So many throws are timing based where a QB has a mental timer that says "I take 5 steps back and throw to this exact point on the field". If a receiver is a bit lazy with how they run their route then they aren't in that exact spot when the ball gets there. If they are supposed to run 7 yards and then break their route out to the sideline at a right angle and their angle is more of a curve than a harder right angle then it takes them a yard or two to fully turn out to the sidelines. That puts them multiple feet short width wise and multiple feet too far depth wise of where the ball gets delivered.DrPepper wrote: ↑Tue Jan 02, 2024 11:02 am This sets up my naïve and honest question, why is being a "good route runner" such a big deal for certain NFL receivers? I was not a football player, so educate me. You follow directions and get the timing right. Is there another part(s) to it, or is that somehow so difficult it gets its own category of superlatives?
It's all that annoying shit they taught us in geometry, physics and calculus that we said we'd never need again.