I remember making small talk with a guy at the doctor's office before the 2006 season. We talked about Beck and whether or not he was a winner. He put up good numbers between the 20s, but he withered when the pressure was on.
When the season started, it was business as usual. The loss at AZ, in which I seem to remember some questionable officiating, had that same almost-but-not-quite feel to it. Same with the Boston College game, after which the team was 1-2. It seemed, like many times during the ten years or so leading up to that game, that Beck - and, by extension, BYU - played with a nervousness and lack of confidence in pressure situations.
Then came the TCU game. Something clicked, and all of the demons were gone. Beck got around his monstrously long confidence learning curve, and he was a machine from that time forward. Those next several games were almost PlayStation-like. Did BYU even punt in that UNLV game? The offense had jelled, and the defense was incredibly fresh and hungry when coming on the field. Those were great times to be a BYU football fan; the team appeared unstoppable. Beck had a five-game stretch with approximately 131 attempts, 13 touchdowns and one(!) interception. He had never lacked in talent, and his mind was no longer getting in the way.
Then came the Utah game. The team jumped to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter. However, the demons and unsettledness returned. BYU surrendered 24 unanswered points. The last three quarters of that game mirrored Beck's career. Then Beck led the final drive, which ended on a play that seemed unbound by the concept of time. Time literally stopped - the clock ran to zero - and Beck once again chased the demons with a barely-there, back-leg, across-the-field toss to a kneeling Harline.
The Oregon game was the icing on the cake. From the TCU game forward, I think Beck and that offense could have competed well against any team in the country. He hasn't had the learning-curve time with a team in the NFL; he may never have it. If he could have sufficient time in a system to get comfortable, though, I think he could be really good.
When the season started, it was business as usual. The loss at AZ, in which I seem to remember some questionable officiating, had that same almost-but-not-quite feel to it. Same with the Boston College game, after which the team was 1-2. It seemed, like many times during the ten years or so leading up to that game, that Beck - and, by extension, BYU - played with a nervousness and lack of confidence in pressure situations.
Then came the TCU game. Something clicked, and all of the demons were gone. Beck got around his monstrously long confidence learning curve, and he was a machine from that time forward. Those next several games were almost PlayStation-like. Did BYU even punt in that UNLV game? The offense had jelled, and the defense was incredibly fresh and hungry when coming on the field. Those were great times to be a BYU football fan; the team appeared unstoppable. Beck had a five-game stretch with approximately 131 attempts, 13 touchdowns and one(!) interception. He had never lacked in talent, and his mind was no longer getting in the way.
Then came the Utah game. The team jumped to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter. However, the demons and unsettledness returned. BYU surrendered 24 unanswered points. The last three quarters of that game mirrored Beck's career. Then Beck led the final drive, which ended on a play that seemed unbound by the concept of time. Time literally stopped - the clock ran to zero - and Beck once again chased the demons with a barely-there, back-leg, across-the-field toss to a kneeling Harline.
The Oregon game was the icing on the cake. From the TCU game forward, I think Beck and that offense could have competed well against any team in the country. He hasn't had the learning-curve time with a team in the NFL; he may never have it. If he could have sufficient time in a system to get comfortable, though, I think he could be really good.
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