I agree, not like our opponents can't pull up our zone read plays from last year anyways.I'm not a fan of trying to be vanilla and hide or save things for other, presumable tougher opponents. How about just run what you run and get so good at executing it with superior athletes that it doesn't matter whether or not the bad guys know what's coming? If you wanna hold back on a couple of "trick plays" and save em for your bigger rivals, like we did with Florida last year then ok, that seems sensible.
But otherwise, just go get real good and confident with your system and go run it no matter who the opponent is IMO. If we just tried the other way vs App State, to hold back evidently only run about 5 or 6 total plays out of the offense, I'd say the results were a great reason to never do that again. Jmo.
Not sure if playing App State to overtime would be considered "smart" coaching. But to each their own I guess.
Do you really think it was part of Butch's strategy Travis? Interested to hear a player's take on it. It did seem like we ran a total of about 8 different plays all night. I was thinking of the North Texas game from last year as well.
THIS.... not quite buying playing vanilla till the end with a potential shattering loss staring you in the face... True, Dobbs clearly was told not to run, but not sure why the offense looked so bad... guess we will find out soon if it was a dangerous smokescreen or our coaching staff and players have regressed.. You would think this staff would have learned from being roasted for losing leads and games partly because they played 3 and out and hold the lead football... you would think they would come out this year to intimidate folks and keep their foot on the accelerator for four quarters.... guess not.
No it's never your strategy to be that close. But they only installed very few plays thinking they could muscle through it and it almost back fired. There is no such thing as holding back plays. You install plays based on your opponent. Against Virginia tech they will have all the plays open
Butch/Debord clearly took out half the playbook v AppSt.
How many read-options did Dobbs run?
I don't remember any.
It was risky, but was clearly on purpose.