• 2 weeks ago
Caleb Williams describes his view of what happened at the end of Thursday's game and the firing of his head coach, and whether it's disruptive for his development as a QB.
Transcript
00:00You know, in that moment, didn't have enough tempo, you know, getting the guys lined up,
00:10them seeing, you know, my urgency, and I was moving pretty, like I was moving well, but
00:16not, you know, as urgent as I should have, understanding the situation.
00:21At the end of the game, I also could have understood the situation a little bit better,
00:28right then and there of the play call.
00:31I thought when we called that last play, it was a no-huddle play that we wanted to get
00:36lined up, and I saw the clock winding down, and, you know, wanted to try to take a shot
00:42at the end zone, because I was expecting it to be our last play right in that moment,
00:45and, you know, we were actually trying to get back in field goal range, and just not
00:49on the same page.
00:50You know, I wouldn't say that it would affect my development.
00:53I think this is a stepping stone of development, you know, to be able to have all of this in
01:02my first year.
01:03I wouldn't say that I'm happy for it, but, you know, having these moments is definitely
01:09something that will help me in the future.
01:11Having these situational moments that, you know, you can't, it's hard to rep in practice.
01:17Having some of these moments, having, you know, your coach fired or coaches fired and
01:22people being promoted and, you know, things like that all happening within, you know,
01:27a couple weeks of each other, yeah, I think it would have helped me in the long run, being
01:34able to handle all of this, handle, you know, this first year, and being able to grow from
01:40it.

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