Dude. You really don't want to go there.It's funny because "doing a lot of things well" and "exploiting what the defense gives you" are actually the hallmarks of virtually every successful team in CFB, and for that matter every good team in any sport.Nebraska's not unique in most ways. Maybe I should expand that statement and say I don't think it works almost anywhere in CFB.
Yeah, I love when the Warriors go big with their lineup to exploit opponent's big men weaknesses.
At this point in 2011, we had 4 commits. Today we have 7 (almost twice as many).Not same as it ever was, same as the 2011 class. The 12, 13, 14 (especially), 15, and 16 classes were lower ranked. We should hope to be at the 11/17 level every year. And then let's hope in a few years that the 17 class doesn't flame out like the 11 class.So yeah, about the same as it ever was.2011 player rating 88.32Objectively speaking, how is this class shaping up better than some other classes, like the '11 class?
I follow recruiting; I just don't follow the hype.
2017 player rating 88.53 (after Avery commits)
And that average is more likely to fall than to rise as the year goes on.
Dude. You really don't want to go there.It's funny because "doing a lot of things well" and "exploiting what the defense gives you" are actually the hallmarks of virtually every successful team in CFB, and for that matter every good team in any sport.Nebraska's not unique in most ways. Maybe I should expand that statement and say I don't think it works almost anywhere in CFB.
Yeah, I love when the Warriors go big with their lineup to exploit opponent's big men weaknesses.
The Warriors don't match up naturally with some of the bigger teams, so they get very creative in other ways. They will utilize Bogut to neutralize the opponents big man in the first quarter, then sit him for the entire fourth and let Draymond Green play center, betting he can always outplay the bigger man at the other end. When shorter guards are forced to guard 6'7" Klay Thompson or Shawn Livingston, they absolutely exploit that. Until the other team adjusts. If they sleep on Bogut and Ezeli, the Warriors very savvy passers will ram through a few alley oops before the other team adjusts. You are mad to suggest the Warriors don't do a lot of things well. They can even play big when they get the right matchup. And it all changes when you have a player like Steph Curry who spreads the floor like nobody else in the NBA.
Steve Kerr and Greg Popovich -- possible the best coach in all of sports -- would absolutely laugh you off the court, CM.
Exploiting what the the opponent gives you -- from game to game and quarter to quarter -- is a fundamental of coaching.
Jesus, you're impossible.Dude. You really don't want to go there.It's funny because "doing a lot of things well" and "exploiting what the defense gives you" are actually the hallmarks of virtually every successful team in CFB, and for that matter every good team in any sport.Nebraska's not unique in most ways. Maybe I should expand that statement and say I don't think it works almost anywhere in CFB.
Yeah, I love when the Warriors go big with their lineup to exploit opponent's big men weaknesses.
The Warriors don't match up naturally with some of the bigger teams, so they get very creative in other ways. They will utilize Bogut to neutralize the opponents big man in the first quarter, then sit him for the entire fourth and let Draymond Green play center, betting he can always outplay the bigger man at the other end. When shorter guards are forced to guard 6'7" Klay Thompson or Shawn Livingston, they absolutely exploit that. Until the other team adjusts. If they sleep on Bogut and Ezeli, the Warriors very savvy passers will ram through a few alley oops before the other team adjusts. You are mad to suggest the Warriors don't do a lot of things well. They can even play big when they get the right matchup. And it all changes when you have a player like Steph Curry who spreads the floor like nobody else in the NBA.
Steve Kerr and Greg Popovich -- possible the best coach in all of sports -- would absolutely laugh you off the court, CM.
Exploiting what the the opponent gives you -- from game to game and quarter to quarter -- is a fundamental of coaching.
They don't change their system to do a lot of things well.
TO's offenses did a lot of things well. It doesn't mean he used a "multiple pick and play" system.
There was a method, a progression, of how he attacked teams, and he, like the Warriors and Spurs, worked their system through the progression. You even reference that in your post. They didn't change the system as Langs apparently is considering changing his.
But then again, maybe Lang's isn't changing his system. What is his system? What are his core offensive philosophies? WHat are even his core "complementary" plays? I watch an Langs offense and am often left wondering "what are they trying to accomplish here?"
I suspect, he'd argue he tries to create isolation matchups that favor his players. This requires, for example, getting in the right formation, making the right pre-snap reads, making the audibles/adjustments, making the post snap reads and executing the actual play. Because he envisions a different package for each of his four or five receivers, that's a lot to learn, read and execute. Teams do it, but I don't think it's a recipe for consistent success at the CFB level.
Compare that to a TO, Briles, Leach or Herman led offense and you'll see that theirs are much less "multiple" and more about working a progression of plays based on what D chooses to do within a framework of offensive principles.
It's a subtle but significant difference and implicates all sorts of things in how you install, teach and call an offense.
you're right....we should fire them all and close down the football team. we will never get another TO so no one will ever measure up. time to forget it and give up. thanks for setting us straight cm. now i have more time for hunting and fishing next fall. always a good thing for me.actually, this was supposed to be about lang's offensive identity, or lack thereof.
But I get why people want to deflect to the "intangibles" of recruiting national championships.
https://cdn.meme.am/instances/53266047.jpgyou're right....we should fire them all and close down the football team. we will never get another TO so no one will ever measure up. time to forget it and give up. thanks for setting us straight cm. now i have more time for hunting and fishing next fall. always a good thing for me.actually, this was supposed to be about lang's offensive identity, or lack thereof.
But I get why people want to deflect to the "intangibles" of recruiting national championships.
It's anecdotal evidence that the recruiting rankings aren't perfect, but then that's never been the claim. They're far from useless.Also, Ameer wasn't overlooked as much as people wanted to play him in a different position, like Tommie Frazier and Corey Ross. All three were highly regarded athletes. Ameer's relatively modest ranking on rivals is just more evidence of how useless those rankings are.
YOU WERE THE ONE WHO BROUGHT THE 2011 CLASS UP IN THE FIRST PLACE!!!actually, this was supposed to be about lang's offensive identity, or lack thereof.
But I get why people want to deflect to the "intangibles" of recruiting national championships.