Looking at the Cats roster, what things can the coaching staff do to right the ship THIS YEAR? This is probably a case of trying to make Kool-Aid without water, but what the hell. I'll give it a shot. Please add your thoughts. Five things I'd do to get the Cats rolling;
1. Go under center and add a TE to the LOS. Not flexed, but in a three point at the snap. Basically, get away from this spread stuff and go with a pro style offense. IMO, CJ Conrad would be outstanding in a traditional offense (I'd even go with the old "I" formation and double TE sets on occasion). In this formation, you can play power football. You can use play action. Generally, the QB has an easy time getting into max protect if he sees something that he wants to go to off of play action. With seven in the box (at least), three WR's would have to deal with four DB's (off of play action). I like UK's WR's in that numbers game. Also, today's defenses are geared to deal with spread offenses. Going to a more traditional offense might actually give UK an edge against certain opponents.
2. NEVER call a play that requires Mosier or Meadows to block one-on-one for more than a three step drop. Neither is good enough to be put on an island like that. Maybe they'd be more effective in a run based scheme pulling down the line of scrimmage. I have no idea, but I never want to see either one of them asked to block one-on-one for more than 2-2.5 seconds.
3. No hurry on offense! UK has zero quality depth with their front seven. I mean none! Stoops is eternally concerned about his defense getting tired. So why in the hell isn't UK running the play clock down to about 6-7 on every offensive play? Hell, if you almost exhaust the play clock on every snap, even one first down will probably give the defense an 8-10 minute rest (assuming we hit a commercial timeout...LOL)! More importantly for Kentucky, taking time off the clock shortens the game in terms of possessions. The best thing about a 10-minute drive for a team like UK is that you just burned off 1/6th of the game. The fewer possessions, the better chance Kentucky has to compete.
4. Defensively, crowd the LOS on damn near every snap. Put a man in every gap ON the LOS. Pressure the opponent. Bring pressure from different places. Bring 5-6 on occasion. Make the opposing QB uncomfortable. Make the opposing OL uncomfortable. Quarterbacks look SO comfortable when they play against Eliot's scheme. It's like they know they'll have all day to stand around. It's like a 7-on-7 drill. I'd like to see Eliot get away from the conservative garbage and become extremely aggressive. Sure, UK would give up some big plays. That beats the hell out of a 14-play drive that ends with the same result while exhausting the defense. We've seen some perfectly mediocre quarterbacks have a career day against Eliot, and that's because his scheme is predictable and less aggressive than Canada.
5. UK's strength on defense is at corner. Roll the dice and stick them on an island. Not on every play, but WAY more often than we do now. Be more creative with the safeties and backers.
Clearly, following this advice will lead to a 10-2 finish [laughing].
GBB!!!
1. Go under center and add a TE to the LOS. Not flexed, but in a three point at the snap. Basically, get away from this spread stuff and go with a pro style offense. IMO, CJ Conrad would be outstanding in a traditional offense (I'd even go with the old "I" formation and double TE sets on occasion). In this formation, you can play power football. You can use play action. Generally, the QB has an easy time getting into max protect if he sees something that he wants to go to off of play action. With seven in the box (at least), three WR's would have to deal with four DB's (off of play action). I like UK's WR's in that numbers game. Also, today's defenses are geared to deal with spread offenses. Going to a more traditional offense might actually give UK an edge against certain opponents.
2. NEVER call a play that requires Mosier or Meadows to block one-on-one for more than a three step drop. Neither is good enough to be put on an island like that. Maybe they'd be more effective in a run based scheme pulling down the line of scrimmage. I have no idea, but I never want to see either one of them asked to block one-on-one for more than 2-2.5 seconds.
3. No hurry on offense! UK has zero quality depth with their front seven. I mean none! Stoops is eternally concerned about his defense getting tired. So why in the hell isn't UK running the play clock down to about 6-7 on every offensive play? Hell, if you almost exhaust the play clock on every snap, even one first down will probably give the defense an 8-10 minute rest (assuming we hit a commercial timeout...LOL)! More importantly for Kentucky, taking time off the clock shortens the game in terms of possessions. The best thing about a 10-minute drive for a team like UK is that you just burned off 1/6th of the game. The fewer possessions, the better chance Kentucky has to compete.
4. Defensively, crowd the LOS on damn near every snap. Put a man in every gap ON the LOS. Pressure the opponent. Bring pressure from different places. Bring 5-6 on occasion. Make the opposing QB uncomfortable. Make the opposing OL uncomfortable. Quarterbacks look SO comfortable when they play against Eliot's scheme. It's like they know they'll have all day to stand around. It's like a 7-on-7 drill. I'd like to see Eliot get away from the conservative garbage and become extremely aggressive. Sure, UK would give up some big plays. That beats the hell out of a 14-play drive that ends with the same result while exhausting the defense. We've seen some perfectly mediocre quarterbacks have a career day against Eliot, and that's because his scheme is predictable and less aggressive than Canada.
5. UK's strength on defense is at corner. Roll the dice and stick them on an island. Not on every play, but WAY more often than we do now. Be more creative with the safeties and backers.
Clearly, following this advice will lead to a 10-2 finish [laughing].
GBB!!!