NWADG College Football

2023

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10 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PREVIEW | 8.27.2023 4404 W 20th St, Grove, Oklahoma 74344 918-786-6446 info@har-bervillage.com Living Pioneer Era History! Pioneer-Era Village Nature Trail Facility Rentals Kids Corner Family Fun Map Har-Ber Village Mining Company www.har-bervillage.com 3184 N College Ave, Ste 1 • Fayetteville, AR 72703 479-444-6300 • www.golfusa.com LOCATED IN THE OFFICE DEPOT/HOBBY LOBBY SHOPPING CENTER We are as GOLF as it gets! Come experience our 2 State of the Art Foresight GC Hawk Launch Monitors Off ering the absolute best in digital performance enhancing analysis and our exclusive fi tting system, techniFIT We off er custom club fi tting, an indoor practice range, full digital simulator with excellent customer service and a HUGE inventory selection! FULL Mitchell repair center–from basic grip installations, loft and lie adjustments, re-shafting and more! got something you think is right, you're probably right, so do it. And if you're wrong we can fix it later.' I think he has really taken that and is being more decisive. "I think he's got a ceiling and I don't think he's even come close to reaching it yet." Jefferson will lead more of a pro- style offense than he did under former coordinator Kendal Briles. Part of the transition includes taking more snaps under center. "I believe in training underneath center," Enos said. "I believe that during the offseason they should train underneath center a lot. When you're under center, it makes you more aware of your timing and your rhythm and your balance on your drops. A lot of these young players now don't play under center ever, and I think that's a disservice for these quarterbacks coming up because that's when I feel you really learn and build a foundation of rhythm and timing on passes. en you should transition back into the shotgun. I think it's much easier to transition back than to transition forward, and I think it helps them develop as a passer when they train under there. "ere are some things that fit what we do better under center than in the gun. We're going to be very multiple. We're going to be in the pistol, in the sidecar, under center and have the ability to do all of those things." e Razorbacks will still have the capability to go uptempo but expect more time between snaps to allow for checks at the line of scrimmage. "To me, in a fast-paced offense, all your reaction is aer the ball is snapped. Your reads are aer the ball is snapped," Pittman said. "In a pro-style type of offense, you're trying to get reads before the ball is snapped." Once the ball is snapped, expect improved footwork from Jefferson than in past years when his feet were not as active in the pocket. Improvement in that area has been a focus since Enos arrived from Maryland before spring practice. "I think your footwork is tied into your accuracy, which is tied into your balance, which is tied into your eyes, and it's so important at this position that your eyes and your feet are doing the right things," Enos said. "I'm really big on training the feet. We do a lot of different things with their feet because they have to play instinctively with their feet. ey're not in a game thinking about what their feet should be doing; they're either doing it or they're not doing it. "If they're not doing it, it's my fault because I haven't put them in those positions enough to make it natural, to make it habit-forming." Enos said Jefferson improved his pocket posture and eyes over the summer when he sent him away with a checklist of fundamentals to work on during his own time. Jefferson's summer included a trip to San Diego to work with George Whitfield, an in-demand quarterback coach who worked in the past with the likes of Cam Newton and Johnny Manziel. Jefferson's days in California included drills on the beach and in the waves of the Pacific Ocean that were meant to emphasize the fundamentals. "Being able to just see how your body reacts in the sand and then also getting Eyes n Continued from Page 6 KJ Jefferson | Arkansas Quarterback File Photo

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