One more point.
I see a lot of coaches that have charts/play sheets. So playcalling isn’t just about calling a play. It’s about knowing what to do in THAT situation against your opponent. It’s a chess game between opposing coordinators. The Pope play was a great play except for the fumble at the end. Calling essentially the same running play on first down for maybe 27 times in a row for almost no gain every time is not very imaginative and when there are 8 guys in the box, probably not very smart. We have to fix that and maybe that’s on the QB as well. Part of the QB's responsibility is when he comes to the line, if the called play is not there based on what the defense is now showing, he has to get us in a better play. Maybe it is as simple as running right instead of left but managing the offense is more than just throwing the ball or handing it off. jmo.
No doubt. Just not sure how much control JG has, and if he does have it, then he isn'ty great at diagnosing it.
Multiple times, we had trips to one side with just 4 DB's, and two DB's were 10-15 yards off the ball. The LB's were not in pass coverage on that side. I never played, but to me, that signals a quick pass, let the other two WR's block, and you have to beat one man. Nope, didn't do it. The Pope play was fantastic because it was the same type alignment as the one we got stopped for a safety. UF played 9 in the box, and we threw the ball. Surprise, it worked!