Gotcha, didn't realize you were defining pace beyond the metric he was using.
Since the TD drive against Cuse (~10.5 quarters) we have had:
20+ yard plays: 17
30+: 7
40+: 4
50+: 2
We have had 12 TD drives avg time 3m56s, avg distance 71.2yards, avg time between snaps (over last 3 games): 31.3 seconds.
My point is that it looks like we have been more explosive on offense recently, while we haven't been spending a ton of time to get TDs, but our pace between plays has been glacial.
I guess I'm struggling to understand why the pace thing has become such an issue when our offense has been playing as well as they have the entire year. We have gotten more explosive, our drives aren't taking 10min, but we have a picnic between snaps.
Pace is incredibly important. And, yes, there is "in-between pace" and "overall pace".
But let's look at the VaTech game as an example.
In the first half, we had THREE "normal" drives, ones in which we were not forced to go tempo/2-minute drive. The 4th drive of the first half began with less than 2 minutes in the half. We went 58 yards in 53 seconds and got a field goal.
In the second half, we had THREE "normal" drives, ones in which we did not have to speed things up. The 4th drive of the second half began with about 2 minutes left in the game, and would have been a "clock killer" if we were not leading by "only 10 points" and needed some style points.
Bottom line, 6 normal drives is not a lot. Even if you score the maximum number of points per drive, that gives you 42 points. In those 6 drives, we only scored 24 points, and then added on 10 points with our 2-minute offense. I'm fine with relying on 3 points at the end of the first half, but we have to be honest, we never would have tried to score that last TD if we were up by 24 points with 2 minutes left to play.
Now, some of this was the fault of the Miami defense. We didn't get a single "3-and-out" for the whole game. We forced one punt off of 4 plays, and then a fumble on another 4-play drive. VaTech punted twice, Miami punted twice. We also stopped them on 4th down once and forced the prviously mentioned fumble.
Miami had 2 really long TD drives out of 4. One was 14 plays, one was 11 plays, and these were the two longest drives of the game. For a game in which we "needed style points" and "needed a dominant victory", we should have been aware of our offensive pace ALONG WITH our struggles to get off the field on defense.
The key is, you need to work on all areas. Yes, we might have had a few more explosive plays against VaTech, or maybe we had no 10 minute drives, but we still had a lot of time BETWEEN PLAYS. And if you are just staring at the sideline and not changing the plays to something more productive, it's just a waste of time.
The proof should be in the pudding. On the TWO drives where we ran a fast tempo, we scored 10 points. On the SIX drives where we did not run a fast tempo, we scored 24 points. It might seem like "5 points per drive" vs. "4 points per drive" is not such a big deal, but it kept VaTech in the game and it left us up by "only 10" with 2 minutes to go.
But, hey, if that's the way Mario wants to live life on the edge, who am I to stop him?
I'm just tired of the slow pace, particularly when we have great athletes and a talent advantage over nearly every team.