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How did Roof do it in 2014, but not since?
Without going back and looking at the stats from that year, it did seem that we got some turnovers that year at key times. VT threw 2 late interceptions when we were behind, GSU lost a pitch that gave us a chance to make a great comeback. MSU had some turnovers in the Orange Bowl but we gave up over 600 yards to them. We got some breaks that year. Was that the year Pitt had all those turnovers? Not sure it was Roof's D. I do think he ran a fundamentally sound defense. It just didn't work well enough with our personnel and he became very predictable with his conservative calls.How did Roof do it in 2014, but not since?
The defense doesn't play in a vacuum. Statistics will be a nice indicator, but the only measure that matters in the history books is W-L.
Bottom line: Does the D do enough to win the game when the offense holds up its end of the bargain? If the D is statistically bad, but make plays when they need to to win the game (eg 2014), I'll be content. Last year the D didn't need to be a whole lot better for us to have won 8+ games, they just needed to make a few plays at the end of halves and OT to stop killer scores.
I'd love eventually for the D to win a game when the offense doesn't hold up its end. Win a game 13-9, with a defensive TD or something. Can't remember the last time that happened...
How did Roof do it in 2014, but not since?
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I'd love eventually for the D to win a game when the offense doesn't hold up its end. Win a game 13-9, with a defensive TD or something. Can't remember the last time that happened...
Ability to score or prevent a score is, in my opinion, the best averaging stat and predictor of a good offense or defense. Points per game does not work due to the variability of possession numbers (hurry up versus grind it out). The second part of normalization is to compare when playing the same opponents or to adjust based on the competition you play.
Good stuff.
As you say, per game stats hide our fewer possessions per game. It will make our pts allowed look better than it is and interceptions look worse.
Still awful regardless.
Ultimately the goal is to win so I'm looking for the defense to win. Imo we should be able to score 27 or so against any team so if our defense can be a net 24 points allowed or better we should win. How we get there doesnt really matter. If we give up 35 but get two defensive scores then fine. If we get no turnovers but hold them to 21 then fine.
Wow, three year average of 34.3 points per game given up even with fewer possession per game. I would really hate to see that number if the offense we run didn't "make it look better" by holding the ball an so long and eliminating an extra possession or two. Would we have been at 40 pts per game given up if we had a "normal" # of possession per game? Shudder!
In 2017, CU held pwr5 teams to 15.3 pts/game on average; georgie 16.9; VPI 17.5; Duke 22.1; and Miami 22.2.
That's 5 teams on our schedule that are top 30 in pts/game defense vs Pwr5. Making the starting point that our offense should be able to score 27+ on all of them, likely with fewer than average possessions is not reasonable in my opinion.
Of those 5 teams, only georgie was also top 30 in pts/game offense vs Pwr5.
And I think with how much our program invests into that one side of the ball it isn't unreasonable to expect that.