I don't think it matters with this OC. If he caught a long TD pass, he would probably get lost in the rotation and not play again until next week.The anemic offense gets anemic-er
It seems like the staff is so focused on play sheets and personnel groupings that they don't know who has the hot hand and how to get them the ball. That's what I always liked about Carlen, Morrison and Spurrier - they knew who their playmakers were and how to get them the ball.I don't think it matters with this OC. If he caught a long TD pass, he would probably get lost in the rotation and not play again until next week.
It seems like the staff is so focused on play sheets and personnel groupings that they don't know who has the hot hand and how to get them the ball. That's what I always liked about Carlen, Morrison and Spurrier - they knew who their playmakers were and how to get them the ball.
Beamer's first coordinator got the blame for this "rotation" BS. Kinda makes you wonder who is behind it now that we are 3 coordinators in.It seems like the staff is so focused on play sheets and personnel groupings that they don't know who has the hot hand and how to get them the ball. That's what I always liked about Carlen, Morrison and Spurrier - they knew who their playmakers were and how to get them the ball.
What do those coaches have in common? They were proven, successful Head Coaches prior to coming here. Along with Holtz, the best Head Coaches we have ever had here.It seems like the staff is so focused on play sheets and personnel groupings that they don't know who has the hot hand and how to get them the ball. That's what I always liked about Carlen, Morrison and Spurrier - they knew who their playmakers were and how to get them the ball.
What do those coaches have in common? They were proven, successful Head Coaches prior to coming here. Along with Holtz, the best Head Coaches we have ever had here.
Frank McGuire too.You have to placate people now. John Wooden would never have made it today. He never played more than seven people during UCLA's glory years, eight at the most.