Van Canna wrote:
Well...it has been my experience that where the experienced athlete looks...the inexperienced athlete scoffs

Van
I keep going back to the original clip that I posted. You and I can look at that quarterback, and see a man perfectly in control while a handful of "Lawrence Taylor" types are trying to break his body in half.
Meanwhile... listen to the commentators.
And Russel dancing out there, whips this one downfield to particularly no-one, and coming from out of the blue is Early Doucet... I don't know how he made that catch!
Even in the replay, the announcers don't get it. They "scoff" at the QB and comment on the wide receiver's vertical leap.
A 53-yard pass that hits your wide receiver who is sandwiched in-between two defenders is NOT whipping the ball downfield "to particulary no-one." Consider the odds of that happening. As athletes, you and I immediately raise the BS flag.
Grossman once wrote about football athletes and test-taking. The linemen typically caved under the stress of a test, and often did poorly. And the quarterback typically did just fine. His experience gave him the ability to operate within and control his cerebral red zone.
And then look at
the video a little further. Russel does two clockwise 360-degree spins to avoid two tackles (0:21 - 0:26), all the while keeping his eye downfield on the unfolding play. Then after hurling the ball in the face of a third defender (0:27), he does yet another COUNTERclockwise 360-degree spin (0:27 - 0:29), and consequently is never even close to being sacked.
Brownian motion? I don't think so...
- Bill