Lashlee on Joe Rose @7:40am

" When kids are reacting, their abilities are taking over. When they are thinking, they are hesitant and slow. Our system is designed to be simple for the guys on our team, but it will be complex to the defense. We want to give the defense a lot of problems. We want to dictate to them and put pressure on the defense.”

Most important comment, KISS principle is always best.
 
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" When kids are reacting, their abilities are taking over. When they are thinking, they are hesitant and slow. Our system is designed to be simple for the guys on our team, but it will be complex to the defense. We want to give the defense a lot of problems. We want to dictate to them and put pressure on the defense.”

Most important comment, KISS principle is always best.

Every OC says the same thing.
 
Coaches are all talk until they produce on the field. . Listen any one of us could call into Rose and say the exact same things. I just heard the New Giants coach's presser, that Judge guy. Sounded amazing. Said all the right things. Hired coaches do this all the frickin time
 
I remember last year when we hired enos and he interviewed and said that he was gonna adapt the offense to the personnel, how he wants to be multiple, and be able to go up tempo and slow it down. That was a good one Dan.

Let me give you a clue, anytime a coach uses the word "multiple" that's a clear sign that **** dont know WTF he's doing or even wanna do!
 
“We’re in the shotgun probably 90 percent of the time, but the longer you hold the ball the more sacks you have, more bad things happen. In our passing game - let’s get it out of his hand, get it to playmakers. That doesn’t mean you won’t throw down the field (either).”
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The basic message of coordinator/QB coach Rhett Lashlee?

That his offense believes in “spreading the field, making plays in space and playing fast.”

He adds “We want to play fast, we want to play physical. You have to be able to run and throw the ball to win in college football. I’m from Arkansas, but I grew up when Nolan Richardson was winning national championships at Arkansas (with “40 minutes of ****”). We can have something a little unique to us that gives us an advantage - at the end of the day the more plays you have the more chances your players have to have that ball and score.

“We’re in the shotgun probably 90 percent of the time, but the longer you hold the ball the more sacks you have, more bad things happen. In our passing game - let’s get it out of his hand, get it to playmakers. That doesn’t mean you won’t throw down the field (either).”
todd day,lee mayberry, corliss williamson! i used to love watching them play,great team!
 
I read the thread title and clicked into page 5. I have not read a single post in this thread as I type this.

So lemme guess, dude went on air and said... "We're going to have an offense that is fast paced, up tempo, gets the ball to our athletes in space and is designed to put pressure on opposing defenses, all while being simple enough for our part time football program participants to learn the nuances of the schemes?

Ami-right???
 
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I read the thread title and clicked into page 5. I have not read a single post in this thread as I type this.

So lemme guess, dude went on air and said... "We're going to have an offense that is fast paced, up tempo, gets the ball to our athletes in space and is designed to put pressure on opposing defenses, all while being simple enough for our part time football program participants to learn the nuances of the schemes?

Ami-right???
The thing is he has units that he has coordinated recently where you have tangible successful results. That is not something we can say for prior recent OC
 
I’d be a lot more interested in specifics like what did working under Dykes add to his offensive repertoire from his days with Malzahn, who was more of a run-first spread coach. The “we’re gonna be fast and physical” stuff is meaningless fluff.
 
I’d be a lot more interested in specifics like what did working under Dykes add to his offensive repertoire from his days with Malzahn, who was more of a run-first spread coach. The “we’re gonna be fast and physical” stuff is meaningless fluff.
Same comment I made earlier.. Interview was setup when he mentioned that he been with Malzahn since his high school playing days. What in last 2 years with Dykes did he learn to evolve his system would have been a great question but dealing with south florida media they were more caught up in buzz words like air raid..
 
" When kids are reacting, their abilities are taking over. When they are thinking, they are hesitant and slow. Our system is designed to be simple for the guys on our team, but it will be complex to the defense. We want to give the defense a lot of problems. We want to dictate to them and put pressure on the defense.”

Most important comment, KISS principle is always best.


What I want to hear is how adaptable he is to the talent of the players on hand. Too many "system" guys can't adapt; square peg, round hole.
 
The thing is he has units that he has coordinated recently where you have tangible successful results. That is not something we can say for prior recent OC


Agreed.


Of the list of coaches who might possibly want to work for Manny Diaz, this guy might be among the more qualified.
 
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In general, I am going to guess he will be underwhelmed with the talent we have on offense, excluding the freshman coming in. I took my orange and green glasses off during the season, and despite Enos poor play calling, we saw below average OL, below average QB, average WR, good TE talent, and average RB talent once Deejay went down. That's just the facts guys, we are not as talented as we think we are. But this is why I like this OC. He maximizes the talent he has. He will take a deficiency in an OL and make the best of it, unlike Enos who refused to get over the fact his OL sucked.

Back to the talent issue, there are glimpses of good young talent on the Offense.
Hodges
Campbell
Payton
Wiggins
Jordan

But who else can you honestly say is not going to be passed up by new talent coming in down the road? We need an influx of talent for any coach to be successful over a long term. Right now we are playing with Duke type talent. No one should expect 11 win seasons with what we have in place right now.
 
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