Football can seem to be about the pursuit of perfection, about executing to a level of precision that means 11 people act as one. That's all well and good, until everything breaks down. This reality highlights the importance of adaptability in the sport, especially for quarterbacks like Jayden Daniels, who can improvise when plays fall apart. If chaos is unavoidable, it makes sense to prepare for it, training for scenarios where execution won't go according to plan.
The best way to prepare for chaos is by telling the quarterback at practice to act as if a play failed and then slip outside of the pocket without warning his offensive teammates about this intentionally broken play. Daniels’s ability to escape has been rehearsed, embedding in the team's strategy a way to exploit defensive breakdowns, ensuring that teammates are ready to react instantly to changing situations on the field.
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