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How to Build an Efficient Offense Quickly
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<blockquote data-quote="slugboy" data-source="post: 850988" data-attributes="member: 282"><p>With an offense, there’s also the yearly pattern of “meh, meh, REALLY GOOD, meh”. Clemson got the right pieces for Trevor Lawrence, and had multiple years of “REALLY GOOD” before falling back to “meh” — or in this case, bottom of the ACC. </p><p></p><p>I’m not saying that it’s a growth pattern. It’s that the differences between having a few pieces here and there that aren’t fitting properly and having everyone mesh is almost night and day. Clemson’s offense is basically the same as our offense—if you have all the pieces and they’re all on the same page, it can set records. Pitt and UVA crushed it this year on offense because they didn’t have any weak spots in their offense. Aside from their QB play, they didn’t have much exceptional on their offense, but they also were solid across the board. </p><p></p><p>In the NFL, a lot of teams are implementing Kyle Shanahan principles. For the Falcons, we had “meh, MVP AND SUPER BOWL SEASON, meh”. Shanahan has seen some of the same in San Francisco. It’s an offense that will magnify the performance of the QB—if he’s consistent and amazing, you get a consistent and amazing offense. If the QB is inconsistent, you get magnified inconsistencies. </p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.ninersnation.com/2017/11/2/16597546/measuring-the-kyle-shanahan-effect-on-nfl-offenses[/URL]</p><p></p><p>We picked an offense that just cruises along on top of consistent play across the board, but also magnifies mistakes and missed assignments. QBs want to play in it because it shows off your skills for the pros. Offensive skill players want to play in it because it has the opportunity for ESPN highlights that show off your skills. For offensive linemen, it’s the same kind of blocking as is common in the NFL, so it’s an attractive place to burnish your skills. </p><p></p><p>It’s not a **robust** offense though. We’re spending a lot of time in the “meh” doldrums because of missed assignments and poor reads, etc. We could switch to a more error-proof offense, but we need one that doesn’t sabotage Collins’ “modern NFL” recruiting. A Meyer-style offense might fit that bill. </p><p></p><p>For any offense, we’re going to have to do a better job blocking than we have over the past few years</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="slugboy, post: 850988, member: 282"] With an offense, there’s also the yearly pattern of “meh, meh, REALLY GOOD, meh”. Clemson got the right pieces for Trevor Lawrence, and had multiple years of “REALLY GOOD” before falling back to “meh” — or in this case, bottom of the ACC. I’m not saying that it’s a growth pattern. It’s that the differences between having a few pieces here and there that aren’t fitting properly and having everyone mesh is almost night and day. Clemson’s offense is basically the same as our offense—if you have all the pieces and they’re all on the same page, it can set records. Pitt and UVA crushed it this year on offense because they didn’t have any weak spots in their offense. Aside from their QB play, they didn’t have much exceptional on their offense, but they also were solid across the board. In the NFL, a lot of teams are implementing Kyle Shanahan principles. For the Falcons, we had “meh, MVP AND SUPER BOWL SEASON, meh”. Shanahan has seen some of the same in San Francisco. It’s an offense that will magnify the performance of the QB—if he’s consistent and amazing, you get a consistent and amazing offense. If the QB is inconsistent, you get magnified inconsistencies. [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.ninersnation.com/2017/11/2/16597546/measuring-the-kyle-shanahan-effect-on-nfl-offenses[/URL] We picked an offense that just cruises along on top of consistent play across the board, but also magnifies mistakes and missed assignments. QBs want to play in it because it shows off your skills for the pros. Offensive skill players want to play in it because it has the opportunity for ESPN highlights that show off your skills. For offensive linemen, it’s the same kind of blocking as is common in the NFL, so it’s an attractive place to burnish your skills. It’s not a **robust** offense though. We’re spending a lot of time in the “meh” doldrums because of missed assignments and poor reads, etc. We could switch to a more error-proof offense, but we need one that doesn’t sabotage Collins’ “modern NFL” recruiting. A Meyer-style offense might fit that bill. For any offense, we’re going to have to do a better job blocking than we have over the past few years [/QUOTE]
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