Illinois, Northwestern, Iowa, Rutgers, Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Purdue would probably be our home schedule.I hope you’re right about the big 10. Can you imagine Penn St, Ohio St, Michigan, USC, UCLA, Washington and the other big 10 teams playing in Atlanta I would think most of these games sell out and that’s a huge win for Ga Tech football and the fans. I get excited thinking about it it also would be a big win for the big 10 because they’re going to get Ga Tech one of the best schools in the country plus better recruiting for most sports but especially football.
Illinois, Northwestern, Iowa, Rutgers, Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Purdue would probably be our home schedule.
The issue is what is happening in the trenches. Our OL, especially, is getting pushed around. This after pushing F$U around. It’s puzzling, but true. Must be fixed.Reminder that our offense sputtered for stretches a lot last year too, especially early on. Go look back at the Louisville, BG, Miami, and BC games. We all hoped we would pick right up where we left off after UCF because of who we returned, but rarely does that happen even for the elite teams.
No they aren't, they just didn't win the numbers game and blow Cuse's defense off the ball on run plays.The issue is what is happening in the trenches. Our OL, especially, is getting pushed around. This after pushing F$U around. It’s puzzling, but true. Must be fixed.
Avoiding sacks is only one aspect of OL play, and that is also influenced by QB mobility.No they aren't, they just didn't win the numbers game and blow Cuse's defense off the ball on run plays.
FSU had 0 sacks and 3 TFL, while we averaged 5.3 yds/carry. GSU had 0 sacks and 5 TFL while we averaged 6.6 yds/carry. Syracuse had 0 sacks and 3 TFL while we averaged 4.7 yds/carry, but they did a much better job of bringing extra guys on the downs they thought we were running.
There are 15 teams in the country that haven't allowed a sack yet. We are the only team who has played 3 games in that group, and the only one who has played multiple P5 opponents.
Does King not run the ball? Does the OL block differently for him than they do for the RBs?As for YPC, you are conveniently including King.
Average yards per rush before contact is also a metric for OL blocking performance (as yards per rush after contact is a measure of the ball carriers performance). I do not have the exact numbers, but a lot of the yards we gained on Saturday were after contact, which further illustrates how poorly we blocked.Avoiding sacks is only one aspect of OL play, and that is also influenced by QB mobility.
As for YPC, you are conveniently including King. Here are the RB YPC individually:
Haynes - 11/35 (3.2 ypc) 15 long
Carrie - 5/5 (1.0) 5
Singleton - 1/3 (3.0) 3
Pyron - 1/2 (2.0) 2
Totals - 18/45 (2.5)
That’s a bad day by anyone’s measure. Maybe it’s because they were stacking the LOS and getting numbers at the POA. Could be, but our OL was largely ineffective in the running game
Saturday. We also had some bad grades along the OL. Call it whatever you want.
1. With out max protect when straight up pass blocking, can our ol give king a clean pocket for 5,6,7 seconds so our wr get open?The issue is what is happening in the trenches. Our OL, especially, is getting pushed around. This after pushing F$U around. It’s puzzling, but true. Must be fixed.
Sometimes their guy might just be better than our guy.1. With out max protect when straight up pass blocking, can our ol give king a clean pocket for 5,6,7 seconds so our wr get open?
2. Are they too slow of foot for agile DE or bull rush dt or are any wr be sides Lane able to create space by route running.
3. Can they straight up zone block?
4. Does ol need to down block and pull around to get push to get rb lanes?
5. Are we running a scheme to stay even with teams like SCuse and to burn clock so not embarrassed by very good teams?
At start of year i felt 1 and 3 were going to be a clear yes.
Now i am worried its 5 with defenses adjusting. .
AND
We run the scheme because our wide recievers cant get open down field ( hard to see on tv).
Louisville, Duke, Unc will give us time to be ready for ND/Vt.
QB draws are blocked differently. You know this. Penetration sets up a draw. You go ahead and defend the OL performance last week. We just differ. Their grades were not good.Does King not run the ball? Does the OL block differently for him than they do for the RBs?
Additionally, how much responsibility do the RBs bear for their lack of yards? We had a WR block his man on a play to the outside and Jamal ran right into the back of them. Is the OL to blame for that?
I've said it before, but nobody for Tech looked sharp against Syracuse, we appeared half asleep across the board - coaches included. We were not blowing their DL 3 yards off the ball on run plays like we'd hoped, seemed like mostly stalemates. But I'm not sure there's an OL in cfb that can go 5-6 vs 7-8 and block everybody.
Perhaps a review of the 2019-2021 OL performances would be a good reminder of what a line getting pushed around looks like.
They were dropping 8 into coverage, on passing plays. YOU know this. Cuse was not bringing 3 defenders and stopping the run. Agreed that we need to reevaluate - several other have already mentioned the need for self-scouting because clearly we had tendencies they were able to go off of.QB draws are blocked differently. You know this. Penetration sets up a draw. You go ahead and defend the OL performance last week. We just differ. Their grades were not good.
ETA: 5-6 vs. 7-8…
Another font said they were dropping 8 into coverage. Amazing DC, that Syracuse guy! If they were so good that they could guess our run plays/pass plays that well, we need to reevaluate our scheme.
Yes, sort of… My response was how did they guess so consistently well that they could stack the line some plays and “drop” 8 some plays with such effectiveness for three solid quarters? You tell me.They were dropping 8 into coverage, on passing plays. YOU know this. Cuse was not bringing 3 defenders and stopping the run. Agreed that we need to reevaluate - several other have already mentioned the need for self-scouting because clearly we had tendencies they were able to go off of.
What's with all the rational thought??I said going into this season that my expectations weren't going to be based on a win-loss number. We play a brutal schedule - in opponent strength, how it lines up and in the travel/away draws we got. What I wanted to see was progress in our team playing like a good football team. We're not going to be the biggest, fastest, most talented team week in and week out. But do we play clean, protect the ball, play well on special teams, have good technique in tackling and blocking? So far, we look better in most of those areas. Not perfect. But our tackling has been mostly better. Outside of (BS IMHO) holding calls against GSU, we've played pretty clean. Few turnovers. Special teams has been great - nearly helped us manage a miracle comeback last Saturday. Birr's misses have been on long kicks.
The hype machine got a little ahead of the wheels after the FSU game. Syracuse ended up being an unexpectedly tough draw on the road. McCord is a great passer. But I'm pleased with where the team is at. We kept competing and very nearly made a huge comeback.
Just two years ago, we couldn't get punts or kicks off, couldn't cover, couldn't block or tackle, threw more INTs than TDs, made stupid self-defeating penalties. Go watch the UCF game from 2022 and then try to be mad about where we're at now.
Expectation? We'll continue to compete in every game. Some weeks, the other team will be better. We'll pull off some upsets. We might drop a game we feel like we should win. We'll get better as the season goes, but the W/L column might not show it, since we play some legitimately very good teams.