My rationalization of the JJ Program
Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 1:53 pm
This is not a defense, it is how I think it works, for both good and bad.
Tenet No. 1: We do what we do. Used as a rallying cry by the June-haters on this board, to me this phrase embodies JJ's philosophy of football. His is a system of offense that, he believes, when run correctly nullifies large parts of what opposing defenses do. If the offense is on the same page, they react to what the defense is showing, and do whatever is open. It is, like communism, a wonderful principle. It did wonders in Hawaii. It brought moderate success to SMU, which in comparison to what had come before must be considered a boon. "We do what we do" is not a vacant, lazy refrain, it is the central idea behind the coach we hired, and it has been more or less consistent throughout his time here. But it has not brought us the success we hoped it would.
Tenet No. 2: Repetition. The whole system is, by all accounts, simple in concept but difficult in practice. The same players doing the same things over and over again until it is second nature. The more fluent a player is, the more productive. This is why we see the same players used time and time again (until this year). I believe that this is why the number of players used in games has been so limited, and I also believe that this has hurt our attractiveness to recruits in the WR and possibly QB positions. It is very much an all eggs in one basket approach. And it is linked to tenet No. 3.
Tenet No. 3: Conference games are more important. When he came here, June was charged with winning bowls and winning championships. His approach has reflected those goals. OOC games play a role in making bowl games, but not in winning championships. And OOC provide opportunities to gain much needed repetition in the system and, also too often in our case, blood new offensive playmakers. The ATM game is a prime example. Other teams had had success running the ball but we threw the ball over 60 times. Why? Because this was a warmup game. This was about getting better. The TCU game is largely the same. Rutgers is where this team needs to come together and play well.
Tenet No. 4: Recruits will come. Being in Texas was going to make June's system to the greatest hotbed of talent in the country. Texas. The players would come. The single-most problematic tenet as I see it. While June's ability to improve players has helped enormously, there is clearly evidence that our development as a team has been limited by simply not having the depth of quality needed to take us to the 10-11 win arena. But this was not the focus. I don't believe that SMU was hiring June for anything but the quick turnaround system. There was always the uncomfortable question of who would succeed him and how you follow that program. One need only look at Hawaii to see how quickly it can all fall apart.
This is, in part at least, how I believe our program approaches the season, and the game of football itself. And it has brought success to the program that had not been seen in a long time. In my opinion it was the right kind of idea. Bring in a system that can turn things around quickly and get us to prominence. 2010 - C-USA Championship game. The closest we have come to a championship. And a game our defense played very well in and gave our O the chance to win. A chance we didn't take, but up until that point I think it fair to say things were really trending up. We had not won a single "marquee" game, but we were very competitive in almost all the others.
And 2011 started so well. 5-1. We'd beaten TCU. We had humbled UCF. We were showing up in the "also receiving votes" category in the rankings. We had, unknown to us all, peaked. I think we all need to temper what we have witnessed since then with the realization that we had actually seen a pretty meteoric rise. And we also need to realize that 2011 and 2012 were winning seasons with impressive bowl victories, so it is not like we have collapsed totally. But there is a different feel to the state of the program. JJ's ASU nonsense clearly shows that he was ok with leaving. But he didn't, but he will doubtless have noted the decided change in attitude towards him. Gone are the lavish luncheons where boosters chuckled and oohed as he showed us what minor alterations were needed to have put up 70 points the Saturday before. Gone even are the Ozona evenings where the workday was no longer to be wagered against hearing JJ's thoughts on the week and it could be enjoyed over beverages and in a much smaller setting. Gone now are the horses he championed. It is clear that bowl games are no longer enough.
He has one challenge left. Win the AAC, and take us to a BCS bowl, and it appears to me that he has gambled all on that. He is all in on GG leading a passing attack that none can stop. Had we beaten Tech, I slightly wonder if the approach since would be different, but I think that really on October 5th it starts. 8-0 in conference and hope Louisville loses a game. It's that simple.
I sat through our practice game at College Station, and I suspect I may sit through another on Saturday, but if he delivers the AAC I will be okay with that.
If he doesn't we will only be looking backward and upward at where we were when we kicked off at Southern Miss in 2010. And it will be the standard on which I will judge him.
When the season is over.
Tenet No. 1: We do what we do. Used as a rallying cry by the June-haters on this board, to me this phrase embodies JJ's philosophy of football. His is a system of offense that, he believes, when run correctly nullifies large parts of what opposing defenses do. If the offense is on the same page, they react to what the defense is showing, and do whatever is open. It is, like communism, a wonderful principle. It did wonders in Hawaii. It brought moderate success to SMU, which in comparison to what had come before must be considered a boon. "We do what we do" is not a vacant, lazy refrain, it is the central idea behind the coach we hired, and it has been more or less consistent throughout his time here. But it has not brought us the success we hoped it would.
Tenet No. 2: Repetition. The whole system is, by all accounts, simple in concept but difficult in practice. The same players doing the same things over and over again until it is second nature. The more fluent a player is, the more productive. This is why we see the same players used time and time again (until this year). I believe that this is why the number of players used in games has been so limited, and I also believe that this has hurt our attractiveness to recruits in the WR and possibly QB positions. It is very much an all eggs in one basket approach. And it is linked to tenet No. 3.
Tenet No. 3: Conference games are more important. When he came here, June was charged with winning bowls and winning championships. His approach has reflected those goals. OOC games play a role in making bowl games, but not in winning championships. And OOC provide opportunities to gain much needed repetition in the system and, also too often in our case, blood new offensive playmakers. The ATM game is a prime example. Other teams had had success running the ball but we threw the ball over 60 times. Why? Because this was a warmup game. This was about getting better. The TCU game is largely the same. Rutgers is where this team needs to come together and play well.
Tenet No. 4: Recruits will come. Being in Texas was going to make June's system to the greatest hotbed of talent in the country. Texas. The players would come. The single-most problematic tenet as I see it. While June's ability to improve players has helped enormously, there is clearly evidence that our development as a team has been limited by simply not having the depth of quality needed to take us to the 10-11 win arena. But this was not the focus. I don't believe that SMU was hiring June for anything but the quick turnaround system. There was always the uncomfortable question of who would succeed him and how you follow that program. One need only look at Hawaii to see how quickly it can all fall apart.
This is, in part at least, how I believe our program approaches the season, and the game of football itself. And it has brought success to the program that had not been seen in a long time. In my opinion it was the right kind of idea. Bring in a system that can turn things around quickly and get us to prominence. 2010 - C-USA Championship game. The closest we have come to a championship. And a game our defense played very well in and gave our O the chance to win. A chance we didn't take, but up until that point I think it fair to say things were really trending up. We had not won a single "marquee" game, but we were very competitive in almost all the others.
And 2011 started so well. 5-1. We'd beaten TCU. We had humbled UCF. We were showing up in the "also receiving votes" category in the rankings. We had, unknown to us all, peaked. I think we all need to temper what we have witnessed since then with the realization that we had actually seen a pretty meteoric rise. And we also need to realize that 2011 and 2012 were winning seasons with impressive bowl victories, so it is not like we have collapsed totally. But there is a different feel to the state of the program. JJ's ASU nonsense clearly shows that he was ok with leaving. But he didn't, but he will doubtless have noted the decided change in attitude towards him. Gone are the lavish luncheons where boosters chuckled and oohed as he showed us what minor alterations were needed to have put up 70 points the Saturday before. Gone even are the Ozona evenings where the workday was no longer to be wagered against hearing JJ's thoughts on the week and it could be enjoyed over beverages and in a much smaller setting. Gone now are the horses he championed. It is clear that bowl games are no longer enough.
He has one challenge left. Win the AAC, and take us to a BCS bowl, and it appears to me that he has gambled all on that. He is all in on GG leading a passing attack that none can stop. Had we beaten Tech, I slightly wonder if the approach since would be different, but I think that really on October 5th it starts. 8-0 in conference and hope Louisville loses a game. It's that simple.
I sat through our practice game at College Station, and I suspect I may sit through another on Saturday, but if he delivers the AAC I will be okay with that.
If he doesn't we will only be looking backward and upward at where we were when we kicked off at Southern Miss in 2010. And it will be the standard on which I will judge him.
When the season is over.