How good can Miami's offense be in '24? A statistical look at our recent additions

How good can Miami's offense be in '24? A statistical look at our recent additions

DMoney
DMoney

Comments (131)

Martinez is probably not going to set a combine record with his 40 time but the guy has great vision and breaks tackles. A 230lb guy with (6) 40 yard+ runs is doing something right. Usually big backs, even the best ones, have their ypc hurt by lots of short yardage carries but this dude was still getting 6 yards a carry. That means he’s maximizing his chances when he gets open lanes.
A dude that size, with decent to good speed can break the first arm tackle he comes across. I am sick and tired of little backs that fall down when a blade of grass pokes up funny. I don't care if a guy can run a 4.25 40, if he's 180 pounds soaking wet. Give me the guy that is 230, runs a 4.45, and is strong enough to break tackles. That is where you get the 40+ yard runs. Good vision, good feet, and excellent strength beats pure speed any day of the week.
 
I do expect the offense to be better this year. Hype aside as long as they take care of business, no dropped balls in crucial plays, fumbles, dumb sacks to missed assignments I think we can be pretty pretty pretty pretty good.
The only thing that I can see holding them back is coaching. Poor game planning will lead to poor execution. Here's hoping our coaching staff coaches their butts off and puts these young men in position to make plays. We certainly have the talent to make plays.
 
Dear friend, there is a reason teams play fast on purpose. It’s a huge advantage for the offense.
I agree if you have the right play caller and personnel to be effective and efficient....what good is it to go fast just to give the ball back to the other team?
 
I agree if you have the right play caller and personnel to be effective and efficient....what good is it to go fast just to give the ball back to the other team?
That’s usually what people think but there’s no evidence linking going three and out to going fast on offense. It’s actually the opposite as most teams that speed up become more efficient and convert more first downs. Thus having more possession time.


Taking your sweet time and going three and out doesn’t really buy you more time than going three and out without huddling. Especially if you throw incomplete passes.
 
That’s usually what people think but there’s no evidence linking going three and out to going fast on offense. It’s actually the opposite as most teams that speed up become more efficient and convert more first downs. Thus having more possession time.


Taking your sweet time and going three and out doesn’t really buy you more time than going three and out without huddling. Especially if you throw incomplete passes.
You truly understand today's football. I'm tired of liking all your posts 🤣
 
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It was pretty clear that our RBs couldn't break a tackle or make a man miss in the open field last year.

Also, I still cant believe we only won 7 games last year lmao
 
What good are all of those things if he can’t capitalize? It’s not slurping or moping. If he can’t win with this lineup which includes the best offense in two decades then all he is is a great OL coach and recruiter.

To me the answer is obvious. You rinse and repeat at the coordinator level until you get it right. Mario knows how to bring in winning talent. We haven’t had that since Butch.
 
To me the answer is obvious. You rinse and repeat at the coordinator level until you get it right. Mario knows how to bring in winning talent. We haven’t had that since Butch.
Isn’t he the one who’s hiring these guys and he’s on his second pair in as many years? So when does accountability ever fall on the head coach according to your logic?
 
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That’s usually what people think but there’s no evidence linking going three and out to going fast on offense. It’s actually the opposite as most teams that speed up become more efficient and convert more first downs. Thus having more possession time.


Taking your sweet time and going three and out doesn’t really buy you more time than going three and out without huddling. Especially if you throw incomplete passes.
You still have to have a coach who can call the plays and have competent players to run a hurry offense. It' has to be more than just want to!!
 
I too think we should at least be in the ACCCG and get a playoff bid.

But I am perplexed by the "no excuses for Mario" comment. Do you think Coker, Radio, Fat AG, Manny or even Richt would have landed two back-to-back Top 10 classes plus the portal guys he's brought in to put us in a position to get to the playoffs this season? .

The "no excuses" comment makes Mario the reason for failure when the reason we are even having this discussion is he achieved what no one else has been able to achieve from a roster perspective in 2 decades. What should be slurpery is thus transformed into mopery.

???
 
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I too think we should at least be in the ACCCG and get a playoff bid.

But I am perplexed by the "no excuses for Mario" comment. Do you think Coker, Radio, Fat AG, Manny or even Richt would have landed two back-to-back Top 10 classes plus the portal guys he's brought in to put us in a position to get to the playoffs this season? .

The "no excuses" comment makes Mario the reason for failure when the reason we are even having this discussion is he achieved what no one else has been able to achieve from a roster perspective in 2 decades. What should be slurpery is thus transformed into mopery.
He’s been very strong overall on the recruiting side.

But on the coaching side - thus far…
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💁🏻‍♂️
 
A dude that size, with decent to good speed can break the first arm tackle he comes across. I am sick and tired of little backs that fall down when a blade of grass pokes up funny. I don't care if a guy can run a 4.25 40, if he's 180 pounds soaking wet. Give me the guy that is 230, runs a 4.45, and is strong enough to break tackles. That is where you get the 40+ yard runs. Good vision, good feet, and excellent strength beats pure speed any day of the week.
4.45 is blazing, even for a smaller RB. I doubt Martinez is anywhere near a legit 4.45.
 
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That’s usually what people think but there’s no evidence linking going three and out to going fast on offense. It’s actually the opposite as most teams that speed up become more efficient and convert more first downs. Thus having more possession time.


Taking your sweet time and going three and out doesn’t really buy you more time than going three and out without huddling. Especially if you throw incomplete passes.
Whoa. Whoa. Whoa.

Going at high temp offense and 3-n-out consistently is absolutely a receipe for disaster and a season of stacking Ls in the column.
 
Whoa. Whoa. Whoa.

Going at high temp offense and 3-n-out consistently is absolutely a receipe for disaster and a season of stacking Ls in the column.
Going 3 and out consistently is a recipe for disaster no matter how fast or slow you go.

What if I told you, that by using a faster tempo, you actually decreased your chances of going three and out?

There is no offensive advantage to going slow unless you already have a comfortable lead and just want to milk the clock.
 
Start at this post, and scroll down through @skyman's links and my comment about Chaney and Parrish:



Big deal, IMO.

Keeping your own receipts now? Niiiceeeee.



While Miami is continuing to look for defensive help in the Portal, their offensive roster is pretty much set headed into the summer. How good can this group be?

I dove into some key stats courtesy of TeamRankings, which excludes stats compiled against FCS schools and thus provides the most accurate picture of team performance. The main takeaway: we're adding impact players who perform best in the areas we struggled with last year.

Let's start with the two most important mainstream stats: scoring and efficiency.

Points per game- 30.1 (38th nationally).

Under Gattis, this number was 19.4 (114th).

Yards per play- 6.1 (25th).

Under Gattis, this number was 4.8 (104th).

So there was a pretty profound improvement from year-to-year, but the offense was still not an elite group.

What were Miami's biggest weaknesses? The quarterbacks threw too many INTs, and they didn't pass well enough in a scheme that was surprisingly pass-dominant (88th in rushing play percentage). Here are two key stats from last year that tell the story:

Interception percentage: 3.48% (106th)
Passing yards per game: 250.4 ypg (47th)

With respect to passing yards per game, the top four teams all had QBs selected in the Top 12 picks of the NFL Draft. Miami is hoping Cam Ward follows in their footsteps. At Washington State, Cam Ward was able to avoid interceptions while leading a prolific passing game:

Interception percentage: 1.69% (19th)
Passing yards per game: 322.6 ypg (6th)

And it wasn't just dinking and dunking- Wazzu had the same yards per attempt as Miami on much higher volume. If Ward matches his '23 production (3,735 yards), he would break Bernie Kosar's single-season passing record (3,642 yards) which has stood for an amazing 40 years.

Even though Ward makes very good decisions with the ball, he has his own turnover issue: fumbles. Below are three areas where Wazzu struggled on offense:

Yards per rush: 2.6 (131st)
QB sacked per game: 3.5 (123rd)
Fumbles per game: 1.8 ypc (121st)

This is where Miami's superior OL reveals itself. Here's how Miami ranked in the same categories:

Yards per rush: 5.0 (20th)
QB sacked per game: 1.3 (17th)
Fumbles per game: 1.0 (38th)

The stats above are why Cam Ward came to Miami- he wanted a strong OL and running game. Ward himself shoulders some of the blame for the fumbles. He was careless at times and lacks strong hands. But the improved protection and run threat should limit the hits on the QB.

The rushing attack will be even better with the addition of Damien Martinez. Miami was Top 3 nationally in yards before contact due to the dominance of the OL. But the running backs failed to generate explosive plays. Shocking but true fact: Henry Parrish and Don Chaney had zero runs over 40 yards in their entire UM careers.

By contrast, Martinez had eight runs over 40 yards in his first two seasons as a teenager in the Pac-12. Last year alone, he had 39 runs over 10 yards (Top 5 among P5 backs). Martinez not only projects as the best runner that Ward has ever played with, he also projects as the best back of Cristobal's career.

Houston WR Sam Brown was the last piece to join the skill group. As it stands, Miami has the top two returning WRs in the ACC in terms of '23 yardage:
  1. Xavier Restrepo, Miami: 1,092 yards
  2. Jacolby George, Miami: 864 yards
  3. Kevin Concepcion, NC State: 839 yards
  4. Jordan Moore, Duke: 834 yards
  5. Malachi Fields, UVA: 811 yards
Sam Brown, with struggles at quarterback, finished with 815 yards. It's not outlandish to say that Miami has three of the Top 5 WRs in the conference on paper.

Of course, championships aren't won on paper. Top 10 offenses in this era are averaging 36+ ppg and 6.7+ yards per play. Can Miami meet those numbers? I don't think the expectations are too high.

This guy eats red meat, I don't care what he says.

There is no question, Cam is a major upgrade at QB. This was evident at the SG, but even more so upon re-watch on the ACCN (while that's still a thing).

He's better at using his feet, his brain, his arm, his legs, all of that, to be sure. But his best attribute will be the timing at which he elects to use those tools, ideally when we invariably, predictably and inexplicably do something completely stupid involving clock but he hits a check down for 40 yards and we get a FG anyway.
 
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