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- Oct 21, 2011
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Last year, we were 96th out of 128 teams in offensive plays per game. Unfortunately, Georgia was 126th of 128.
With early camp talk being almost weirdly around the new FB, thought I could express two concerns:
1. My hope is the FB only sees close to 10-15% of offensive downs. For a lot of reasons. Yes, I understand the added benefit of a physical tone. I've been harping for years about our inability to commit to any kind of power run game. It hurt the OL - from tone and mentality to outcomes. However, you don't need to run straight I-form in order to flash the power run game. Many teams now do it from the 'Gun. Further, with a utility player of Chris Herndon's caliber, I think we're giving up flexibility and potential mismatches.
You can run Herndon out of broken I sets, in motion and in the H-Back role. When I think of him, I think of Fred Baxter of the Jets, who played TE and some H-Back. In the Curtis Martin (whose style isn't totally different from Knowshown Moreno, a player Walton reminds me of) days and before, Baxter's versatility was used in a number of different "Pro sets" where he'd crack down on counter plays, run combination routes out of the backfield and get in the flats. While Williams (the new FB) may help us in short yardage and downhill plays, Herndon can beat LBs in the flats and perhaps even get vertical down the seams.
2. Pace of play. We've read early on about the players "sprinting everywhere." How they want the guys to "finish" and be focused. My hope is Georgia's pace last year was dictated partly by injuries and mainly by a playcaller who was not Richt. One of the biggest complaints of the James Coley tenure was that, after his initial scripted set of plays (often very good), it seemed he just ran out of bullets and scenarios. And, plays would come in so slowly that it left fans (and players on the field) frantic. Coach Richt has to be as focused as he wants his players and hopefully think quickly so we can get into the 30-40 ranking range in plays/game - which would essentially give us 75-77 plays per game and a small boost of 10% or so.
With early camp talk being almost weirdly around the new FB, thought I could express two concerns:
1. My hope is the FB only sees close to 10-15% of offensive downs. For a lot of reasons. Yes, I understand the added benefit of a physical tone. I've been harping for years about our inability to commit to any kind of power run game. It hurt the OL - from tone and mentality to outcomes. However, you don't need to run straight I-form in order to flash the power run game. Many teams now do it from the 'Gun. Further, with a utility player of Chris Herndon's caliber, I think we're giving up flexibility and potential mismatches.
You can run Herndon out of broken I sets, in motion and in the H-Back role. When I think of him, I think of Fred Baxter of the Jets, who played TE and some H-Back. In the Curtis Martin (whose style isn't totally different from Knowshown Moreno, a player Walton reminds me of) days and before, Baxter's versatility was used in a number of different "Pro sets" where he'd crack down on counter plays, run combination routes out of the backfield and get in the flats. While Williams (the new FB) may help us in short yardage and downhill plays, Herndon can beat LBs in the flats and perhaps even get vertical down the seams.
2. Pace of play. We've read early on about the players "sprinting everywhere." How they want the guys to "finish" and be focused. My hope is Georgia's pace last year was dictated partly by injuries and mainly by a playcaller who was not Richt. One of the biggest complaints of the James Coley tenure was that, after his initial scripted set of plays (often very good), it seemed he just ran out of bullets and scenarios. And, plays would come in so slowly that it left fans (and players on the field) frantic. Coach Richt has to be as focused as he wants his players and hopefully think quickly so we can get into the 30-40 ranking range in plays/game - which would essentially give us 75-77 plays per game and a small boost of 10% or so.
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