I would highly suggest that anyone remotely interested in this topic listen to last week's OWH Pick Six podcast.
http://www.omaha.com/huskers/blogs/pick-six-podcast-nu-s-identity-on-offense-armstrong-s/article_ae9e16a4-0678-11e6-8b05-9fca310911ca.html
Sam and Jon had a very interesting discussion about this very thing.
You might not understand - Sure the players do. If i'm missing some quotes from the players, please share!!!So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
So CM agrees with the previous post and gets 2 +1s, while the post with the actual observation gets 0?Exactly.
It's referred to in the videocast that's been posted. Also, there were articles from the spring practices quoting players, Armstrong in particular.You might not understand - Sure the players do. If i'm missing some quotes from the players, please share!!!So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Yes. It was Bo's fault.Interesting hyperbolic mischaracterization of what actually happened. You sound venomous. Is it Bo's fault?Apparantely "didn't handle THEIR crap well" means ignoring recruiting, hiring yes men buddies, ranting and raving about our fans on secret recordings, instilling a venomous atmosphere among players and goating the AD to FIRE HIM after an ugly loss.And in the end, i think we'll find out that was more of a Perlman and Eichorst problem than a Bo problem, though he didn't handle their crap well.The point is Bo butting heads with ADSE is what got him canned, don't act like you don't know what I'm talking about.Is that why he was fired?That is a reversal of chronology I hadn't heard before.Even if Bo Pelini's '09 squad wins that Texas game and gives us a trophy, Bo still gets canned for calling ADSE a *****.I love how when we fire coaches for not winning championships or "the games that matter", which were all explicitly stated by the responsible ADs, we like to pretend it's based on some rumor or innuendo.
We know that's a fiction, because if said coach had won a championship, he wouldn't have been fired.
And if they really did want to fire those coaches for supposed off the field issues that justified termination, they are hypocritical, sellouts who have no integrity if they wouldn't have pulled that trigger no matter what.
the world may never knowSo CM agrees with the previous post and gets 2 +1s, while the post with the actual observation gets 0?Exactly.
Can someone tell me how this keeps happening?
So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Fun Fact: Nebraska was #2 in the Big 10 in Third Down Conversion last season.BRB, you bring up a prime example of my concern with this system. In this offense, that 20 yard pass was absolutely the "correct" read because it was single coverage.
To me, it's a problem when a correct read leads to a wrong play.
(And I don't think we should run on every 3rd and 1, especially not the sort of unimaginative running we see in this offense to date).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ytCEuuW2_AOkay. I don't really have anything to add here. No keen observation of my own, or funny meme to attach.
But could someone +1 this post so I can feel my life has meaning?
Hahahah. Hahahahahaha.Players don't need to understand a vision; that's a buzzword used for and by fans with an elementary, outsider's amount of knowledge. Players need to know the playbook. At the end of the day, Langs has a playbook, with specific plays with specific lines drawn in different directions, that the players will have, learn, and practice, under tutelage and with correction along the way.So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Having concern about offensive philosophy is fine, but the players 'not understanding the vision' is probably the most nonsensical reasoning possible to get to that concern.
I agree, and I think the fragile mentality of Bo Pelini's teams attests to that fact.Hahahah. Hahahahahaha.Players don't need to understand a vision; that's a buzzword used for and by fans with an elementary, outsider's amount of knowledge. Players need to know the playbook. At the end of the day, Langs has a playbook, with specific plays with specific lines drawn in different directions, that the players will have, learn, and practice, under tutelage and with correction along the way.So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Having concern about offensive philosophy is fine, but the players 'not understanding the vision' is probably the most nonsensical reasoning possible to get to that concern.
Having a philosophical understanding of what you're trying to get done is extraordinarily important and anyone who has coached or listens to coaches will m consider that over and over.
Vision produces mentality and only a fool wouldn't understand the importance of mentality in football success.
Hahahah. Hahahahahaha.Players don't need to understand a vision; that's a buzzword used for and by fans with an elementary, outsider's amount of knowledge. Players need to know the playbook. At the end of the day, Langs has a playbook, with specific plays with specific lines drawn in different directions, that the players will have, learn, and practice, under tutelage and with correction along the way.So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Having concern about offensive philosophy is fine, but the players 'not understanding the vision' is probably the most nonsensical reasoning possible to get to that concern.
Having a philosophical understanding of what you're trying to get done is extraordinarily important and anyone who has coached or listens to coaches will m consider that over and over.
Vision produces mentality and only a fool wouldn't understand the importance of mentality in football success.
Keep whistling dude. And deflecting with personal attacks.That's taken care of in practice, namely, in fall practice, via coaching. Whether or not the players can produce a satisfactory sound byte answer to the media to sate plebs like you and I doesn't really have any bearing on if it actually does or doesn't happen successfully.Hahahah. Hahahahahaha.Players don't need to understand a vision; that's a buzzword used for and by fans with an elementary, outsider's amount of knowledge. Players need to know the playbook. At the end of the day, Langs has a playbook, with specific plays with specific lines drawn in different directions, that the players will have, learn, and practice, under tutelage and with correction along the way.So... You need your own guys to have a stated offensive philosophy. That's interesting.
The concern I have is that players don't even seem to understand the vision. How do you get alignment on a goal in that scenario?
Having concern about offensive philosophy is fine, but the players 'not understanding the vision' is probably the most nonsensical reasoning possible to get to that concern.
Having a philosophical understanding of what you're trying to get done is extraordinarily important and anyone who has coached or listens to coaches will m consider that over and over.
Vision produces mentality and only a fool wouldn't understand the importance of mentality in football success.