and he's talking about how he believes there's some concern in the NFL ranks, that college football is producing and will continue to produce even more of what would be considered fast tempo, quick read/no progression/tuck and run QB's. Guys who literally have the entire offense including audibles called for them from the sidelines. Howie Long came on a little while later and echoed those concerns, and even went on to discuss how the line calls and schemes in the NFL are so much more sophisticated than what uptempo spread offense lineman have to deal with.
Cowherd even expressed concern about a perceived disintegration of communication skills by QB's from these systems because everyone just reads the wacky signs, or gets a signal and looks at a wrist band. Meanwhile the top QB's in the NFL while receiving the in helmet audio for a few seconds, once that's cutoff it's their job to orchestrate the entire offense. Manning, Brady, Luck etc. etc. . . . the top QB's are reading defenses pre-snap, calling audibles, moving guys around, calling hot reads.
K-State has some of those "new" offense elements built in like look at the sideline pre-snap. However, my perception is that much of the K-State offense still incorporates the more sophisticated principals that Snyder first incorporated, particularly in the passing game.
If that is indeed the case how can K-State leverage that to recruits to instill that they'll be more NFL ready?