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Should our offense coordinator be coaching on the sidelines instead of in the booth?
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<blockquote data-quote="GTRambler" data-source="post: 633151" data-attributes="member: 4009"><p>Yes, I agree. It doesn’t really matter where he is during the game—up in the booth, or on the sidelines—because (at least to me so far, from watching three games) he doesn’t seem to have one offensive system-philosophy from which he can select the best available QB to run that one system-philosophy.</p><p></p><p>Instead, he seems to, so far, be trying to run two different systems thru two different QBs, based on what he perceives (or hopes) each each individual QB “can best do.” And in doing so, he hopes that the rest of the offensive team (the O-linemen, the backs, the WRs, and the TEs) can adequately operate the two different systems, too.</p><p></p><p>Well, OK, go ahead, Coach ... hope it works that way (or two ways). What do I know?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GTRambler, post: 633151, member: 4009"] Yes, I agree. It doesn’t really matter where he is during the game—up in the booth, or on the sidelines—because (at least to me so far, from watching three games) he doesn’t seem to have one offensive system-philosophy from which he can select the best available QB to run that one system-philosophy. Instead, he seems to, so far, be trying to run two different systems thru two different QBs, based on what he perceives (or hopes) each each individual QB “can best do.” And in doing so, he hopes that the rest of the offensive team (the O-linemen, the backs, the WRs, and the TEs) can adequately operate the two different systems, too. Well, OK, go ahead, Coach ... hope it works that way (or two ways). What do I know? [/QUOTE]
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Should our offense coordinator be coaching on the sidelines instead of in the booth?
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