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If Golson is starting at QB for us in the fall, then I promise Jimmymac will do a naked lap around campus!
If I were a repper, you'd done got repped.
If Golson is starting at QB for us in the fall, then I promise Jimmymac will do a naked lap around campus!
If Golson is starting at QB for us in the fall, then I promise Jimmymac will do a naked lap around campus!
Well the if scoring 40 isn't "humming" I don't know what will satisfy this site, and I feel very sorry for Malik next year because walking on water will dissapoint some posters at this rate.
As to the bowl performance, I would say it's far more likely the consistent implementation of the running game was the catalyst of our fortune. Not the QB handing the ball off.
What do you think would have happened had EG taken every snap in the game assuming the same consistent running plan was implemented?
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My 2 cents:
- I wouldn't read too much into the "Malik playbook" vs. LSU. That was a specific gameplan for a defense that: (1) had virtually no film on Zaire; and (2) had been gashed several times by option-running QBs during 2014 already. If that became our base offense, opponents would adjust to it and efficiency would trend down. Sample size of 1, etc.
My 2 cents:
- I'm not ready to throw in the towel on Golson. His ceiling is still ridiculously high. He's got 1st-round draft pick arm talent, and Wilsonian elusiveness. If he can just learn how to competently execute an option and how to secure the f*cking football when he runs, he'll make a run at the Heisman next year. But while those two things shouldn't be that hard to learn, they're crucial. If Golson can't improve significantly in those two areas during the off-season, he simply can't be our QB.
- I don't think schematic comparisons to 2012 are very helpful. Opposing defenses were still using the Rees game-plan to defend Golson, which is why he converted so many 3rd downs with his legs. We also had a much better OL-- Martin and Watt on the left, Braxton and Golic in the middle (both of whom were very good at pulling and run-blocking), and a healthy Lombard at RT (which we haven't had over the last two years)-- as well as better/ more experienced RBs. Unless Kelly is willing to endorse a major scheme change to a run-first spread (a la Auburn, Oregon or OSU), we're still going to look more like aTm and Clemson next season.
- I wouldn't read too much into the "Malik playbook" vs. LSU. That was a specific gameplan for a defense that: (1) had virtually no film on Zaire; and (2) had been gashed several times by option-running QBs during 2014 already. If that became our base offense, opponents would adjust to it and efficiency would trend down. Sample size of 1, etc.
We would have won? What kind of question is that? What do you think would have happened?
How many times do you want your QB running the ball per game? Mariota this year has something like 125 rushes (including sacks). That is roughly 9 rushes per game.
As I pointed out before, EG ran the ball that much and more in select games in 2012 and was effective. With the proper design, he can be a threat.
The guy who struggled at the end of this year was first exposed to this system 4 years ago. I know it hasn't been a traditional 4 years by any means but it's still 4 years. I don't think he has the mental make-up to play well enough to win every game. ND most likely, screw that they have to win every game next year to get to what ND plays for... a shot at the national title. From his body of work, I say it's 100% chance that he would lose at least one game therefore I'll ride with the kid who is gonna be here in '16 & '17.
Are you an attorney?
Whiskey, well stated. And that is why I think Golson would put himself in a better situation if he picked a team that suited him better. Kelly isn't gonna change his O to help Golson.
Yea, I mean... is there a huge body of film that I'm not aware of showing Golson failing to run the zone read on a consistent basis? There's no doubt that we didn't run it much while he was in..but I don't understand why that automatically = Golson can't zone read.
It's a negative inference we're drawing, but it's a pretty strong one in this case. Running the ball well from the sort of single-back spread sets that Kelly favors requires a QB who can execute the option. Otherwise you're constantly at a numerical disadvantage at the point of attack, and it makes your offense much easier to defense. In fact, I can't think of a single program nationally who utilizes Kelly's preferred sets without an option QB. So the fact that Kelly isn't calling option plays for Golson is a pretty telling sign that the kid can't execute them well; because the offense would function a lot better if he could.
My 2 cents:
- I'm not ready to throw in the towel on Golson. His ceiling is still ridiculously high. He's got 1st-round draft pick arm talent, and Wilsonian elusiveness. If he can just learn how to competently execute an option and how to secure the f*cking football when he runs, he'll make a run at the Heisman next year. But while those two things shouldn't be that hard to learn, they're crucial. If Golson can't improve significantly in those two areas during the off-season, he simply can't be our QB.
[*]I don't think schematic comparisons to 2012 are very helpful. Opposing defenses were still using the Rees game-plan to defend Golson, which is why he converted so many 3rd downs with his legs. We also had a much better OL-- Martin and Watt on the left, Braxton and Golic in the middle (both of whom were very good at pulling and run-blocking), and a healthy Lombard at RT (which we haven't had over the last two years)-- as well as better/ more experienced RBs. Unless Kelly is willing to endorse a major scheme change to a run-first spread (a la Auburn, Oregon or OSU), we're still going to look more like aTm and Clemson next season. And that's fine, as long as our QB poses a genuine rushing threat. A Golson who inexplicably can't execute the option doesn't pose such a threat, which creates major problems for the offensive scheme.- I wouldn't read too much into the "Malik playbook" vs. LSU. That was a specific gameplan for a defense that: (1) had virtually no film on Zaire; and (2) had been gashed several times by option-running QBs during 2014 already. If that became our base offense, opponents would adjust to it and efficiency would trend down. Sample size of 1, etc.
It's a negative inference we're drawing, but it's a pretty strong one in this case. Running the ball well from the sort of single-back spread sets that Kelly favors requires a QB who can execute the option. Otherwise you're constantly at a numerical disadvantage at the point of attack, and it makes your offense much easier to defend. In fact, I can't think of a single program nationally who utilizes Kelly's preferred sets without an option QB. So the fact that Kelly isn't calling option plays for Golson is a pretty telling sign that the kid can't execute them well; because the offense would function a lot better if he could.
My 2 cents:
- I'm not ready to throw in the towel on Golson. His ceiling is still ridiculously high. He's got 1st-round draft pick arm talent, and Wilsonian elusiveness. If he can just learn how to competently execute an option and how to secure the f*cking football when he runs, he'll make a run at the Heisman next year. But while those two things shouldn't be that hard to learn, they're crucial. If Golson can't improve significantly in those two areas during the off-season, he simply can't be our QB.
- I don't think schematic comparisons to 2012 are very helpful. Opposing defenses were still using the Rees game-plan to defend Golson, which is why he converted so many 3rd downs with his legs. We also had a much better OL-- Martin and Watt on the left, Braxton and Golic in the middle (both of whom were very good at pulling and run-blocking), and a healthy Lombard at RT (which we haven't had over the last two years)-- as well as better/ more experienced RBs. Unless Kelly is willing to endorse a major scheme change to a run-first spread (a la Auburn, Oregon or OSU), we're still going to look more like aTm and Clemson next season. And that's fine, as long as our QB poses a genuine rushing threat. A Golson who inexplicably can't execute the option doesn't pose such a threat, which creates major problems for the offensive scheme.
- I wouldn't read too much into the "Malik playbook" vs. LSU. That was a specific gameplan for a defense that: (1) had virtually no film on Zaire; and (2) had been gashed several times by option-running QBs during 2014 already. If that became our base offense, opponents would adjust to it and efficiency would trend down. Sample size of 1, etc.
I see what you're saying, but the few times I remember Kelly dialing up an EG read option this year, the play seemed to work like a charm. Obviously, EG's 60+ yard dash to open things up against Navy comes to mind. But so does his 6 yard keep against LSU on the final drive. His ball carrying is certainly a concern, but I only remember a couple of fumbles this year that really came when Golson was running the ball. Most came when he was trying to keep alive in the pocket or from poor snaps/hand-offs, etc...
I think that Golson CAN run the read option, but Kelly a) didn't want to risk him, b)thought he could use screens and the like to achieve the same basic effect at the point of attack and c) didn't think he needed it (both Bryant and Folston finished with >5 ypc this season).
Yea, I mean... is there a huge body of film that I'm not aware of showing Golson failing to run the zone read on a consistent basis? There's no doubt that we didn't run it much while he was in..but I don't understand why that automatically = Golson can't zone read.
There's not a huge body of film on Golson running the option because he doesn't do it well when we do run it. He suffers from the same problem Hendrix did, he doesn't read the edge properly to decide if he needs to keep it or hand it off. Zaire did a great job with this, and we ran the hell out of it in the LSU game successfully. I think that tells you everything you need to know. If Golson hasn't grasped the concept yet, I'm not sure he's going to get it next year either.
This just begs the question though. I understand what it takes to run the read option well, what I'm asking is outside of the fact that we rarely run it while he's in, do we have any evidence (film or quotes from Kelly) indicating that he struggles to read the edge? The reason I ask is that the only two times I remember us running it, they were successful plays. I'm sure there were more though, I just don't remember when.
Whiskey, can he change. I think. Will he under Kelly, I doubt it. There is a lot we don't see, but with what we do see, I just don't see the kind of communication and relationship between them.
This just begs the question though. I understand what it takes to run the read option well, what I'm asking is outside of the fact that we rarely run it while he's in, do we have any evidence (film or quotes from Kelly) indicating that he struggles to read the edge? The reason I ask is that the only two times I remember us running it, they were successful plays. I'm sure there were more though, I just don't remember when.
I can't really point you to specific plays, but I can tell you I cringed a number of times this season when we did run the read option with Golson. Overall it wasn't very successful, and a good number of times it was because of a mistake on his part deciding to keep it or hand it off. Hendrix was plagued with the same issue. Logic dictates that if we were successful running it with Golson in the past, we would have kept running it this season, but we didn't.
I did not feel that way about Zaire when he ran it, he was obviously very successful other than the 3rd possession I think...LSU gobbled one up that I remember, but it could have just been a great defensive play. He understands the mechanics and makes a quick decision with the ball. In 1 1/2 games Zaire had more than double the average yards a carry over Golson and came within 100 yards of his total rushing yards for the season.
had he handed it off it was a first down...BUT the blocker got trucked which lead to Zaire having to bounce it out further and their def was way too fast to go sideline to sideline
I read that as anything we didn't know.
Golson is the most talented athlete to play the position at Notre Dame in a long time.
Quinn and Clausen haven't been gone all that long, and they were awfully talented.