Easy compared to architecting the offense, etc. He's been given a script man. It's all there to see.Playcalling is easy? Nice take.
Easy compared to architecting the offense, etc. He's been given a script man. It's all there to see.
That's simplistic. Our offense is not the exact same as any offense. To infer that what's broken with Chev's offense could be cured by calling the plays better (i.e. the simple selection of plays differently from the game card" is silly. That is in fact my point. There's a lot more to it than "calling the play".If playcalling were easy, Colorado would be on top of the Pac-12 south. We run the same offense as the best team in the conference but to substantially different results.
That's simplistic. Our offense is not the exact same as any offense. To infer that what's broken with Chev's offense could be cured by calling the plays better (i.e. the simple selection of plays differently from the game card" is silly. That is in fact my point. There's a lot more to it than "calling the play".
It is not. It is an easy response to your awful take. We attempt to run the same offense as Washington State. The architecture is just fine. Playcalling is not easy, especially since it deals with the variable of player execution. If playcalling was the “easy part” as you describe, then Colorado would have substantially better results. We don’t because, as we’ve found out, playcalling is the chess match of the game. We’ve lost those battles because we don’t have good enough players to execute the plans.
When the game was in the 4th quarter Reid was telling EB what play to call, and EB was relaying it to the QB. I don't have a feeling one way or another toward the guy, but he isn't a P5 head coach. But he is learning from one of the great offensive minds in the game, and at some point Im sure he will be in a place where he is the sole play caller and/or a head coach. But he isn't the play caller in KC, at least not when it matters most.Reid is the HC. Of course he is involved in the game and the ebbs of the contest. EB called the vast majority of the plays. If we’re basing off of what the camera showed, Reid’s lips were persed and EB was calling the plays from the sheet. Reid would offer input as the boss. On several occasions, you could see him offer approval/input/suggestions per his job.
if he’s a excellent coach, i dont give a **** if he chews coopenhagen, drinks moonshine, loves nascar, and voted for trump!....just bring a winner to boulder pleaseNah, I stand by it: Holgo is a louisville, or Ole miss, or texas tech type of coach. Seems rednecky, etc. . .its not so much the liberal boulder that presents the fit problems, its the Red Bull/Nascar vibe I get from him.
Washington State runs actual route concepts and puts the QB in a position to read the defense, make a decision, and throw with anticipation.
We’re doing very little of that. It’s not just playcalling, the plays themselves are too simple
When the game was in the 4th quarter Reid was telling EB what play to call, and EB was relaying it to the QB. I don't have a feeling one way or another toward the guy, but he isn't a P5 head coach. But he is learning from one of the great offensive minds in the game, and at some point Im sure he will be in a place where he is the sole play caller and/or a head coach. But he isn't the play caller in KC, at least not when it matters most.
Thank you for making my point.
Architecture of the offense is the exact same.
We cannot call the plays the same because our players aren’t good enough to block the schemes. The playcalling side of execution is confounded by the skill of the players and the attempt to adapt to your personnel’s strengths and weaknesses.
I disagree with this. Chev ignores the middle part of the field. You don’t need the O-Line to hold up for 8 seconds to run quick slants or crossing routes, or quick 2 man patterns like a slant/flat combo. Instead we either run a go route or a screen. Very little in between
Have you broken down Montez’ ability to make those throws? If not, it’s something I recommend. Those throws and our interior OL pass pro are major liabilities.
This makes playcalling really tough.
In my opinion it takes a certain skill set to develop an offense, and a different skill set to call plays on game day. I don't know if I'd classify it as a skill, but having an awareness of player capability factors into what you can do as far as play calling. Individuals who have the ability to design offensive schemes, then call plays within those schemes are less common, in my opinion, than individuals who can do both. Then, the next level is the playcaller who can identify counters/adjustments as a defense adjusts to the offensive game plan.Easy compared to architecting the offense, etc. He's been given a script man. It's all there to see.
Pretty solid breakdown iyam. He also loves to just do step 1 and 2 repeatedly and forgets to try step 3 until too late in the game.I have noticed that almost every play seems to be a single read by design. Is that on Chev because he’s not creative enough or is it because he doesn’t trust Montez to read a defense? I honestly don’t know and I wouldn’t be surprised if it was either one.
But I have noticed Chev has a very clear gameplan he wants to do.
1. Attack the edges to spread the defense out
2. Run the ball up the middle once the defense starts cheating toward the edge
3. Go over the top when the defense starts cheating toward the line of scrimmage.
The problem is against good defenses, he can’t get past step 1
I have noticed that almost every play seems to be a single read by design. Is that on Chev because he’s not creative enough or is it because he doesn’t trust Montez to read a defense? I honestly don’t know and I wouldn’t be surprised if it was either one.
But I have noticed Chev has a very clear gameplan he wants to do.
1. Attack the edges to spread the defense out
2. Run the ball up the middle once the defense starts cheating toward the edge
3. Go over the top when the defense starts cheating toward the line of scrimmage.
The problem is against good defenses, he can’t get past step 1
I asked the same questions as you. That’s why I broke down the film. Montez is very physically gifted but has significant limitations in seeing defenses and making throws in the middle of the field. The game plan is complicated by the players. I won’t repost about the effect our disaster OL has on the scheme.
Yeah I’ll have to take a look at this. He has so few attempts over the middle this year that it’s hard to gauge. I’ll have to look at last year’s film.
The offense looked a lot different with Sefo but it’s hard to tell how much of that is Montez vs Liufau and how much is Lindgren vs Chev
I asked the same questions as you. That’s why I broke down the film. Montez is very physically gifted but has significant limitations in seeing defenses and making throws in the middle of the field. The game plan is complicated by the players. I won’t repost about the effect our disaster OL has on the scheme.
At least part of the problem, I think, is that we don’t have enough depth. Guys wear down. And, particularly, our QBs take too much of a beating. Consider Sefo’s passing in the first 2 or 3 games of a season (or coming back from injury after resting a couple weeks during a season). He’s a different guy.Lytle threw an absolute dime over the top to Winfree on that fourth down conversion against Utah.
Granted he then followed it up with a bad interception, but that's such a constant with our backup QBs that methinks it's on the coaching staff for not putting them in a position to get live-action experience in a lower pressure situation.
On the coaching topic, I want someone with endurance who can finish out a season...I was at the Alamo bowl after '16, the team I saw then was not top 25 that's for damn sure. For the past decade our teams have been limping down the home stretch in games that matter (with the exception being against Utah and Wazzu in 2016 but those were at home and all factors favored the Buffs).
There is a single cause for this symptom:For the past decade our teams have been limping down the home stretch in games that matter.
At least part of the problem, I think, is that we don’t have enough depth. Guys wear down. And, particularly, our QBs take too much of a beating. Consider Sefo’s passing in the first 2 or 3 games of a season (or coming back from injury after resting a couple weeks during a season). He’s a different guy.
Lytle threw an absolute dime over the top to Winfree on that fourth down conversion against Utah.
Granted he then followed it up with a bad interception, but that's such a constant with our backup QBs that methinks it's on the coaching staff for not putting them in a position to get live-action experience in a lower pressure situation.
On the coaching topic, I want someone with endurance who can finish out a season...I was at the Alamo bowl after '16, the team I saw then was not top 25 that's for damn sure. For the past decade our teams have been limping down the home stretch in games that matter (with the exception being against Utah and Wazzu in 2016 but those were at home and all factors favored the Buffs).
When the game was in the 4th quarter Reid was telling EB what play to call, and EB was relaying it to the QB. I don't have a feeling one way or another toward the guy, but he isn't a P5 head coach. But he is learning from one of the great offensive minds in the game, and at some point Im sure he will be in a place where he is the sole play caller and/or a head coach. But he isn't the play caller in KC, at least not when it matters most.
I was also at the Alamo Bowl. Thank god so many margaritas were nearby.Lytle threw an absolute dime over the top to Winfree on that fourth down conversion against Utah.
Granted he then followed it up with a bad interception, but that's such a constant with our backup QBs that methinks it's on the coaching staff for not putting them in a position to get live-action experience in a lower pressure situation.
On the coaching topic, I want someone with endurance who can finish out a season...I was at the Alamo bowl after '16, the team I saw then was not top 25 that's for damn sure. For the past decade our teams have been limping down the home stretch in games that matter (with the exception being against Utah and Wazzu in 2016 but those were at home and all factors favored the Buffs).
Lytle threw an absolute dime over the top to Winfree on that fourth down conversion against Utah.
Granted he then followed it up with a bad interception, but that's such a constant with our backup QBs that methinks it's on the coaching staff for not putting them in a position to get live-action experience in a lower pressure situation.
On the coaching topic, I want someone with endurance who can finish out a season...I was at the Alamo bowl after '16, the team I saw then was not top 25 that's for damn sure. For the past decade our teams have been limping down the home stretch in games that matter (with the exception being against Utah and Wazzu in 2016 but those were at home and all factors favored the Buffs).