I understand all this, but you’re literally wrong. These guys might not be great blockers, but they’re absolutely asked to do it, and they do it well enough to not get their QBs killed. That’s what we’re talking about here. Not a great pass pro grade, no coach says “If my kid doesn’t have the #1 pass pro grade from PFF, he can’t play”. But you have to understand concepts. You have to at least get in the way.
Here’s a good example from a guy who can’t block and is never asked to, if you listen to this board. I don’t even really care about the effectiveness of the block, although this is a good rep. It’s more about recognition and getting in the way. If he keeps his eyes left and doesn’t recognize the defense, Micah ******* Parsons ends Carr’s life. That’s all coaches are saying. You have to be able to *understand* pass pro. There are a lot of players who don’t even see Parsons here, and your QB is now in the hospital. That cannot happen here.
Also, I agreed with your first part this whole thread. It’s a little coach-speaky to say a kid literally cannot get a snap if he’s not good in pass pro. That’s obviously not true. That’s trying to publicly say what you teach, that hey kid, you gotta get this **** down. There are other ways to get kids who are dynamic the football if they’re not great at this area, and you highlight some of them here. But saying **** like coaches don’t care about this **** and RBs only block if the OL sucks is so braindead I can’t even explain it to you. If you cannot do this (and YES, there are kids who are young and inexperienced in college football who cannot), you’re not playing. Period.