He's not been throwing as many interceptions, but he loves to throw into triple coverage. He has a lot of similarities with Snead. Snead had an arm and could throw some laser rockets in there (sorry Peyton

), as can Masoli. Both can/could run the ball and cause major issues with the defense. When Masoli has a designed keeper, he usually gets 10 or so yards. However, he starts every play 15 yards deep in his backfield (except designed keepers). He has to run 50 yards to get back to the line of scrimmage. Then, he'll just make bad decisions a quarterback as highly touted as he was shouldn't make. In two consecutive plays against Auburn, he proved my point. 2nd and 3. Has a receiver 10 yards down field directly in front of him with no defenders in the shot (10-15 yards min). He throws into triple coverage. No catch. Next play (3rd and 3), he stays in the pocket, can't find anyone open, but has no pressure. He could have stepped forward and gotten 10 yards, but threw to someone on the sidelines. I know I've got a birdseye view but... He tends to zing in lasers when he needs a soft touch and float what should be zingers. His receivers don't help him much, either, but he has a lot of his own problems. Snead would throw 4 INT's a game and 2 would be from receivers tipping the ball into the defenders hands... Masoli has looked the same, but hasn't had the number of interceptions (in most games). I've seen a handful of nice drives this year, but if they aren't just really on, it ain't happening (and being 'really on' has been in short supply this year).
We've still got LSU and MSU and need wins at both to be bowl eligible. It is the SEC and I'll be hoping for an upset (Miles gave us one last year, like he almost gave one to UT this year-exact same situation), but this year has not shown many promising moments for the Rebels...