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I guess it's easier to convert to "option" than to convert to "modern"
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<blockquote data-quote="scrappy_95" data-source="post: 637208" data-attributes="member: 1205"><p>Can we <u><strong>PLEASE FINALLY</strong></u> kill this now that CPJ is gone. This is probably the biggest false argument that I kept hearing repeated year after year. I have to admit that I believed this also until I actually looked at the data and this could be the furthest from the truth. CPJ best offensive year came in year number 7. That means every team in the ACC had seen this offense at-least once before, every team in our division had seen it 6 times, Clemson had seen it 6 times, and UGA had seen it 6 times. There was plenty of film and different ways many people had tried to defend it. Yet, year 7 was his best year. </p><p></p><p>Please look at the stats below: In year 9 was his 5th best offense efficiency at 2.14 plays per point. As a matter of fact, his worse offensive year came in year 3 at 2.79. <strong>Even his 3 wins season in 2015, he put up 29.2 points per game with an efficiency of 2.27 plays per point. </strong> I think if the league would have caught up with him, it would have been around season 4, 5, or 6. As much as I loved T. Marshal (recruited as a Aback), he was probably CPJ's worse trigger man. I think that explains the last two year, not the offense. I think with T. Oliver running his offense, you would have seen a major jump in the offense efficiency and point this year. </p><p></p><p>I am all for blaming CPJ for his defensive issue, but saying that the rest of the league had caught up with him offensively is just false.</p><p></p><p>Year ,Points per game ,# plays per point ,Wins, QB</p><p>2018, 29.3, 2.32, 7, Marshall</p><p>2017, 28.1, 2.53, 5, Marshall</p><p>2016, 28.2, 2.14, 9, Thomas</p><p>2015, 29.2, 2.27, 3, Thomas</p><p>2014, 37.9, 1.75, 11, Thomas</p><p>2013, 35.7, 2.06, 7, Lee</p><p>2012, 33.4, 2.17, 7, Washington</p><p>2011, 34.3, 2.02, 8, Washington</p><p>2010, 26, 2.79, 6, Nesbitt</p><p>2009, 33.8, 2.07, 10, Nesbitt</p><p>2008, 24.4, 2.59, 9, Nesbitt</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="scrappy_95, post: 637208, member: 1205"] Can we [U][B]PLEASE FINALLY[/B][/U] kill this now that CPJ is gone. This is probably the biggest false argument that I kept hearing repeated year after year. I have to admit that I believed this also until I actually looked at the data and this could be the furthest from the truth. CPJ best offensive year came in year number 7. That means every team in the ACC had seen this offense at-least once before, every team in our division had seen it 6 times, Clemson had seen it 6 times, and UGA had seen it 6 times. There was plenty of film and different ways many people had tried to defend it. Yet, year 7 was his best year. Please look at the stats below: In year 9 was his 5th best offense efficiency at 2.14 plays per point. As a matter of fact, his worse offensive year came in year 3 at 2.79. [B]Even his 3 wins season in 2015, he put up 29.2 points per game with an efficiency of 2.27 plays per point. [/B] I think if the league would have caught up with him, it would have been around season 4, 5, or 6. As much as I loved T. Marshal (recruited as a Aback), he was probably CPJ's worse trigger man. I think that explains the last two year, not the offense. I think with T. Oliver running his offense, you would have seen a major jump in the offense efficiency and point this year. I am all for blaming CPJ for his defensive issue, but saying that the rest of the league had caught up with him offensively is just false. Year ,Points per game ,# plays per point ,Wins, QB 2018, 29.3, 2.32, 7, Marshall 2017, 28.1, 2.53, 5, Marshall 2016, 28.2, 2.14, 9, Thomas 2015, 29.2, 2.27, 3, Thomas 2014, 37.9, 1.75, 11, Thomas 2013, 35.7, 2.06, 7, Lee 2012, 33.4, 2.17, 7, Washington 2011, 34.3, 2.02, 8, Washington 2010, 26, 2.79, 6, Nesbitt 2009, 33.8, 2.07, 10, Nesbitt 2008, 24.4, 2.59, 9, Nesbitt [/QUOTE]
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I guess it's easier to convert to "option" than to convert to "modern"
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