ones apart though. Some of the great ones were just terrific leaders. Other had toughness. For some it might have been decision making skills. But most of the great ones did something outside of their physical skills that set them apart.
Boyd has many of the physical tools. He is a good athlete with a live arm. He is also an accurate passer who is dangerous because he can hurt you with his feet as well. I think Boyd is a natural leader as well. I also think he is a hard worker who is willing to do what it takes to become a great quarterback one day.
However, that day is not Monday, March 29, 2010. The main reason he is not a great one today is due to the lack of something he has no control over and that is experience. With his shot at experience will come his shot at greatness.
Kyle Parker has a stronger arm than Boyd and may be a little more of an accurate passer at this point. Boyd may be more athletic and may move better. But the main separation between Parker and Boyd right now is experience.
Parker has gone into a season as the starter and few things can substitute for that. Parker has been the man. He knows how to prepare for a road game. He has taken his team down the field for the game-winning touchdown drive. Parker has thrown the third-down pass to beat Miami in South Florida. He knows what it is like to win a bowl game.
I see a lot of Kyle Parker in Tajh Boyd but the one thing I see in Parker that Boyd does not have yet is true confidence. Boyd thinks he can lead this team to wins but Parker KNOWS he can because he already has done it.
I learned a long time ago was that the starting quarterback position is a development and requires a process. You can’t be the starting quarterback with going through the process that prepares you for success. That process is longer for some but it is still a process. The process is important because you have to go through it to gain the confidence needed be THE guy. This is especially the case at this position. True freshmen can start at cornerback or running back or wide receiver because it is more about the physical abilities. At quarterback it is about so much more than physical abilities.
Boyd got his first taste of the being the starting quarterback Saturday when Parker was away for a baseball series at Virginia. Boyd did some things well but struggled at times. He got ripped a time or two from the coaches for a bad decision. But he also got his first shot at experience in the stadium and with it he got a valuable lesson.
"He has a great approach to it, but I do think he's got to get to the point where he understands that there is a whole other level out there in terms of attention to detail," Clemson offensive coordinator Billy Napier said. "We can do a lot of the main things right on offense and be very average. We have got to do those things right, and we've got to continue to do the little things right at each and every opportunity. Right now, that’s where Tajh is at. He's figuring out: 'Hey, there's a lot more to this crap than I thought.' He is in that phase now where he's learning what to do. You need repetition. It's the foundation of learning. So the good thing is, he's getting a lot of reps."
There are other good things. First, I am still convinced Parker will be back in the fall so Boyd will have more time to build his foundation. Also, Boyd has so many of the things you can’t teach and the physical tools to be the guy one day but not today.
There is other good news for the quarterbacks at Clemson. They have a very good quarterback coach in Napier that will assist in their development. I think the offensive line will continue to improve. I think they have good running backs to take pressure off of the passing game.
Until he takes over as the starter then Boyd will have to settle for being the most popular man on campus.
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Its hard to subsititue for experience. Parker has already been through the "growing pains". Now its time for that growth to pay off. It would be a huge set-back for us to have to break in another QB with no game experience, no matter how much natural talent a kid has. We need Parker back behind center next fall.
Posted by apextiger on March 29, 2010 at 12:19 PM EDT #
I liked this line:
"Boyd thinks he can lead this team to wins but Parker KNOWS he can because he already has done it."
If Parker keeps batting like he has been, won't MLB make him an offer that he can't refuse?
Posted by Razzmatazz on March 29, 2010 at 12:39 PM EDT #
Mickey,
I want to start off that I like Kyle Parker and recognize his obvious talents. However, I do hold out some hope for Boyd, if nothing else to push Parker to be better.
KP made a great throw against Miami in OT to win. But against GT, Mary, TCU, and GT again we got the ball with about a minute on the clock and needing to score to win. We never came close.
Even in the Miami game he forced a ball that was picked and we fortunately got it back where we threw and ran it into fg range to tie.
KP has not been his best in the clutch. Until he gets better or we have another qb who is, the incredibly evenly matched ACC will be very difficult to win.
Just look at Nesbitt, he is very clutch, and that made the difference in Tampa.
Posted by Clemsnman on March 29, 2010 at 01:17 PM EDT #
Anyone who says they think Parker will be our quarterback after he gets an offer from MLB has never been faced with losing millions of dollars. A very rich friend of mine once told me, "you and I will never think the same about money and will never come to the same conclusions about it until you have as much of it as I have." If we've never been there, we should stop trying to predict what a kid will or won't do when standing face-to-face with millions. Lets focus on training up Boyd AND Parker and be prepared for whatever happens.
Posted by RU4GOD2 on March 29, 2010 at 02:29 PM EDT #
I wish I was as confident of Parker beeing there in the fall as you Mickey. Maybe you know something I don't or maybe not. If we go into the season without Parker it puts us very thin at the key position on offense. I hope it doesn't come to that
Posted by 74TIGER on March 29, 2010 at 03:14 PM EDT #
I hope Parker returns for his sophomore season at QB, but if not then at least Boyd will be one of the most experienced freshman in the country. There would surely be some growing pains for Boyd if he is our starter for the first game of 2010, but I wouldn't expect them to be any worse than with Parker last year.
Posted by Judge Keller on March 29, 2010 at 11:44 PM EDT #
Last year KP had some moments of brilliance, and he had more moments of mediocrity. I saw him, many times, try to force a ball where it shouldn't have been forced, and wait a little too long to hit the sideline guy many times that resulted in a catch out of bounds.
Posted by Dugatiger on March 30, 2010 at 12:23 PM EDT #
If many of you think we have a better qb on campus than Kyle Parker you are sorely mistaken. Do not forget that Parker was just a redshirt freshman....meaning he did not have any real game college experience to work from prior to. Parker has the potential to be one of the best we have ever seen at Clemson.
It is great to have a solid gifted backup in Boyd and to have two respected qb's on the roster, but don't fall for the hype, Parker is the starter for a reason.
Don't forget that Parker was a highly sought after recruit just like Korn and Boyd. Some work out, some don't. Parker had a solid freshman year and led us to the ACC championship game. Let's give him a break and see what he can do in his Sophmore season.
Posted by Tiger Rag+Fishing+Team on April 01, 2010 at 03:40 PM EDT #