Canes Brotherhood
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Just what I was wondering. Who's in the portal?
Right now my picks would be the TExas Tech and WF qbs.
But also I believe King from Houston is also going to the Portal
Just what I was wondering. Who's in the portal?
Bump lmao how wonderfulFinally. My man. I will bump this every hour for a week lol
-- Unless Miami replaces entire OL unit w/ "KJ quality" grad transfers, uptempo is best way to mitigate glaring weaknesses...
- In the first half alone I charted 61 plays
- Miami ran 64 plays a game in 2019 (Now you know why I did this video in parts)
...
-- He has no other choice, defenders too often reached QBs as fast as they could run...
- Initial impression is that Lashlee will not put the stress on the offensive line that Enos did
- There is a consorted effort to get rid of the ball quickly
...
-- Without dramatic change, Miami's OL could have a 15 sack game next year...
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- SMU allowed only 17 sacks on the year (34 less than Miami's 51)...
-- Appears Williams and Perry can't process that fast...
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- One of my biggest criticisms of last year's offense was the refusal to audible when necessary
- Rhett Lashlee and SMU will check with me at the line of scrimmage
-- Miami's OL simply can't do either on consistent basis...
- Run game this first half was not overly complicated and utilized both zone and man blocking
- I strongly disagree if you think SMU's offensive line is better than Miami's
- SMU's offensive line was not dominant and hardly created any push
- They don't seem to be a very powerful or overly athletic offensive line
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-- Miami's QB will do so out of necessity and sheer terror...
- Once again the quarterback is getting rid of the ball very quickly not requiring to block long
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-- I think he would challenge for #1 slot...
- SMU quarterback would be the #4 quarterback here. (I mean #3 if Tate was on vacation again)
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- Because of separation, not system...
- SMU WR's had their way with Temple DB's
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-- That is in every OC's job description...
- Lashlee manufactured some big plays by design...
-- Exactly what a team built like the Pony's should do...
- SMU went under center very sparingly and were a predominate shotgun based team
...
I love the tempo aspect of it, Miami is painfully slow and methodical offensively-- and just plain boring and ineffective.
Could you imagine UM running 80 plays in the South Florida humidity, what they could do to teams in the 4th quarter
First thing I noticed - he didn't come off his first read very often. Looks like the offence stresses the defence so much that it's obvious where the ball is to go if you're the QB.First thing I noticed, wow was that SMU qb good at making quick reads and getting the ball out fast. Williams and Perry were not at that level.
Right now my picks would be the TExas Tech and WF qbs.
But also I believe King from Houston is also going to the Portal
So we finally did it. We finally got the offense I have been begging this university to run for over a decade. I honestly will start by saying that I think we nailed this hire. This was my number one pick this cycle and I have been answering with Rhett Lashlee anytime someone would ask me who would be my pick to replace Enos. (I did say Lincoln Riley's pen too) This will be 11 narrated clips from the FIRST HALF of the SMU Temple game. I decided to start the series with a common opponent for next year in Temple.
Here are some random first look take away points from the first half
- This is a multiple based uptempo spread offense
- In the first half alone I charted 61 plays
- Miami ran 64 plays a game in 2019 (Now you know why I did this video in parts)
- Initial impression is that Lashlee will not put the stress on the offensive line that Enos did
- There is a consorted effort to get rid of the ball quickly
- SMU allowed only 17 sacks on the year (34 less than Miami's 51)
- One of my biggest criticisms of last year's offense was the refusal to audible when necessary
- Rhett Lashlee and SMU will check with me at the line of scrimmage
- Run game this first half was not overly complicated and utilized both zone and man blocking
- Zone read will be featured much more in this style of offense
- I strongly disagree if you think SMU's offensive line is better than Miami's
- SMU's offensive line was not dominant and hardly created any push
- They don't seem to be a very powerful or overly athletic offensive line
- Once again the quarterback is getting rid of the ball very quickly not requiring to block long
- Air raid components are apparent with option routes based off look
- RPO friendly formations that are easily read identifiable for quarterbacks
- SMU quarterback would be the #4 quarterback here. (I mean #3 if Tate was on vacation again)
- This system will not be overly complicated to assimilate as far as a QB is concerned (Pre snap reads are much simpler to find)
- SMU WR's had their way with Temple DB's
- Lashlee manufactured some big plays by design
- Favorite play was watching 12 set personnel act as blocking decoys when in fact it was a stop and go (I will attach clip)
- That play showed the ability to use personnel to gain an advantage
- SMU went under center very sparingly and were a predominate shotgun based team
- 11 set heavy but also showed 10 and 12 set personnel
Thank you for supporting the YouTube page and it was an absolute pleasure to become a student of this offense. There will be many more games I look to tackle this off season but no place like the present. Also look forward to Lance Roffer's breakdown as he will definitely be utilizing his technical aptitude and bring his unique talents to the table. You know we assemble around these things like a kick *** x/o forming Voltron. I'LL FORM THE HEAD.
@Roman Marciante
Great breakdown!
How did they rank on 3rd down conversions?
Also, was there designed QB runs mixed in?
Oh no here we go again! I can only hope we don’t flaccid again!
@Roman Marciante Agree with what others have mentioned.
Do you think we have the QB to run this type of offense? It sounds like accuracy is the biggest component which doesn't seem to be a strength of anyone currently on the roster (not sure about Matocha). Or will we be reliant on a transfer?
I am a big fan of the podcast and appreciate your knowledge of football which is clearly superior to mine. But I remember quite a bit of excitement from you over the Enos hire. That combined with the soft country club atmosphere Manny has created along with the drugs and alcohol and fortnige instead of playbook leads me to believe they could have bill walsh designing the offense and it wouldn’t matter.
Fair. I was excited about enos. I was. However the from the perch enos piece I wrote... could the offense work here? Yes. Is it what I would have chose? No. I wrote about concerns with his tempo.(he was 4-8 at Arkansas and in the 100's nationally play wise)
So I will say I was really excited about the preview but we never got that spread cost tempo offense that we were sold on with bama.
And that was my mistake. I included bama game film.. that influenced me a bit and I was hoping it would be more that variety. It was more Arkansas with rpos mixed in
Amazing, thank you very much. Love your breakdowns.Im going to really focus on what the QB is required to do in the next installment of FTP. This isn't a high level sophisticated read offense. Which is honestly one of the subtle brilliance of this style of offense.
Less exotic blitzes on a continual bases
Rpo pre snap reads are easy
Option routes aren't that complex post snap if you think of it open vs closed
And space and design is really allowing the 1v1 matchup to materialize easily
This system is a much more simpler than enos. That doesn't mean vanilla. Honestly accuracy is a premium in any offense. Arm strength needs to be prioritized a little bit more. And if you are insanely athletic qb.. this system puts you in numbers advantage in the run game in a hurry n