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Tulane is Next
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<blockquote data-quote="Boomergump" data-source="post: 173761" data-attributes="member: 639"><p>Great Question! I will answer as if I know, but in reality, I just think I know. First of all, coaches get to see game film on all their opponents. It is part of an agreement. So, having Duke play Tulane doesn't provide any extra tape for our coaches, but rather condenses things where they don't have to have two separate recordings. They will have access to all Tulane's games and all Duke games, either way. I would say having an opponent's film is way more important for CTR than it is for CPJ. Watching the Duke vs Tulane tape will help him greatly because that is what he will be seeing on game day minus any special packages that those teams have in store. The meat and potatoes will be the same. For Johnson, nobody plays defense against us like they do against the rest of the football world, so it has little value. He needs to find film of the last time they played an offense like ours. Fortunately, in Tulane's case, that was us last year. I have heard of Johnson seeking tape several years old, when playing a new opponent (or a new DC) just to find out how they did it then.</p><p></p><p>For this reason, I think it is so special that we have a coach who has been around, seen it all, and can adjust on the fly during games if he has to, without having to game plan like crazy. There is truly only so many ways a team can line up against us without totally exposing themselves to complete anguish. CPJ has seen all the tactics and he knows the counters to the tactics like we all know our phone numbers. Does CPJ game plan? Absolutely, but it is more for the kids to make sure they execute well on a certain set of plays that coach thinks will work. If you notice, we rarely come out in the same formations every game (other than the standard flex) running the same plays. CPJ keeps a bit of a rotation going so DC's will have a hard time preparing. Just defending the standard TO well, with a week's prep, is hard, let alone what bag of wrinkles CPJ has up his sleeve for that week. Take the Orange Bowl as an example. Those unbalanced line BB gives with the playside pulling guard came out of nowhere for that rookie MSU DC.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Boomergump, post: 173761, member: 639"] Great Question! I will answer as if I know, but in reality, I just think I know. First of all, coaches get to see game film on all their opponents. It is part of an agreement. So, having Duke play Tulane doesn't provide any extra tape for our coaches, but rather condenses things where they don't have to have two separate recordings. They will have access to all Tulane's games and all Duke games, either way. I would say having an opponent's film is way more important for CTR than it is for CPJ. Watching the Duke vs Tulane tape will help him greatly because that is what he will be seeing on game day minus any special packages that those teams have in store. The meat and potatoes will be the same. For Johnson, nobody plays defense against us like they do against the rest of the football world, so it has little value. He needs to find film of the last time they played an offense like ours. Fortunately, in Tulane's case, that was us last year. I have heard of Johnson seeking tape several years old, when playing a new opponent (or a new DC) just to find out how they did it then. For this reason, I think it is so special that we have a coach who has been around, seen it all, and can adjust on the fly during games if he has to, without having to game plan like crazy. There is truly only so many ways a team can line up against us without totally exposing themselves to complete anguish. CPJ has seen all the tactics and he knows the counters to the tactics like we all know our phone numbers. Does CPJ game plan? Absolutely, but it is more for the kids to make sure they execute well on a certain set of plays that coach thinks will work. If you notice, we rarely come out in the same formations every game (other than the standard flex) running the same plays. CPJ keeps a bit of a rotation going so DC's will have a hard time preparing. Just defending the standard TO well, with a week's prep, is hard, let alone what bag of wrinkles CPJ has up his sleeve for that week. Take the Orange Bowl as an example. Those unbalanced line BB gives with the playside pulling guard came out of nowhere for that rookie MSU DC. [/QUOTE]
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