A simple application of the Pareto principle suggests that you should focus your efforts on the 20% that's going to net the 80% improvement. Given the track record of our offense, I think it's safe to say that the 20% high impact bucket is the defense.
/QUOTE]
The track record of our offense? Our offense last year was not what it would become in the first half of the year. It wasn't until after we made the bback change that it became so good, which is exactly why this line of conversation came up because the natural, and more than fair, criticism of Johnson is why did it take an injury to force Days to even get a shot? And it's also fair, in wake of the coaches coming out and saying that we aren't getting the production we should from Skov, to question if the same type of change wouldn't have a similar impact this year, because in the only game against a team with a pulse that we've played this year, it was the offense not carrying it's weight. And making personnel changes doesn't hinder our ability to work on the defense. It doesn't require extra snaps, or extra time spent on offense. Just a reallocation of time and snaps already spent.
And on top of that, it's a false dichotomy to say we should only focus on the defense. We should, and are focusing on both. Saying that our defense is weaker than our offense doesn't justify blindly defending every choice that is made on the offense and burying your head to the issues on that side of the ball.