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.
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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.