Well, there you go.  Not only is this writer a great neurologist, he's a
brilliant football coach too.  Too bad Dave George is wasting his many
talents writing for such a hack newspaper.

 

Oliver Barry CRS,GRI

Real Estate Broker

Bob Parks Realty

1517 Hunt Club Blvd

Gallatin TN 37066

Phone: 615-826-4040

Fax: 615-822-2027

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 

 

 


Commentary: Florida Gators can - and should - win without Tim Tebow at LSU


By DAVE GEORGE <mailto:[email protected]>   Palm Beach Post Staff
Columnist

Superman might still wear Tim Tebow pajamas in tribute to the Florida
quarterback's brawny reputation, but the image of Tebow in a flimsy hospital
gown is the one that nobody can quite swallow.

Saturday night in Baton Rouge, the myth might slip a little more, and that's
all right.

The No. 1 team in college football isn't really worth its ranking unless
there's significant depth at every position. That includes quarterback, the
ultimate leadership position. If Urban Meyer made a poor choice in signing
and grooming John Brantley as Tebow's backup, we'll know it from the very
first snap.

If Tebow is the one who takes that snap against No. 4 LSU, returning in a
rush from a frightening concussion, it will mean that Meyer doesn't trust
anybody else to continue Florida's national championship mission.

Considering all the astonishing skill players at Meyer's disposal, that
would be a serious jab at the ingenuity of this highly successful coach, who
won his first national title with creaky Chris Leak at quarterback and beat
No. 1 Alabama in last year's SEC title game without Percy Harvin.

My belief is that Florida can win this game with Tebow on the sideline, and
should take the field with nothing else in mind. After all, the Gator
defensive unit, No. 1 in the SEC, isn't hurting.

The challenge is finding new and potentially unfamiliar ways to utilize
Florida playmakers.

The standard plan of forcing opponents to stop Tebow first on the
quarterback keeper before worrying about all the other deadly options won't
work with any consistency. Les Miles' defensive ends will be instructed to
blanket the Gators' speedy backs, inviting Brantley to tuck the ball away
and lumber into the chaos whenever he wishes rather than pitching it off. If
Brantley wants to avoid an ambulance ride of his own, or if Meyer isn't
eager to use punter Chas Henry or cornerback Joe Haden as emergency
quarterbacks, that won't happen much.

Meyer's had a bye week to work on all of this so there should be enough
screen plays and shovel passes and end-arounds to keep LSU guessing and to
open up a few deep balls as well. The biggest problem in missing Tebow,
though, is having nowhere else to turn on third-and-short and goal-line
situations.

Would there be anything wrong with putting Brantley under center and handing
the ball to Emmanuel Moody, the Gators' underused bruiser, with a lead
blocker and a fired-up offensive line collectively charged with saving the
day 1 or 2 precious yards at a time?

Nothing revolutionary about that. In fact, it's practically Neanderthal.
Might be the best way, though, for several of Tebow's teammates to take
ownership of a moment that usually belongs to him alone, and to pay tribute
to the singular toughness of an inspirational leader who for one time in his
life is just not up to snuff.

Besides, if the Gators are going to lose a game, this is the one that hurts
the least. On the road against a No. 4 team and, probably, without Tebow in
the lineup, there are far worse ways to stumble. Florida can bounce back
from something like that to win the SEC and the national title, too. Twice
in the last three years it's gone pretty much that way.

The heart and the soul of the Gators, that's Tebow, but now we're talking
about his brain.

As little as the guy has practiced, Meyer won't feel good about taking that
risk, and I'm guessing he won't. A coach can't do his job on the sideline if
he's cringing every time his best player gets hit. He would pull punches
with his playcalling. He would show weakness, which on a Saturday night at
Tiger Stadium is a sure recipe for disaster.

Give the myth a rest, for safety's sake, and give every man on the team more
motivation than ever to avoid letting Tebow down.

 

 

 



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