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Cheeky thread title. Deal with it.
Overall I have no major beefs with the coaching nor decision-making last night. We saw two fairly even teams ebb and flow throughout the game.
That said, there were a few moments that I thought were "key" and have seen some referenced in the postgame thread:
I've seen some suggest our 3Q drives were conservative. I'm not sure I agree. There were two failed drives and a total of 8 plays. Several variations of those plays appeared to work with great success in 2Q, so I didn't fault the attempts at that time.
Overall I have no major beefs with the coaching nor decision-making last night. We saw two fairly even teams ebb and flow throughout the game.
That said, there were a few moments that I thought were "key" and have seen some referenced in the postgame thread:
- Situation: 2Q - Last Louisville drive of 1st half. 3rd and 5 from the Louisville 18. Clock rolling with ~20 seconds to go.
- Key Decision: Let the clock roll.
- Alternative Option: Should we have called a timeout? Letting the clock roll felt just a little conservative. Ultimately I agreed with Key's decision to let the clock roll, ignoring the outcome of the subsequent INT with 5 seconds left, but I thought Key might choose to be aggressive in this situation and stop the clock.
- Situation: 2Q - CPLee INT at the Louisville 37 yard line. GT ball with 5 seconds remaining.
- Key Decision: Attempt the FG
- Alternative Option(s): Some have suggested Hail Mary. But in the moment I preferred a 3rd option - a quick hitch or out to pick up 5-8 yards. Why? My perception has been that Stewart doesn't have the leg for this kick. In fact, when I saw we were attempting the FG, I assumed Birr or another kicker would be run onto the field. Now, I realize we run the risk of burning all 5 seconds, but we had our timeouts and worst case King throws the ball into the ground immediately. To be clear, I don't know what Stewart is capable of as I'm not in practice every day, but he's never demonstrated accuracy beyond 40+ nor has he demonstrated a big boot. I felt the FG attempt as attempted was a recipe for failure so much so that I'm equally surprised Louisville didn't put a returner back in the end zone to take advantage of this.
- Situation: 4Q - GT ball with ~4 min to go on. 1st and 10 on Louisville 16 yard line with clock rolling. Louisville up 29-28.
- Key Decision: Drop back pass.
- Alternative Option: Drain the clock. Let me be clear. I support the play call. I think there's way too much time even if we try to drain the clock, and I liked being aggressive. But hindsight 20/20 being what it is.... I don't know if the play called was one that is slow-developing, if King held the ball too long, if the coaches should have been aware that our QB could be in a compromised/game-changing position because of OL/DL match-ups, etc etc etc. Louisville also had at least two timeouts left. Very easy to Monday morning QB this decision given the result. It was arguably the most important play of the game, and I can't help but wonder if there was a lower risk play call to at least ensure we get 3 points out of the drive (I still believe in Stewart at that range).
I've seen some suggest our 3Q drives were conservative. I'm not sure I agree. There were two failed drives and a total of 8 plays. Several variations of those plays appeared to work with great success in 2Q, so I didn't fault the attempts at that time.