How is your baseless comment better than his? If the TO would provide an NFL team an edge someone would try it. The fact that no one has,ever, means case closed.
The real point here is what offense you run is not just about the offense itself but how it fits into the team structure. What we have seen at Tech is successful offenses with overall lesser talent. We have also seen that recruiting problem extend to the rest of the team and suffered with poor defenses and special teams most years. So yes, you can rave about the offense but the point is to win games. Kudos to Paul for what he was able to accomplish at Tech. I preferred his ability to have higher highs that Chan but also have to admit he had lower lows. Now he’s decided to step down and I am excited by the potential the new staff promises. Here’s hoping they can deliver.
I think your second paragraph refutes your first. For whatever reason, the flexbone offense is not seen as cool. And player buy-in is crucial to the NFL game. Saying that players don't want to play in that offense is different from saying that it wouldn't work if they did.
Just look at the D1, Pwr5. Regardless of the issues surrounding CPJ and Defense (I think there's probably something there but not as simplistic as some made it seem a few months ago), he did prove that his offense works at the D1, Pwr5 level. So, people began to ask why more D1 teams didn't use it. The answer is obviously not that it doesn't work. When you consider the success of Navy and now Army as well as others at D1 and even against Pwr5 opponents, it's been working everywhere it's been tried. So, the answer seems to come down to two issues: getting players willing to commit to it and the risk-factor associated with being different.
What I mean by the risk-factor associated with being different can be seen in this post:
Anyone who watched the Clemson and mutt games of the past few years and wanted to keep running that offense against 'em is a masochist.
Three years ago, we beat the mutts averaging 7.5 yds/play against a defense which allowed 5.26 yds/play on average. However, leave that aside. In 2017 and 2018, Clemson had the number 3 and number 1 defenses in the country. In 2017, both georgie and Climp's kid were playoff teams. In 2018, georgie had the #7 defense in the country. So, let it sink in. Someone who is probably otherwise reasonable, reduced the struggles of our offense against two of the best defenses in the country to ... the scheme.
Now, can you imagine the fans of most teams calling into question the offensive scheme when their team fails to be as efficient against the best and one of the best teams in the country? Obviously not. However, when you run a unique scheme, there is a tendency among skeptical fans and commentators to treat it like some kind of magic. If it doesn't perform a miracle, then the magic must have worn off. The defenses have figured it out. Or whatever. The fact that our starting QB over the last two years was brought in as an A-Back and that the guys expected to compete for the starting job were injured, and all of this is after the primary QB target had been injured before arriving on campus. When you run a unique offense, none of that matters.