MWBATL
Helluva Engineer
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- 6,529
We seem to run A LOT of WR screens. I did not count them last night, but there were a ton of them. It may be my perception but these things bothered me:
(1) we have been doing this all year, and by now every team we play knows they will need ot cheat up and stop that because it seems to be one of our base plays;
(2) we really haven’t then passed over the top of the cheating up DB’s to make them pay with effective mid range passes (15 yards or so). I have no idea why this isn’t a key component of our game plan, but we didn’t do it last night nor can I remember this being a serious part of any of our games this year.
(3) we do try a few deep bombs, and that’s good, but we certainly don’t do it enough (or succeed with it enough) to really force a change in the defenses against us
(4) last night I deistically recall one series where we ran 3 straight WR screens and all 3 failed. This wa sin the 2nd quarter somewhere around midfield and killed our drive, forcing a punt.
We also seem to telegraph a lot of our plays. When we line up empty backfield, it is a QB run (called or delayed) about 90% of the time. When I can lean over and tell my wife what’s coming, it’s a bad sign. I did that repeatedly last night.
I also felt that our running plays were pretty transparent. We seem to either run up the gut or run a WR screen in about 75% of our plays, with an occasional WR sweep thrown in for ’surprise’.
When we do NOT telegraph the play, it more often than not works. (remember the surprise when Pyron went in motion then took the snap under center to get us a key first down?)
My bottom line is I feel we have become too predictable on offense and defenses can prepare for just a few base plays, and once they stop those we are generally stuck. I was hoping to see a bit more innovation last night in our offense, so I was disappointed in this.
The good news is when we are legitimately better than the other team (like last night) we can roll with this conservative offense and do OK. I was happy we won last night, but I was still disturbed by the play-calling. Against a Notre Dame and Georgia (whose strength is their defense) we will suffer mightily.
(1) we have been doing this all year, and by now every team we play knows they will need ot cheat up and stop that because it seems to be one of our base plays;
(2) we really haven’t then passed over the top of the cheating up DB’s to make them pay with effective mid range passes (15 yards or so). I have no idea why this isn’t a key component of our game plan, but we didn’t do it last night nor can I remember this being a serious part of any of our games this year.
(3) we do try a few deep bombs, and that’s good, but we certainly don’t do it enough (or succeed with it enough) to really force a change in the defenses against us
(4) last night I deistically recall one series where we ran 3 straight WR screens and all 3 failed. This wa sin the 2nd quarter somewhere around midfield and killed our drive, forcing a punt.
We also seem to telegraph a lot of our plays. When we line up empty backfield, it is a QB run (called or delayed) about 90% of the time. When I can lean over and tell my wife what’s coming, it’s a bad sign. I did that repeatedly last night.
I also felt that our running plays were pretty transparent. We seem to either run up the gut or run a WR screen in about 75% of our plays, with an occasional WR sweep thrown in for ’surprise’.
When we do NOT telegraph the play, it more often than not works. (remember the surprise when Pyron went in motion then took the snap under center to get us a key first down?)
My bottom line is I feel we have become too predictable on offense and defenses can prepare for just a few base plays, and once they stop those we are generally stuck. I was hoping to see a bit more innovation last night in our offense, so I was disappointed in this.
The good news is when we are legitimately better than the other team (like last night) we can roll with this conservative offense and do OK. I was happy we won last night, but I was still disturbed by the play-calling. Against a Notre Dame and Georgia (whose strength is their defense) we will suffer mightily.