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CPJ interview - Nov 11
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<blockquote data-quote="Skeptic" data-source="post: 656604" data-attributes="member: 2175"><p>As much as I would like to see that, I just can't. He would face the same recruiting dilemma he faced here -- outstanding running backs are not going to opt into Johnson's spread, and touch the ball 4-5 times a game, and the onus would be on recruiting a standout fullback. And -- the sticking point that stuck Johnson at Tech, a QB to run his system, run the ball, and throw the ball. Johnson had one of those in 10 years, and in 2014 it was magic. By 2015 his Abacks might as well have been in a train wreck together because they all got hurt. I would pay to see the big, powerful, be-all SEC that refused to play against the offense by choice have to defend it in league play, because with even an average QB, the clock would get chewed up. Imagine Orgeron stroking out at midfield. I think if we see him again it would be at the FCS lvel, building a program that needed a scheme to compete. Plus, Arkansas is now like FSU: it can't take a chance on another failure. It has to go big and score big to compete. (And it is too bad about Morris, a terrific coach who rebuilt SMU with a great offensive scheme that others such as Clemson still use with only minor changes.)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Skeptic, post: 656604, member: 2175"] As much as I would like to see that, I just can't. He would face the same recruiting dilemma he faced here -- outstanding running backs are not going to opt into Johnson's spread, and touch the ball 4-5 times a game, and the onus would be on recruiting a standout fullback. And -- the sticking point that stuck Johnson at Tech, a QB to run his system, run the ball, and throw the ball. Johnson had one of those in 10 years, and in 2014 it was magic. By 2015 his Abacks might as well have been in a train wreck together because they all got hurt. I would pay to see the big, powerful, be-all SEC that refused to play against the offense by choice have to defend it in league play, because with even an average QB, the clock would get chewed up. Imagine Orgeron stroking out at midfield. I think if we see him again it would be at the FCS lvel, building a program that needed a scheme to compete. Plus, Arkansas is now like FSU: it can't take a chance on another failure. It has to go big and score big to compete. (And it is too bad about Morris, a terrific coach who rebuilt SMU with a great offensive scheme that others such as Clemson still use with only minor changes.) [/QUOTE]
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CPJ interview - Nov 11
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