Stoops has an issue of trusting his coordinators. He can't stand the fact if the offense scores to quick. It has to stop now! It's happened with every offensive coordinator he has had. Go back and look at the first couple of games of every offensive coordinators he has had. We score quick and then it all changes like the offense is going backwards. He needs to focus more on the defense and stay out of the offenses way. If that doesn't stop we are in for a long season and his tenure will end very soon! What are your thought?
My thoughts are that it is interesting how certain narratives become accepted as fact without evidence and how fan bases will lock in on a particular coach as "the problem".
When Brooks was here if there was a problem it was blamed on the OC...ether Ron Hudson or Joker. When Cobb didn't get the ball...it was Joker's fault. I can't recall anyone ever blaming Brooks for a call. When Joker became HC, it was all his fault not Randy Sanders. Yet Tennessee fans would tell everyone that Randy Sanders was a terrible OC. Last year everything was Dawson's fault...now everything is Stoops fault.
Trying to give the defense a rest is fundamental football at every level. I seriously doubt that any competent OC needs to be reminded. It takes much more energy to play defense and if you have little/no depth then the result will be that you'll never stop anyone and your players will suffer more injuries due to their fatigue.
Further, I suggest anyone suggesting that the play calling changed after UK got a lead vs So Miss to check the play-by-play.
2nd half...
1st possession...
1st Pass 32yds
1st Run 1 yd
2nd Barker sacked, fumbles
2nd possession
1st Pass 1 yd
2nd Run -1 yd
3rd Sacked
4th punt
3rd possession
1st Pass no gain
2nd Pass (long pass downfield) - intercepted
4th possession
1st run 6yds
2nd run 6 yds
1st run 7 yds
2nd run 5 yds penalty called for holding
2nd sacked
3rd pass 3yds
4th punt
5th possession
1st Sacked, fumble
I don't exactly see a team trying to take the air out of the ball and eat clock. Those short passes in the first half were being taken for big gains. There are 4 sacks which were on longer called pass plays. The other 2 long pass plays, 1 was complete, the other intercepted.
There were only 15 offensive plays in the 2nd half and 3 of those were turnovers. When your sample sizes are drives of 3, 4, 2, 5 and 1... 9 of the 15 called plays were passes...a pass play is not controlling the clock...