I wish someone could explain this concept so simple I could understand it. The game passed passed him by?
Football is blocking and tackling at its core. If your team does those two things at a high level you will win far more than you lose. CPF failed in the same fashion that basically all coaches fail, poor hires and poor use of practice time. Practice time usage might be the only concept where coaches have fallen behind. When one team is getting 100 reps to your 50 or so they will kick your ass most times if the talent is even close to equal. My guess is this is where CBJ has failed. Either poor technique being taught which equals wasted reps, poor teaching abilities which means pissed away practice time trying to get everyone to understand, worrying about conditioning at the end of practice when if you rep enough times at a high pace none of the silly **** we were all made to do in high school ( sprints at the end of practice and other silliness) is needed or simply unintelligent coaches who talk to damn much will cause a team to perform at a very low level.
Without being there my guess is it is a classic mbination of the above by some of the coaches on staff. In my opinion, the oversight of practice pace is where CBJ has likely failed.
100% correct. I said a few weeks ago that this team, offensively, has all the symptoms of a scheme that's so needlessly complicated that it cuts into practice time and creates confusion in-game. Rather than focusing on the most basic building blocks of developing individual skill, too much time is devoted to making a never-ending series of arcane adjustments that simply will not or should not be used in game situations. And if not that, then it's constantly putting new plays in.
When I played in high school as an O-lineman, between one-third and one-half of our individual time was spent on nothing but perfecting stances, going through the first steps, and everything up to actual contact. Then the remaining time was spent on drills: maybe it was time in the chutes, maybe it was double-team drills, maybe it was pass-rushing, or some combination of all. We did this so often that to this day, I could still snap off a perfect stance and cut block at the drop of a hat. And when I started coaching, this is how I did things as well.
When I went to a new school, this wasn't how it was done...individual time was mostly for making in-week adjustments, and the offense was so needlessly complex that working on schemes took priority over actual skill development. But the defense was incredibly simple, and my D-line was like a swarm of hornets.
Our popgun offense couldn't get out of its own way, but our defense allowed something like 12 points/game, which is even more impressive considering that we lost the turnover, field position, and time of possession battles every single week because of the offense. The offensive plays were so long and complex that we
averaged two delay of game penalties and one burned timeout per game (due to wrong alignments or personnel). But the defense was so good that only one team scored more than 17 points against us all year - that being a state champion led by a five-star recruit.