That's because the 3-4 we are playing (read: not a ton of complicated zone blitzes, etc.) is intended to stop the run first. I'm really not even remotely close to a football expert or coach or anything, but just going off of what I've heard/read. I think our goal was to be stout against the run and then hopefully get the team in passing 3rd down situations where we could then bring in guys like Lynch for the DL and unleash the OLBs to bring pressure.
I'm interested to see what they're talking about too. I believe the idea is to have so much size/speed/talent on defense that we can play a base defense against those 90% of teams and whip them; and then against the elite teams go Pittsburgh Steelers on them and bring all kinds of crazy pressure from different angles that college offenses simply won't be able to deal with. This is all just pure conjecture from me though.
Thst sounds awesome, but I feel that is a long ways away. I feel like that takes a couple generations of recruiting classes where players can sit-learn-reload. I thought the main problem against USC (and most likely against Stanford) was that they were afraid of Barkley picking them apart, and played to much coverages, particularly in the first half. I think, with the talent we have, keep it black/white, and just bring a lot of pressure. While we have trouble getting pressure with our front 3, they do require a ton of attention from the offensive line. I feel like Tenuta's blitz packages would work very well with the talent we have. I am not football expert, and this will definetly get mixed comments, but I feel like our LB's are really good at bringing the heat, why not let them do that, rather then make them sit uncomfortably in pass coverage. Giving a ton of different looks is the way to beat good QB's like BArkley, and Luck.
Sure, we will get burned every now and then, but I'd take that over getting methodically picked a part. Plus, a rattled QB is more prone at making mistakes then a comfortable QB.