When Friedgen was here, we ran multiple offenses (including option) from different formations. We weren't "worth an (expletive) at any of them"?
Riiiiight.... Maybe it's the coach who isn't "worth an (expletive)" at anything other than "his" offense.
I discussed the shotgun with someone who knows Johnson well. He explained why we won't run shotgun. Because "Johnson is stubborn" is the explanation he gave.
And with regard to the diamond and Vad Lee, as the article points out, we beat Duke 38-14 and rarely ran it again. It didn't work? Another GTSwarm myth. I guess losing to Duke while they outscore us 40-6 is a "better option".
Johnson isn't stubborn. He's calling plays he think will work. His disciples run different formations because they have their own preferences.
[*]Will we run shotgun again? Probably, just not under CPJ.
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actually -- I was at the game -- Tech left at least two TDs on the field and maybe a third. That silly formation was a sop to Lee who couldn't run from under center. Two mistakes: Johnson for recruiting him, Lee for accepting. Besides when your O lineman (Braun) dismisses it, then forget about it.When Friedgen was here, we ran multiple offenses (including option) from different formations. We weren't "worth an (expletive) at any of them"?
Riiiiight.... Maybe it's the coach who isn't "worth an (expletive)" at anything other than "his" offense.
I discussed the shotgun with someone who knows Johnson well. He explained why we won't run shotgun. Because "Johnson is stubborn" is the explanation he gave.
And with regard to the diamond and Vad Lee, as the article points out, we beat Duke 38-14 and rarely ran it again. It didn't work? Another GTSwarm myth. I guess losing to Duke while they outscore us 40-6 is a "better option".
It is common knowledge in the college football forums world that college coaches don't know anything. They don't know formations. They don't know how to select starting players. They don't know when to change plays, formation, or players. College coaches just think that years and years of long weeks studying and analyzing football count for something. That experience is nothing compared to the knowledge of forum posters who maybe played high school football and spend Saturday afternoon drinking beer and screaming at the TV. Those are the guys who actually have a vast knowledge of football.
actually -- I was at the game -- Tech left at least two TDs on the field and maybe a third. That silly formation was a sop to Lee who couldn't run from under center. Two mistakes: Johnson for recruiting him, Lee for accepting. Besides when your O lineman (Braun) dismisses it, then forget about it.
We have had 2 LOSING seasons -(one bad, and probably would have been 5-7 this yr) of last 3.The Offense is the engine for this train.It didn't really get it done.Any partial change that helps will be appreciated.
actually -- I was at the game -- Tech left at least two TDs on the field and maybe a third. That silly formation was a sop to Lee who couldn't run from under center. Two mistakes: Johnson for recruiting him, Lee for accepting. Besides when your O lineman (Braun) dismisses it, then forget about it.
The biggest mistake was Johnson half -assing putting in a new wrinkle when he didn't want to.
Why don't we have multiple formations? Well, actually, we do. We have variations of our base formation, quite a few of them. Why don't we vary even more than that? Now that's a good question, but one with a very simple answer: time. We don't have time to practice more stuff and be good at all of it. Actually, we don't have enough time to practice the stuff we already run and be good at all of it.
Don't forget, we also vary our blocking assignments, too. There's plenty of variation in our offense as is. There's a lot to digest, understand and master. Master is the key word and we haven't. We have to run it faster than the defense can react to it and we must be perfect in our execution. The better/more athletic the defense, the more perfect and faster we have to be to have success with it. But it can be done, we've proven that in the past.
The problem in '17 was we weren't perfect or fast enough to beat the defenses on our schedule. It wasn't just qb, either. Just about every position on our offense needs to improve. Some of the improvements are tiny but have a big effect. Timing and spacing are small corrections that could yield huge gains. Those things come with repetition and familiarity among teammates.
We don't need to be more multiple. We need to be better at what we already do (or try to do).
Their schedule isn't as tough as ours. Army played and beat Duke, so what, other than that it was tOSU, who killed them, and a bunch of nobodies. We would have had similar results with Navy's schedule as they did, they lost to all the hard teams they played.Yet Army & Navy can?
Their schedule isn't as tough as ours. Army played and beat Duke, so what, other than that it was tOSU, who killed them, and a bunch of nobodies. We would have had similar results with Navy's schedule as they did, they lost to all the hard teams they played.
If Army and Navy manage to incorporate some shotgun into their offenses, using it some even when not in desperate third- and fourth-and-forever situations, I as a mere fan confess to finding it perplexing that Tech can't (or won't) manage to have a shotgun package to use in those 3rd-and-15+, and particularly 4th-and-forever situations when a drive must be maintained, a score must be had on the possession, or else the game will be lost. All the moreso if the QB has been getting pressured all game, and he could really use that extra second to look over things, to have a few more yards distance from the defense when the ball is snapped. One need not revamp the entire offense just to have a special package of plays ("series") from a particular formation to use in a specific situation, under certain distinct conditions.
Army and Navy both don't do the blocking variations we do at least not as much anyway. I don't know if that is preference by the coaches or ability.Yet Army & Navy can?