My Techniques of Passing
Andre,
You're coming into a league where if defenders are engaged with the receiver, you still can throw to that man. But remember, you make that throw and only one good thing can happen. Two bad things can happen! So you've got to be fearless. You've got to trust your instincts! You may even have games where stadiums are involved and that further complicates the difficulty of the pass.
With that being said, such an environment along with having "The Peanut Gallery" heckling you at every opportunity, it can either sharpen your skills or make you shell-shocked! If it helps you sharpen your skills, this is what you will see:
The TTQB is aligned in a manner where the throwing arm and the aiming arm are perfectly aligned. Sometimes, I melt the aim arm to get that line of throw to be slightly lower than how Tudor design the QB's arm upward. Then I bend the leg forward and put in ice water. Simple metallugy is what will occur as the plastic will harden. It will look as if the QB is leaning way forward but he's good. At this point, everything is aligned to create a high pass completion rate.
Next, it becomes cerebral. When I use to play hoops, I thought the goal was like an ocean. As big as the wide open sea. That made scoring pretty easy for me. Similar to hoops, I take the analogy to miniature football. When I see guys in heavy coverage, it does not bother me. The target on that potential ball carrier/receiver becomes even larger! I know I only have a small area to fit the ball into but that's where training camp comes in handy. You practice those scenarios. Remember, you play in a league where running and passing is 50/50 in some instances. But because of teams being able to run schemes such as the 46, stacking, 52, and 34, it would be nice to control the game to the point where they will have to take personnel out. That's what having that passing skill will do for you.
Always remember, we've got plenty of coaches here who are more than willing to show you how to do most everything. You've just got to have supreme confidence that no matter where the hecklers are, no matter whether you've had penalties or fumbles to halt your drives, or whether you stayed up working on your team, you've got to hit that pass. And 'Dre, I have no doubt you will hit the pass.
But because of this level of difficulty, it makes for the greatest scene in electric football. The slit does help alot.
Reginald
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