OK, I'm at the office, but I might as well take a break to answer this.gord wrote: Actually, production is not anywhere near non-Brennan levels. The lowest passing average from 1999-04 was 322.9 (highest SMU 282) and the only times Hawai'i was below 30 ppg (something SMU hasn't done) was in his first two years: 1999 and 2000. His two worst years at Hawai'i are just about even with his two best here--everything else at UH far surpasses his SMU output. Yes Colt Brennan was good at UH, but Jones also coached the all-time leader in passing yards in Timmy Chang.
No disagreement that the talent levels are not increasing. That's hard to argue against.
You cite total passing yards and clearly Hawaii far exceeded anything we have done at SMU. But that isn't offensive production nor does it tell the whole story. I took two semi-random years:
2001: Solid 9-3 year, QB Rolovich for most of the year, with Chang taking significant number of snaps also.
2009: 8-5 Hawaii Bowl year. Mitchell with a slight lead in total snaps taken over Padron.
Hawaii dominates the total passing yardage that year, 4461 to 3647, even with one fewer game. But that means little.
When you include rushing (I added in anyone with about 100 yards or more) you have Hawaii: 5397 yards to SMU: 4921.
Considering Hawaii had only 12 games to SMU's 13 (why no bowl for Hawaii???) you get H: 449.75 yds/game vs SMU: 378.5 yds/game.
In this comparison SMU only had 84% the yards per game of Hawaii. Clearly SMU isn't doing anything like what Hawaii was doing, right?
Not exactly. Hawaii took many more offensive snaps that year than SMU. Total yards in that case isn't apples to oranges. Let's look at how effective each offensive play was.
Total yards per attempt: Hawaii: 7.433884 yards/attempt, SMU: 6.882517 yards/attempt. That means SMU had nearly 93% as many yards per attempt. That isn't nearly different as everyone assumes.
It should be noted that Hawaii's scoring is far superior to SMU's. Hawaii scored 40.25/game or .665289/attempt vs SMU's 32/game or .584615/attempt. SMU scored 88% the points/attempt Hawaii did.
What does that say? SMU had 93% the yards/attempt but only 88% the points/attempt. This means Hawaii had a shorter field or just a better redzone offense. I don't have the data to say.
I can say that both teams gave up a very similar number of points, 26.5/game with Hawaii and 27.6/game with SMU. Not sure what to make of that. It may suggest, if you assume that Hawaii's offenses were weak as is the common consensus, and that SMU's defense is pretty good, that SMU's opponents have more potent offenses than Hawaii's opponents and that even with a superior defense SMU cannot out run their offenses. If, and that's a big if, that's the case, it explains why June was more successful at Hawaii - there weren't as many pass happy high scoring teams to deal with.
Bottom line is that SMU is doing pretty close to what Hawaii did with the ball, just slower.
I'll have to pick a more run-heavy year for Hawaii and try it again at some point.