Observations from the game
Posted: Sun Sep 22, 2013 9:27 pm
- we ran the nickel package 0 times.
- we never blitzed A&M. Three rushers, everyone else is in coverage. I think the hope is that JF would get sick of holding the ball and throw it into coverage, but it never really happened. After 8 seconds in the pocket, someone is bound to get open.
- To the naked eye, it was pretty obvious we did zero prep for this game. Straight 3-4, no blitzing. Pretty vanilla. Hopefully we have a great showing against TCU, because we didn't prep for A&M at all.
- If you are going to try and upset a team, you have to win turnovers, have at most 5 penalties, and not drop more than 2 passes. We failed miserably. We did not give ourselves a chance to compete in this game.
- Scott missed a lot of tackles. Our players were on their heels waiting for their player to make a move and trying to react. You lose every time in that situation against premium athletes. I know people talk about no tackling in practice, but we do hit. I think the bigger problem is that we don't have the special athletes on offense for those guys to practice against. That is where you learn those kinds of lessons.
- You are up thirty in the first half, go for it 3 times on fourth down and then take points off the board to go for it again? That is kind of crappy.
Upside:
- Holman broke out. He was awesome in fall camp, so hopefully this is a springboard for the rest of the season.
- o-line looked improved. Obviously, the penalties against Briggs were bad, but Gilbert wasn't running for his life and there weren't missed assignments everywhere. The offense looked a lot more stable (with the exception of the penalty), and really we stopped ourselves much more than they stopped us.
- Once heisman went out of the game, our defense changed to be much more aggressive. We blitzed both of the other quarterbacks all over the place, and effectively shut them down. Amazing to see how one player can take an offense from uber-productive to fizzling out.
- Longoria made a great play in the third quarter. I know he dropped the pick, but an LB running stride-for-stride with a WR 40 yards down the field is impressive.
- we never blitzed A&M. Three rushers, everyone else is in coverage. I think the hope is that JF would get sick of holding the ball and throw it into coverage, but it never really happened. After 8 seconds in the pocket, someone is bound to get open.
- To the naked eye, it was pretty obvious we did zero prep for this game. Straight 3-4, no blitzing. Pretty vanilla. Hopefully we have a great showing against TCU, because we didn't prep for A&M at all.
- If you are going to try and upset a team, you have to win turnovers, have at most 5 penalties, and not drop more than 2 passes. We failed miserably. We did not give ourselves a chance to compete in this game.
- Scott missed a lot of tackles. Our players were on their heels waiting for their player to make a move and trying to react. You lose every time in that situation against premium athletes. I know people talk about no tackling in practice, but we do hit. I think the bigger problem is that we don't have the special athletes on offense for those guys to practice against. That is where you learn those kinds of lessons.
- You are up thirty in the first half, go for it 3 times on fourth down and then take points off the board to go for it again? That is kind of crappy.
Upside:
- Holman broke out. He was awesome in fall camp, so hopefully this is a springboard for the rest of the season.
- o-line looked improved. Obviously, the penalties against Briggs were bad, but Gilbert wasn't running for his life and there weren't missed assignments everywhere. The offense looked a lot more stable (with the exception of the penalty), and really we stopped ourselves much more than they stopped us.
- Once heisman went out of the game, our defense changed to be much more aggressive. We blitzed both of the other quarterbacks all over the place, and effectively shut them down. Amazing to see how one player can take an offense from uber-productive to fizzling out.
- Longoria made a great play in the third quarter. I know he dropped the pick, but an LB running stride-for-stride with a WR 40 yards down the field is impressive.