Richt doesn't want pressure

imo, he doesn't have the QB that he wants to pull it off. Perhaps he does with Jarren but that remains to be seen.

He tried to force Kaaya into what he wanted but it didn't pan out. So in that instance he changed up to fit what his QB was good at. I feel that is why Kaaya left. Richt didn't want to have to change what he wanted to do as OC, but he didn't want to fall on his face his 1st season either.

We got lucky last season with Malik. Richt ran his system and we were able to win in spite of the QB. If it went bad early on. He could've played the QB card. Finally it did go bad but he had a 15 game win streak to play with.

This season is just want last season could've very easily looked like. The difference in the two season. Is we haven't had the same luck on offense we did a year ago.

Wow impressive no doubt if we took away some of those lucky plays OMG , there would have been an earlier melt down last year excellent point. The truth of who we are actually showed the last (3) games and we tried to fix it over the summer but your point shared above still left a void to this day.

GOCANES
 
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A 2010 article by a UGA writer someone linked on here earlier https://bleacherreport.com/articles/469429. Highlights:

-Inconsistent and underachieving offenses have persisted during Richt's tenure.
-At no point, not even during the 2002-2007 heyday when UGA was in the top 10 every season and won two SEC titles and two BCS bowl games, was it due to having some explosive offense.
-The idea that Richt was ever this great play-caller/strategist at his days at FSU is fiction, people. First Richt wasn't running the FSU offense during their best years, Bobby Bowden and other coordinators like former South Carolina head coach Brad Scott were.
-When Richt got the FSU offensive coordinator job, he didn't do anything especially groundbreaking or innovative at FSU. By then, FSU was already a powerhouse well into their record-breaking string of consecutive top 5 finishes. FSU's offensive success during a great deal of that era was mostly due to the fact that back then (the 80s and early 90s) they were the only big time southern program relying on the passing game.
-So, rather than Richt's being this great coach, it was often just the result of playing a different style than everybody was used to seeing and defending, and also having four and five star players at every position on offense competing against two and three star ACC recruits on defense.
-It's easy to look like a genius when people aren't scheming to stop you, and even easier when you have better players than everybody else. But by the time Richt got to UGA, everybody in the SEC had caught onto defending the passing game, because by then Steve Spurrier, Peyton Manning, Tim Couch, Hal Mumme etc. had been through the conference.
-Bottom line: Richt is basically relying on what he learned at Miami (where he was a player and coach) and FSU (where he was a coach) in the 1980s and 1990s at UGA
-The problem is what worked for Miami and FSU in the 1980s and 1990s is not going to work in the current SEC whether Richt or Bobo is calling the plays.
-Add that to the fact that it was Richt's decision to waste both last season and this season by starting Joe Cox instead of playing Aaron Murray.
Had Richt played the much more physically gifted Murray over the over-hyped recruit...UGA has about the same season last year as they wound up having anyway. The difference is that with a year of experience under his belt, Murray would have been a much better QB this season
-Not saying that Richt is a bad coach who needs to be fired. You can't accomplish what Richt did in the SEC from 2001-2007 by being a bad coach. Richt is a proven winner, and firing him always carries the risk of getting someone who isn't. Plenty of schools have fired a good coach looking for someone better and wound up with someone—indeed a string of people—much worse.
-Instead, Richt needs to hire a coordinator who can win without A) the gigantic talent advantage that Miami had over the Big East and FSU had over the ACC and B) in an SEC where polished QBs, WRs and pass-blocking offensive linemen are rare.
-Bottom line UGA fans: Richt is the real problem. It is time to apply pressure to make Richt solve it.

It's Groundhog Day, except we caught on quicker. Why wouldn't he want to do it differently the second time around after getting fired for underperforming the first time? Old habits die hard, I guess, especially when they're making you millions without winning titles.

Reading that is disturbing. Essentially nothing has changed. Richt is showing zero understanding of why he was fired at Georgia.
 
This is getting ridiculous. There's no question the guy needs to do a better job, and focus on being the head coach not the offense of coordinator. No one is debating any of that. But, just because he isn't doing it the way we want, doesn't mean he doesn't want to win. He wrote that check, because it was the right thing to do for what he's trying to establish at Miami. You don't have to like the way he's doing it, but this **** is getting really really stupid.

Don’t know about everyone else but I just want it DONE and don’t care how. Thing is he is not getting it done.
 
Don’t know about everyone else but I just want it DONE and don’t care how. Thing is he is not getting it done.

No one is debating that he's not getting it done. You can't look at a loss against Virginia and their trash HS quarterback and think anything other than a complete failure occurred in Charlottesville. But, to the original point, he didn't make a donation to the IPF in some attempt to take pressure off of himself; he did it because he, being a rich guy, was about to go into the community and ask them for millions of dollars, too.
 
Carry on big man, do not like the coach so do every thing possible to hurt the program. Guess I pull to hard for players, school, other coaches to let my dislike fo a couple of the coaches cause me to not want to beat everybody we play every week.

You love the coach so you do everything you can to hurt the program by keeping the bum. It is the same thing, but you do not realize it.
 
Carry on big man, do not like the coach so do every thing possible to hurt the program. Guess I pull to hard for players, school, other coaches to let my dislike fo a couple of the coaches cause me to not want to beat everybody we play every week.

BS.

If you pulled hard for the school, players, and other coaches, you'd want this Coma-Coach gone!

NOT fair to our offensive players - terribly unfair to our Defense - who's expected every week to win the game for us - and the other coaches - especially the Defensive Coaches are busting their asses - to compensate for Snow White's Dopey/Sleepy Head Coach.
 
No one is debating that he's not getting it done. You can't look at a loss against Virginia and their trash HS quarterback and think anything other than a complete failure occurred in Charlottesville. But, to the original point, he didn't make a donation to the IPF in some attempt to take pressure off of himself; he did it because he, being a rich guy, was about to go into the community and ask them for millions of dollars, too.

I don't worry much about his donation. It is common for our alum to donate. Mark has made big money for a lot more years than players so he has nice bankbook. I agree it was not to secure his job, he doesn't think he needs to because he thinks his stuff is great.
 
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*you're

So a QB sneak is designed to score?

I remember Emmit Smith Dallas Cowboys took a off tackle play on there one yard line every single player blocked perfectly and went 99 yards untouched all Dallas wanted to do was get a couple yards to throw with more room.

Emmit went 99 yards why , everyone blocked it perfectly as designed , if for a second your right why didn't he just fall down after what he just needed , would the QB just fall down or stop after a yard or so ?
They don't WHY because each play if run perfectly is designed to score , unless you've played this game you wouldn't understand or maybe just wasn't a student of it.

I've seen on side kicks go for touchdowns because it was blocked perfectly and the player just scooped it up picked up a couple key block and BOOOM TD.

A play is never designed to STOP there designed to score , that's why so much time is spent on film study day and night to get the perfect blocking scheme you's seen Grudens QB school on ESPN very intense study to score and to break down faults that cause a play to fail.

Hope this helps Jaromir football is a team sport and exposes human imperfection and exalts team unity in working together in unison the only way for a play to fail is human error in not executing it as a team.

GOCANES
 
I remember Emmit Smith Dallas Cowboys took a off tackle play on there one yard line every single player blocked perfectly and went 99 yards untouched all Dallas wanted to do was get a couple yards to throw with more room.

Emmit went 99 yards why , everyone blocked it perfectly as designed , if for a second your right why didn't he just fall down after what he just needed , would the QB just fall down or stop after a yard or so ?
They don't WHY because each play if run perfectly is designed to score , unless you've played this game you wouldn't understand or maybe just wasn't a student of it.

I've seen on side kicks go for touchdowns because it was blocked perfectly and the player just scooped it up picked up a couple key block and BOOOM TD.

A play is never designed to STOP there designed to score , that's why so much time is spent on film study day and night to get the perfect blocking scheme you's seen Grudens QB school on ESPN very intense study to score and to break down faults that cause a play to fail.

Hope this helps Jaromir football is a team sport and exposes human imperfection and exalts team unity in working together in unison the only way for a play to fail is human error in not executing it as a team.

GOCANES

You’re confusing what a play is DESIGNED to do with what a play COULD POSSIBLY do. Some plays are designed to pick up a yard. Some plays are designed for 3rd and 10.

When you call a QB sneak on 3rd and inches, you’re not trying to clear a path for N’Kosi Perry to run 80 yards and take it to the house. You’re trying to push the pile just enough that he can fall forward and get a first down. An out pattern that literally and purposely takes the receiver to the sideline and out of bounds isn’t designed to score. It’s designed to gain five yards against soft coverage.

Think about it this way. If every play was designed to score, then play calls would never matter. Just do your job on this fullback dive on 3rd and 21 and we will be fine.
 
You’re confusing what a play is DESIGNED to do with what a play COULD POSSIBLY do. Some plays are designed to pick up a yard. Some plays are designed for 3rd and 10.

When you call a QB sneak on 3rd and inches, you’re not trying to clear a path for N’Kosi Perry to run 80 yards and take it to the house. You’re trying to push the pile just enough that he can fall forward and get a first down. An out pattern that literally and purposely takes the receiver to the sideline and out of bounds isn’t designed to score. It’s designed to gain five yards against soft coverage.

Think about it this way. If every play was designed to score, then play calls would never matter. Just do your job on this fullback dive on 3rd and 21 and we will be fine.

I have to give you a compliment , you engaged in contrasting conversation without name calling or foul language your a class act, I thank you.

GOCANES
 
Dog, if you don't feel a sense of dread reading this, you're not a true Hurricane fan. This nugget here in particular makes me weep for our squad:

"Attention to detail: It showed up most in special teams and in big games, as Georgia would make critical errors that led to things going bad quickly. This year the Alabama and Florida games were both tied early as the first quarter neared an end but, with the help of special teams touchdowns, they were routs by halftime. "
 
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