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Trolling and whining are not exactly the same.
Not saying they are. Just saying when Phork thinks you are being too negative, it means something.
Trolling and whining are not exactly the same.
His gameplan was to not bother blocking blitzers. Someone posted his pregame stuff somewhere. Last year kept te's in to block, this year he wasnt going to. Now I know this team had "hot routes" with tommy, so I dunno if that announcer was talking out his ass bout nd not having them but they sure didnt use em with golson. Folston didnt miss blocks, by the time Cam came in asu wasnt mass blitzing. the oline and cam actually started communicating with golson who is incapable of swiveling his head to see obvious presnap blitzes. Thats only adjustment I saw, the offense actually communicating presnap which is only what every team has done since caveman days. I really wish kelly was just a headcoach/program runner and hired a real OC.
ASU was flying up the field to stop our short passing game/screens so they faked the screen to Fuller and hit Amir over the top to make it a three point game. Had we caught one break and pulled the game out, we'd be talking about Kelly's creative play calling/adjustment to their defense.
You wanted one.
Playcalling is slight adjustments. I am talking about schematic adjustments that every team has ready for their players in the locker room at half time.
The game plan was fine, it was the players that did not execute. I refuse to believe that gameplan was the reason why Jaylon Smith missed simple tackles, why Shumate whiffed multiple times on easy one on one tackles, or why Golson won't just eat a sack or throw the ball away in certain circumstances. And even if the gameplan sucked, it was thrown out the window in the first quarter anyways because of the score.
My point is that it is pretty much impossible to criticize a gameplan when it was abandoned so early in the game. How does one know what the gameplan was when it never even came to fruition?
His gameplan was to not bother blocking blitzers. Someone posted his pregame stuff somewhere. Last year kept te's in to block, this year he wasnt going to. Now I know this team had "hot routes" with tommy, so I dunno if that announcer was talking out his ass bout nd not having them but they sure didnt use em with golson. Folston didnt miss blocks, by the time Cam came in asu wasnt mass blitzing. the oline and cam actually started communicating with golson who is incapable of swiveling his head to see obvious presnap blitzes. Thats only adjustment I saw, the offense actually communicating presnap which is only what every team has done since caveman days. I really wish kelly was just a headcoach/program runner and hired a real OC.
I agree about BK needing a real OC. Sometimes I marvel at his playcalling but then other times I scratch my head in total disbelief.
There was a particular moment in the game against ASU where we had run the ball right down there throat and there was a break for commercials. So the break ends and play resumes and he has Golson run two straight pass plays, the latter ending in a turnover. I couldn't believe why he would just stop what was clearly effective. I mean we were getting 8-9 ypc at the time.
Then to contrast later in the game there was a beuatiful play call for an inside shovel pass/screen, probably BK's best play call of the night and it was dropped by the receiver.
Just that kind of night for the Irish.
I agree about BK needing a real OC. Sometimes I marvel at his playcalling but then other times I scratch my head in total disbelief.
There was a particular moment in the game against ASU where we had run the ball right down there throat and there was a break for commercials. So the break ends and play resumes and he has Golson run two straight pass plays, the latter ending in a turnover. I couldn't believe why he would just stop what was clearly effective. I mean we were getting 8-9 ypc at the time.
Then to contrast later in the game there was a beuatiful play call for an inside shovel pass/screen, probably BK's best play call of the night and it was dropped by the receiver.
Just that kind of night for the Irish.
I agree about BK needing a real OC. Sometimes I marvel at his playcalling but then other times I scratch my head in total disbelief.
There was a particular moment in the game against ASU where we had run the ball right down there throat and there was a break for commercials. So the break ends and play resumes and he has Golson run two straight pass plays, the latter ending in a turnover. I couldn't believe why he would just stop what was clearly effective. I mean we were getting 8-9 ypc at the time.
Then to contrast later in the game there was a beuatiful play call for an inside shovel pass/screen, probably BK's best play call of the night and it was dropped by the receiver.
Just that kind of night for the Irish.
He is a real OC. How is this lost on people? He's generally regarded as one of the top offensive minds in college football by many people. Doesn't really get much better.
He is a real OC. How is this lost on people? He's generally regarded as one of the top offensive minds in college football by many people. Doesn't really get much better.
This is a gross misrepresentation of what actually happened.
I'm sure you're thinking of the offensive series that bled into the 2nd quarter because it's the only one that could possibly fit the narrative you presented.
Folston started off the series with runs of 1 yard and -2 yards. Golson then picked up the first down with a 13 yard pass to Robinson.
Folston then ran for 8 and then 4 yards before the quarter ended. Then Golson scrambled for 8 yards and threw a pick six.
For the RTDB crowd all it takes is 1 good run to equal "we're running the ball down their throat!" and this is the reality you wanted to see. At no point in the game did we stop running the ball when it was clearly effective.
Yeah, Folston had that run of 8 yards but his other runs went for 2, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 2 and the above 4, 1, and -2 yards. Not only is that clearly not effective it's the exact opposite!
This kind of narrative bugs the crap out of me because it makes no sense when you switch the running and passing around. No one in the history of football has watched a quarterback struggle putting together a bunch of incompletions and a few short completions only to hit one 25-yard pass and exclaim, "Why didn't we throw more we were really abusing their secondary!"
The passing game was clearly more ineffective. ...
Ok. We ran the ball 25 times for 52 yards, if you take Golson's stats out. Why would anyone CONTINUE to get 2.1 yards per play, instead of 10+, on average?
Uh ...
38 Rushes
41 Net Yards Rushing
1.1 Yards/Attempt
Because it sets up other things. Take the Dallas Cowboys for example. They are playing really well this year because of (Zach Martin) the ability to run the football. A lot of D Murray's runs are into walls (run or pass blitzes) for little to no gain. HOWEVER, this sets up play action calls that have been extremely successful for Dallas who has a ton of big plays. In addition, right after a big pass play, Dallas will run the ball and gouge the defense who is on their heels. Murray has gotten most of his big runs after big pass plays, which inflates his yard per carry. It is a run to setup the pass which works quite well whether in college or the pros.
Kelly wants to pass to setup the run. The problem is, against a blitzing defense, you HAVE to establish the run early. On the first series against ASU, Kelly did this. They marched down the field. Then, he started playing spread trips and the blitzes started getting to Golson, who at this point in his career, is turnover prone.
I think the turnovers will tone down as Golson 'ages', because remember this is only his second full year of starting so he is a young Senior. Kelly has to recognize this and adjust his game plan. Once Golson gets rattled, he should have settled into a more conservative game plan to settle the team down, stop the turnovers, control the clock, and setup big run and pass plays that took advantage of an aggressive defense.
Chris Spielman was all over this on the broadcast during the game, and so was one of the announcers in a previous game this year (I am sorry, cannot remember the announcer). Kelly is great, but he makes mistakes at times.
Could have sworn the turnovers and major miscues were because of passing, which was a huge determining factor in the game.
Also remember, college football subtracts sack yardage from rushing, not passing like the NFL so stats are not really that useful here considering Golson was sacked a multitude of times on passing downs. Still never understood why they haven't changed that but that is another story altogether.
But think what you want. Look at the numbers instead of what went wrong. How many turnovers did rushing plays net? Look that stat up for me and let me know, I'm curious.
But think what you want. Look at the numbers instead of what went wrong. How many turnovers did rushing plays net? Look that stat up for me and let me know, I'm curious.
I think this is where people might disagree with you. We could have stuck the Dallas Cowboys' offensive line out there and even then, six or seven pass rushers will ALWAYS beat five blockers. Our guys didn't just get "beat." We seemed genuinely surprised that Arizona State, the blitziest team in the country, blitzed us all game.The offensive line was responsible for Golson constantly being under pressure.
I think this is where people might disagree with you. We could have stuck the Dallas Cowboys' offensive line out there and even then, six or seven pass rushers will ALWAYS beat five blockers. Our guys didn't just get "beat." We seemed genuinely surprised that Arizona State, the blitziest team in the country, blitzed us all game.
I'm not just making things up. The announcers said over and over again that we didn't have enough blockers to handle the pass rush and that "Kelly was counting on Golson to account for the free rusher himself." Golson was obviously not capable of that, and that's on the game plan.The Cowboys?
We win with last year's OLine or the one from '12.
They practice for the blitz but they didn't execute like they practiced. And add Koyack and Folston to the guys you think didn't get beat. We had 6 or 7 blockers available. They failed as a unit
I'm not just making things up. The announcers said over and over again that we didn't have enough blockers to handle the pass rush and that "Kelly was counting on Golson to account for the free rusher himself." Golson was obviously not capable of that, and that's on the game plan.
I'm not just making things up. The announcers said over and over again that we didn't have enough blockers to handle the pass rush and that "Kelly was counting on Golson to account for the free rusher himself." Golson was obviously not capable of that, and that's on the game plan.
Yeah, I heard that too. With an empty backfield and no TE that is the plan by simple math.
But I also saw OLs, a TE, and an RB whiffing. And two OLs taking the same man when there were extra rushers coming. I didn't need the color guy to point that out.
If Golson was a couple inches taller and had a different complexion I would have thought that was deja vu of Clausen as a freshman.
Golson held on to the ball too long sometimes trying to make a play but it starts up front. Our pass protection did not function well as a unit.
My only consistent complaint, and I have had it all year. why can't we have two running backs in the backfield?
why can't we use a tight end as a lead blocker?
That's kind of my point. Confusion indicates poor preparation and planning. If we were just physically missing guys or getting beat with speed, I'd agree that it was primarily poor execution. However, when we look like we don't even know what we're supposed to do, that comes back to what we did Monday through Friday.Our pass protection was all kinds of confused. We looked absolutely silly at times. I didn't HATE the game plan at all, just like anything else. We execute we will be fine, we don't, we are in for a disaster.
Or three? With split backs and jet motion from a third, the defense wouldn't know what the heck we're going to do. The jet guy could be a Fuller/Prosise/Hunter WR, or it could be the third guy of Cam, GB, and Folston.why can't we have two running backs in the backfield?
Maybe the argument is we shouldn't necessarily be a pass-first spread. I'd love to see even a sniff of read option every once in awhile. We've run the look a few times, but I don't know if it's ever a true option in the sense of EG making a read and choosing what to do. They always look like half-ass play action where the give/keep call is predetermined in the huddle or at the line.For the same reason you don't see Clemson, Baylor and aTm doing it. Multi-RB sets don't make much sense in a pass-first spread.
I think this is where people might disagree with you. We could have stuck the Dallas Cowboys' offensive line out there and even then, six or seven pass rushers will ALWAYS beat five blockers. Our guys didn't just get "beat." We seemed genuinely surprised that Arizona State, the blitziest team in the country, blitzed us all game.