dressedcheeseside
Helluva Engineer
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Deion is all about Deion. No thanks. Goof Collins 2.0Yeah bc the hard-nosed Brent Pry’s of the world are killing it
Deion is all about Deion. No thanks. Goof Collins 2.0Yeah bc the hard-nosed Brent Pry’s of the world are killing it
the more y’all keep saying it doesn’t make this statement anywhere closer to being trueDeion is all about Deion. No thanks. Goof Collins 2.0
Sigh...Sigh....
The Fridge ran an option offense. There are plenty of NFL teams that include lots of option plays in their offense. Lumping them all together with CPJs offense makes zero sense regardless if the basics are the same or not. Saying we could not recruit under CPJ has no bearing on whether we can or will recruit with Chadwell.
The point is that when you the players to run the offense it does not matter that the other team has better athletes or higher recruiting rankings. You do not get to exclude that one year because it disproves your point.
Chadwell is 30-4 over the past two plus years. That is dominating. To suggest otherwise is absurd.
Deion got one five star recruit to come to JSU. Could he or Gruden or McGee get a couple? Maybe. But there is no chance we will pulling 5 stars on a regular basis regardless of who is coaching here
Whatever...Sigh...
Lot's of folks run option, there's a spectrum. Chadwell is closer to pure option than most, CPJ might be the definition of pure option. But no one is inventing anything here.
Chadwell had a magic season during Covid, does that really count? Didn't make the conference title game last year. That's dominant to you?
Deion actually had more 4 stars than tech in 2021. Deion outrecruited Chadwell in 2021 at an HBCU which is nuts. in 2022 Deion got more 5 stars than tech and more 4 stars than Chadwell. His average player rating was also higher than tech's in 2021 and 2022 which is nuts.
You keep talking about "regular basis", what is that?
Eh, but it’s a high school offense.Reminds me a LOT of what Friedgen use to do here. Lots of personnel packages and motion to get the defenses to declare...and Friedgen would just destroy them after the snap.
Now combine it with option and RPO...and it's just a masterful display of football chess. Not gonna lie, it has me pretty excited to think we can be watching that every Saturday on the Flats.
My worst nightmare is someone in the ACC getting smart and beating us to Chadwell. Nothing worse than watching a coach we could have hired demolishing us.
CPJ recruited multiple pro wideouts and the highest-paid TE in the NFL. Malachi Carter is still listed as starter on depth chart five years later.
How much better was GC at recruiting? Not saying there was no improvement, but it seems the "CPJ can't recruit" thing has become a bigger thing in retrospect than it was when he was coaching.
CPJ recruited multiple pro wideouts and the highest-paid TE in the NFL. Malachi Carter is still listed as starter on depth chart five years later.
How much better was GC at recruiting? Not saying there was no improvement, but it seems the "CPJ can't recruit" thing has become a bigger thing in retrospect than it was when he was coaching.
imho, any offense that works is a fun offense to watch.It also is a lot of fun to watch.
Lets nto forget McCollum was a CPJ commit that stayed through the transition in 2018
Looks no worse not working than the UVA game did this year. Any offense not working will bring out the boo birds. There were boos for the offense at the UVA game.imho, any offense that works is a fun offense to watch.
As beautiful as CPJ's flexbone was when it was working, it was horrible to watch when it wasn't working.
Lets nto forget McCollum was a CPJ commit that stayed through the transition in 2018
Recruiting should be better, OL blocking is not predominantly cut blocking, QB is in various shotgun, pistol formations, uses a TE, tons of passing, RB lines up normally not hand in the dirt B-back style (which hurts RB recruiting) all the skill positions in Chadwell’s scheme translate to the NFLChadwell's offense is a lot like what I wished CPJ would've tried here at times. I could go back 7 years and find posts talking about it. CPJ had his (valid) reasons for sticking with the flexbone - speed of the mesh, balanced formation, 'girl you came with'. But I always wondered if 2013 had gone a little differently if he would've kept some of the 'wrinkles' he tried that season.
It felt like the biggest knock in recruiting was that the flexbone was so unique in P5, and so different from anything the NFL did, that it just didn't translate. But that was never a knock against Urban or Malzahn who were running a lot of option concepts at the same time - 2 back sets out of the gun, RPOs, QB runs. Their QBs won Heismans and got drafted. CPJ tried some of that in 2013. He actually had a lot of success with some of that in '08 and (less so) '09 before the flexbone was fully installed IIRC. CPJ was great at reading defenses and calling plays. He believed the flexbone was the best formation for what he wanted to do on the field. Some years, it looked unbeatable. I love watching that offense. But I also do believe it held the program back in some ways.
What Chadwell does seems like a happy medium. Option offense, but out of a lot of formations with a heavier emphasis on passing options. Things that a lot of NFL teams and 'big' programs are doing with dual threat QBs. Easier for recruits to see a pathway to the NFL in his offense than the flexbone. It also is a lot of fun to watch.
that has been something I have noticed a lot in college football after watching CPJ's offense for so long... many offensive teams run plays that seem very SLOW developing. Defenders can get blocked and recover before the ball is out of the backfield. The offenses are reading so much that it sometimes seems like they aren't attacking. also, it seems like very few play calls get vertical as quickly as they should. There is a lot of "stretch" runs and a lot of swing passes, but nothing gets vertical in the middle of the field quickly. The closest thing in a lot of "current" offenses would be quick slant passes. Our dive read and midline used to get to the line almost as fast as DTs could get out or their stance. There doesn't seem to be anything similar in the zone read schemes.I mentioned it in another thread, but something I liked about both App State and Coastal Carolina is that they ran their offense very quickly post snap. Their players were moving to where they needed to block and/or hitting the hole quickly. On offense and defense the players were being decisive and playing fast.
Don't tell that to Darrell Royall of Texas or Barry Switzer of Oklahoma. In 1968-1970 Texas record was 30-3 using the Wishbone (TO). Barry Switzer used the wishbone (TO) exclusively at Oklahoma with a record of 83-9-2. Paul Johnson used the TO at Tech and fared better than some of our other coaches. It appears to be the coach using it rather than the system itsef.Eh, but it’s a high school offense.