When Kentucky hired Eddie Gran, I had a whole host of expectations from UK's upcoming offense. At mid-season, I find that Gran has exceeded my expectations, given the situation he was handed. The facts on the ground:
More than anything, Gran has brought stability and professionalism to the offense. There are some obvious limitations to our attack, at least until we see a fundamental change in Johnson's abilities, but the days of silly "three bombs and out" are over. The defense has really improved; bully for Stoops. However, Grand deserves a great deal of credit for turning the offense into a efficient unit capable of winning.
- Gran has done an excellent job of identifying and employing UK's strengths. Currently, UK has the 16th best rushing attack in all of football. Credit Gran with realizing that the best thing for UK's offense (and defense) was to turn UK's offensive attack into a ground-and-pound operation, releasing the three-headed monster of Boom, Snell, and Kemp.
- Gran has mitigated the damage of loosing Barker after only two games. With Johnson at QB, Gran simplified the playbook, incorporated QB runs, and made the read-option the linchpin of the offense. Johnson's development has been slow, but Gran has wisely kept the weight of the offense off the inexperienced QB's shoulders. Later in the season, Gran may open the playbook when Johnson is ready, but the "right now" version of Johnson is doing just enough to win--which is fine by me.
- UK offense, especially the OL, has taken on the demeanor of it's coordinator. The offense is no longer the passive unit that was afraid to run it up the gut at Vandy with a bowl game on the line. It's an aggressive, physical front line, complemented even by the likes of Alabama. Against Vandy and South Carolina, 3rd and 4th and short were automatic runs, even if the defense knew it was coming. Such faith in the reliability of the ground game has been a boon to the overall confidence of the offense.
More than anything, Gran has brought stability and professionalism to the offense. There are some obvious limitations to our attack, at least until we see a fundamental change in Johnson's abilities, but the days of silly "three bombs and out" are over. The defense has really improved; bully for Stoops. However, Grand deserves a great deal of credit for turning the offense into a efficient unit capable of winning.
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