OP is correct to a certain extent, IMO. In fact, I’ve almost started a similar thread several times over the last few weeks. It started when I came across this article a few weeks ago:
Mark Richt goes in-depth on calling plays, coaching Brad Kaaya | Canes Watch
(If someone would embed it’d be much appreciated. The relevant part of the article is Richt saying, in summation, “the plays haven’t changed over the last 30 years, it’s all about the execution.”)
Where my opinion differs from the OP is that I think the plays we have aren’t good (as opposed to lack of identity; similar, but different). I still think MR isn’t a great playcaller (a poster today mentioned how he called a run/draw to Dallas after he just sprinted 60 yards), but more importantly I think our plays are basic and dated. Route patterns (4 verts way too often), bubbles at wrong time (continuous against Cuse, who was ready for it; not enough against GT until last drive), wayyyy to much RPO for a 2nd rate QB (need a deadly accurate guy to run strictly RPO, IMO).
I’ve been calling for motion forever and a day. No misdirection (I’m not talking about reverses and those crap plays; why doesn’t our TE or slot guy ever leak open after a fake in the other direction?). Not enough feeding the guy with the hot hand (usually Berrios). Watching even lowly UNC, they would motion the WR into the backfield and fake/run a jet sweep; my eyes were always following that motion guy, so I have to imagine our guys were doing the same thing. Such easy stuff to implement that creates a competitive advantage.
Many posters point out, correctly, that Rosier has limitations. But that has nothing I do with how vanilla our offense is. To the contrary, scheming before the snap to confuse the defense would help mask those deficiencies. And I think Malik is a smart kid that would easily pick up, and thrive in, that type of offense. His limitations are after the snap, not pre-snap.
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So because Mark Richt told a young athlete in peak condition to stay on the field and reward himself with a td run after he gained the yards to get down there, he cant call plays? lulz. ok buddy.
Basic and dated? The RPO/zone read mix is the most up to date offensive concept in football. Its what majority high octane offenses today use and its quite simple for most remotely athletic qb that struggle to pick up advanced concepts. So you're basically calling most of the good offenses in CFB vanilla and dated. OK
Its something you've never seen Richt run in his career but its dated.
Stop with the four verts stuff man. You haven't charted a game and cant validate that at all. We literally have a poster dissecting the games and routes that has yet to mention this. But some of you idiots keep saying this shid and its not true.
If you hate it so much tell us how many times we run it a game and show its how its a detriment to the offense.
Its not easy to implement and use motion. Its a bunch of window dressing that doesn't fool well coached teams often. Hence, why UNC isn't winning any big games or championships.
I think the RPO with or without all of the window dressing is still a potent offense. I just don't get what you guys want us to implement in accordance to the talent we have.
Our Offensive line gets blown up way too much to implement any **** offense. The good thing is theyre in great shape and play better as defenses get tired.
We are winning. Even with a limited oline and qb that are both streaky and inconsistent. The offense we have works with proper execution and its far from vanilla.
His limitations are presnap and post snap. are you serious. The kid cant read a defense at all.
He is confused as fuq for most or all of every 1st half. This is the same kid that admitted to not watching film or studying.
He has major presnap limitations.
I swear you guys don't watch these games.
If you do then you clearly don't know football.
At least give us a plan to discuss what offenses youd run and why based upon personnel.
Yall just complaining.