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Trey Lance QB NDSU

Trey Lance QB NDSU

QB21 with Kirk Herbstreit featuring Trey Lance on now on ESPN2.
  • mayo49
  • Veteran
  • Posts: 64,320
Originally posted by NYniner85:
Originally posted by Phoenix49ers:
Originally posted by JTB1974:
If Jones had highlights worthy of being shown, they would have.
He made plenty of nice throws, people with an axe to grind just ran with the ones he missed.


The overall lack of velocity on his throws are painfully obvious...

He reminds me of Chad Pennington no arm, but good accuracy.
Originally posted by mayo49:
He reminds me of Chad Pennington no arm, but good accuracy.

Pretty much. He's a system QB and you don't burn 3 1sts for that
Originally posted by NYniner85:
Originally posted by Phoenix49ers:
Originally posted by JTB1974:
If Jones had highlights worthy of being shown, they would have.
He made plenty of nice throws, people with an axe to grind just ran with the ones he missed.


The overall lack of velocity on his throws are painfully obvious...

I wanna see boobies bouncing while girls are jumping on a trampoline, not while a man is trying to throw a football
Trey Lance's second pro day wasn't a private workout. But it might've felt that way, with just nine NFL evaluators in Fargo to see the North Dakota State star throw. Here's the roll call from the midday session …

Atlanta (3): assistant college scouting director Dwaune Jones, QBs coach Charles London, passing game specialist T.J. Yates.

Denver (1): OC Pat Shurmur

New England (2): executive Eliot Wolf, assistant director of player personnel Dave Ziegler.

San Francisco (3): GM John Lynch, QBs coach Rich Scangarello, head coach Kyle Shanahan.

Lance did wind up finding wideouts to throw to—which was a challenge, given that the Bison are in-season. He had free agents Jordan Veasy and Jordan Matthews at receiver, and a third free agent wideout, Brandon Zylstra, moonlighting at tight end. As one onlooker explained it to me, it was efficient and detailed, with an emphasis on pace and tempo. "He got after it," the evaluator said.

In a lot of ways, it was just like Justin Fields's second pro day, which makes sense in that both have been working with John Beck, who played for Shanahan in Washington and had communicated with the Niners on what the team wanted to see. And similar to Fields's second workout, Lance's wrapped up with Scangarello taking over to direct about a 10-throw sequence with receivers at spots, and the quarterback asked to react quickly.

What did it show? Lance's footwork and release had clearly improved, showing the gains he's made over the last few weeks. And it showed the sort of shape Lance has kept himself in, too. All in all, another good day for the QB.

https://www.si.com/nfl/2021/04/19/alex-smith-retirement-49ers-jaguars-trey-lance
Originally posted by Jcool:
Trey Lance's second pro day wasn't a private workout. But it might've felt that way, with just nine NFL evaluators in Fargo to see the North Dakota State star throw. Here's the roll call from the midday session …

Atlanta (3): assistant college scouting director Dwaune Jones, QBs coach Charles London, passing game specialist T.J. Yates.

Denver (1): OC Pat Shurmur

New England (2): executive Eliot Wolf, assistant director of player personnel Dave Ziegler.

San Francisco (3): GM John Lynch, QBs coach Rich Scangarello, head coach Kyle Shanahan.

Lance did wind up finding wideouts to throw to—which was a challenge, given that the Bison are in-season. He had free agents Jordan Veasy and Jordan Matthews at receiver, and a third free agent wideout, Brandon Zylstra, moonlighting at tight end. As one onlooker explained it to me, it was efficient and detailed, with an emphasis on pace and tempo. "He got after it," the evaluator said.

In a lot of ways, it was just like Justin Fields's second pro day, which makes sense in that both have been working with John Beck, who played for Shanahan in Washington and had communicated with the Niners on what the team wanted to see. And similar to Fields's second workout, Lance's wrapped up with Scangarello taking over to direct about a 10-throw sequence with receivers at spots, and the quarterback asked to react quickly.

What did it show? Lance's footwork and release had clearly improved, showing the gains he's made over the last few weeks. And it showed the sort of shape Lance has kept himself in, too. All in all, another good day for the QB.

https://www.si.com/nfl/2021/04/19/alex-smith-retirement-49ers-jaguars-trey-lance

This is good to know.
Originally posted by jcs:
Originally posted by 4ML:
Originally posted by 4ML:

Some more throws from proday2.

That's an elite elite elite arm.

Elite arm with non of awkwardness that you get with Fields mechanics.

Oh weird no mention of his WRs having to wait for his passes? Shocking.
Originally posted by Joecool:
Originally posted by Jcool:
Trey Lance's second pro day wasn't a private workout. But it might've felt that way, with just nine NFL evaluators in Fargo to see the North Dakota State star throw. Here's the roll call from the midday session …

Atlanta (3): assistant college scouting director Dwaune Jones, QBs coach Charles London, passing game specialist T.J. Yates.

Denver (1): OC Pat Shurmur

New England (2): executive Eliot Wolf, assistant director of player personnel Dave Ziegler.

San Francisco (3): GM John Lynch, QBs coach Rich Scangarello, head coach Kyle Shanahan.

Lance did wind up finding wideouts to throw to—which was a challenge, given that the Bison are in-season. He had free agents Jordan Veasy and Jordan Matthews at receiver, and a third free agent wideout, Brandon Zylstra, moonlighting at tight end. As one onlooker explained it to me, it was efficient and detailed, with an emphasis on pace and tempo. "He got after it," the evaluator said.

In a lot of ways, it was just like Justin Fields's second pro day, which makes sense in that both have been working with John Beck, who played for Shanahan in Washington and had communicated with the Niners on what the team wanted to see. And similar to Fields's second workout, Lance's wrapped up with Scangarello taking over to direct about a 10-throw sequence with receivers at spots, and the quarterback asked to react quickly.

What did it show? Lance's footwork and release had clearly improved, showing the gains he's made over the last few weeks. And it showed the sort of shape Lance has kept himself in, too. All in all, another good day for the QB.

https://www.si.com/nfl/2021/04/19/alex-smith-retirement-49ers-jaguars-trey-lance

This is good to know.

TREY LANCE TO THE BAY!!!! 🔥
Why does he do this?

He sees the target, then he sizes it up, takes an extra step, then he sizes it up again, and then, five years after Tom Brady retires, throws the ball.

https://mobile.twitter.com/NDSUfootball/status/1384227646565851148

Why doesn't he just flip his hips and throw?

And no, this tweet here isn't the first time I saw this. Other than his physical gifts and and under center PA stuff he did, this hesitation when looking at the target is what I noticed most. Ugh.

Fields would just let it rip.

I don't hate Lance, but I don't like when he does this.
[ Edited by 5_Golden_Rings on Apr 19, 2021 at 5:21 PM ]
Originally posted by NYniner85:
It's the lack of velocity in Jones throws...it's very clear there's a drastic difference in arm talent when you watch Lance/fields makes those same throws.

Yeah every NFL QB can throw a deep ball. The difference is the zip on the throw(And accuracy ofcourse)and how quick it can get to the target so the defender doesn't have time to catch up to the receiver and break it up. Can't have the throw look like a punt.
[ Edited by JTB1974 on Apr 19, 2021 at 5:22 PM ]
Mmm this is better.

https://mobile.twitter.com/NBCS49ers/status/1384224338111459334
Originally posted by Jcool:
Trey Lance's second pro day wasn't a private workout. But it might've felt that way, with just nine NFL evaluators in Fargo to see the North Dakota State star throw. Here's the roll call from the midday session …

Atlanta (3): assistant college scouting director Dwaune Jones, QBs coach Charles London, passing game specialist T.J. Yates.

Denver (1): OC Pat Shurmur

New England (2): executive Eliot Wolf, assistant director of player personnel Dave Ziegler.

San Francisco (3): GM John Lynch, QBs coach Rich Scangarello, head coach Kyle Shanahan.

Lance did wind up finding wideouts to throw to—which was a challenge, given that the Bison are in-season. He had free agents Jordan Veasy and Jordan Matthews at receiver, and a third free agent wideout, Brandon Zylstra, moonlighting at tight end. As one onlooker explained it to me, it was efficient and detailed, with an emphasis on pace and tempo. "He got after it," the evaluator said.

In a lot of ways, it was just like Justin Fields's second pro day, which makes sense in that both have been working with John Beck, who played for Shanahan in Washington and had communicated with the Niners on what the team wanted to see. And similar to Fields's second workout, Lance's wrapped up with Scangarello taking over to direct about a 10-throw sequence with receivers at spots, and the quarterback asked to react quickly.

What did it show? Lance's footwork and release had clearly improved, showing the gains he's made over the last few weeks. And it showed the sort of shape Lance has kept himself in, too. All in all, another good day for the QB.

https://www.si.com/nfl/2021/04/19/alex-smith-retirement-49ers-jaguars-trey-lance

Did he hit anyone in stride from what we saw?
Originally posted by Cisco0623:
Did he hit anyone in stride from what we saw?

Not many from what I saw. Not a good sign IMO.

Give me fields
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