Eastman
Helluva Engineer
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- Columbia, SC
Can’t see that happening. I doubt Lynch will get that many but combined they will make it.Calling it now... TQM, Benson and Lynch all get 1,000 yards on the ground this season
Can’t see that happening. I doubt Lynch will get that many but combined they will make it.Calling it now... TQM, Benson and Lynch all get 1,000 yards on the ground this season
Benson and TQM will be 1000 yard rushers on their own. It would just be nice to see a healthy 2014 Clinton Lynch. We all know that Qua is a clutch beast when need be, but Lynch is straight up dangerous when he is healthyCan’t see that happening. I doubt Lynch will get that many but combined they will make it.
Do you think TaQuon Marshall will throw for more than 10 touchdowns in 2018? I think TM will throw for 14-16 touchdowns in 2018 and that will help balance out the offense somewhatBenson and TQM will be 1000 yard rushers on their own. It would just be nice to see a healthy 2014 Clinton Lynch. We all know that Qua is a clutch beast when need be, but Lynch is straight up dangerous when he is healthy
I'm going with 15 rushing TD's and 8 passing TD'sDo you think TaQuon Marshall will throw for more than 10 touchdowns in 2018? I think TM will throw for 14-16 touchdowns in 2018 and hat will help balance out the offense somewhat
If Tech threw 5 yards passes or slip screens then the completion% would mirror UNC but that's not what Tech does now is it?
I went back to 2004, and we played in a pro set until 2007. We weren’t above 50% then, even with 5 yards passes and slip screens.
Also, one of the “throw for dough” arguments is that our receivers should be open because the defense is selling out for the run. Shouldn’t that send the completion rate higher?
BTW, Tevin Washington was possibly our best passer since Hamilton and Godsey, at least by the stats.
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Do you think TaQuon Marshall will throw for more than 10 touchdowns in 2018? I think TM will throw for 14-16 touchdowns in 2018 and that will help balance out the offense somewhat
Okay so what point are you making? That the completion% should be higher? I don't think anyone's arguing to the contrary but Tech will never be a 65% completion team as the O is presently run. As far as "throw for dough", the longer the pass the lower the completion% generally, the WRs are not running without coverage unless it's a blown coverage but are singled up.
I don't think completion % is as much of a feature of our offense as something we've seen for the last 15+ years at GT. Flexbone offenses typically don't go much north of 50%, but that might be more a function of CPJ's coaching tree than the Flexbone.
I was starting by saying we don't usually go north of 50% completion percentage, and it's a tall order. Our average over the past 14 years is about 46% and our max is about 52.6%.
In fairness to the original post I replied to, it's a good correlation to our winning percentage (53% correlated). It's a better predictor of how we do than QBR, passing yards, or total yards. I'm a little surprised how well it does. I have to go back into the stats archive to see how we did in 1999 (65.2%). That's ~20 years back to get a completion percentage close to what we're seeing at Duke and UNC right now. FWIW, Gailey's numbers were 3% better than CPJ's at 48%, but being at 48% with Calvin Johnson and BayBay and a good tight end isn't that much to brag about.
View attachment 3740
GT, Navy, Army, and Air Force do all have about the same completion rate (2017-> GT 36%; Navy 41%; Army 31%; USAF 48%) , but we had about the same completion rate before adopting the Flexbone. Central Florida was a 68% completion rate--but they do use a lot of shotgun.
Here's last year's highlights of UCF vs Navy. They're both lining up the offense in similar ways. But UCF is a more pass-happy version of our offense. They threw for more yards per game (331) than we ran for (307). They were the #33 rushing offense at 199 yards/game. In yards per play, they blew us out at 7.46 ypp (#5) vs. 5.74 for us (#74).
CPJ looked at the Run and Shoot and said "I want to run out of that thing and play smashmouth football". Scott Frost looked at CPJ's offense and said "I want to pass out of that thing".
If you're going to say "our offense as we currently run it" or "currently coach it", it's hard to argue that we're pretty much stuck looking up at a 50% completion rate. If you cut it back to "our offense" and drop the "as we currently run/coach it", we could be up at a higher completion rate and yards per game/yards per play. Unless you think that UCF has once in a lifetime skill players on offense last year.
As for what's important for us to win, the passing game is definitely something to look at.
I don't think completion % is as much of a feature of our offense as something we've seen for the last 15+ years at GT. Flexbone offenses typically don't go much north of 50%, but that might be more a function of CPJ's coaching tree than the Flexbone.
I was starting by saying we don't usually go north of 50% completion percentage, and it's a tall order. Our average over the past 14 years is about 46% and our max is about 52.6%.
In fairness to the original post I replied to, it's a good correlation to our winning percentage (53% correlated). It's a better predictor of how we do than QBR, passing yards, or total yards. I'm a little surprised how well it does. I have to go back into the stats archive to see how we did in 1999 (65.2%). That's ~20 years back to get a completion percentage close to what we're seeing at Duke and UNC right now. FWIW, Gailey's numbers were 3% better than CPJ's at 48%, but being at 48% with Calvin Johnson and BayBay and a good tight end isn't that much to brag about.
View attachment 3740
GT, Navy, Army, and Air Force do all have about the same completion rate (2017-> GT 36%; Navy 41%; Army 31%; USAF 48%) , but we had about the same completion rate before adopting the Flexbone. Central Florida was a 68% completion rate--but they do use a lot of shotgun.
Here's last year's highlights of UCF vs Navy. They're both lining up the offense in similar ways. But UCF is a more pass-happy version of our offense. They threw for more yards per game (331) than we ran for (307). They were the #33 rushing offense at 199 yards/game. In yards per play, they blew us out at 7.46 ypp (#5) vs. 5.74 for us (#74).
CPJ looked at the Run and Shoot and said "I want to run out of that thing and play smashmouth football". Scott Frost looked at CPJ's offense and said "I want to pass out of that thing".
If you're going to say "our offense as we currently run it" or "currently coach it", it's hard to argue that we're pretty much stuck looking up at a 50% completion rate. If you cut it back to "our offense" and drop the "as we currently run/coach it", we could be up at a higher completion rate and yards per game/yards per play. Unless you think that UCF has once in a lifetime skill players on offense last year.
As for what's important for us to win, the passing game is definitely something to look at.
I don't think completion % is as much of a feature of our offense as something we've seen for the last 15+ years at GT. Flexbone offenses typically don't go much north of 50%, but that might be more a function of CPJ's coaching tree than the Flexbone.
I was starting by saying we don't usually go north of 50% completion percentage, and it's a tall order. Our average over the past 14 years is about 46% and our max is about 52.6%.
In fairness to the original post I replied to, it's a good correlation to our winning percentage (53% correlated). It's a better predictor of how we do than QBR, passing yards, or total yards. I'm a little surprised how well it does. I have to go back into the stats archive to see how we did in 1999 (65.2%). That's ~20 years back to get a completion percentage close to what we're seeing at Duke and UNC right now. FWIW, Gailey's numbers were 3% better than CPJ's at 48%, but being at 48% with Calvin Johnson and BayBay and a good tight end isn't that much to brag about.
View attachment 3740
GT, Navy, Army, and Air Force do all have about the same completion rate (2017-> GT 36%; Navy 41%; Army 31%; USAF 48%) , but we had about the same completion rate before adopting the Flexbone. Central Florida was a 68% completion rate--but they do use a lot of shotgun.
Here's last year's highlights of UCF vs Navy. They're both lining up the offense in similar ways. But UCF is a more pass-happy version of our offense. They threw for more yards per game (331) than we ran for (307). They were the #33 rushing offense at 199 yards/game. In yards per play, they blew us out at 7.46 ypp (#5) vs. 5.74 for us (#74).
CPJ looked at the Run and Shoot and said "I want to run out of that thing and play smashmouth football". Scott Frost looked at CPJ's offense and said "I want to pass out of that thing".
If you're going to say "our offense as we currently run it" or "currently coach it", it's hard to argue that we're pretty much stuck looking up at a 50% completion rate. If you cut it back to "our offense" and drop the "as we currently run/coach it", we could be up at a higher completion rate and yards per game/yards per play. Unless you think that UCF has once in a lifetime skill players on offense last year.
As for what's important for us to win, the passing game is definitely something to look at.
Calling it now... TQM, Benson and Lynch all get 1,000 yards on the ground this season
I'm hoping that a healthy Clinton Lynch turns quite a few of those seam/skinny posts over the middle into big plays. They were there for the taking last year and we didn't succeed nearly enough. From what I saw in the spring game, it wouldn't surprise me to see Lynch be our leading receiver next year. Although I do have big hopes for Jalen Camp. He kind of reminds me of early Demaryius. Just needs to put it all together.