Hedley Lamarr
New member
Auburn, Oregon, Florida St, Bama, Ohio St....all different offenses
His offense had a bunch of plays but no real formula.What is "the Nebraska offense under Bo Pelini"?"They hold up a card on the sideline, he kicks his foot and throws the ball. That ain’t playing quarterback. There’s no leadership involved there.[/b]"
pitiful and we paid good money to see this bullsh#t!His offense had a bunch of plays but no real formula.What is "the Nebraska offense under Bo Pelini"?"They hold up a card on the sideline, he kicks his foot and throws the ball. That ain’t playing quarterback. There’s no leadership involved there.[/b]"
I think the OL had more reads and responsibilities than the QB, RBs & WRs. The offense would have remained the same; an offense that relied on spacing, with speed at the skill positions and some good athletes to do whatever play is called.
When the Huskers got a two score lead in the second half, Bo went with a submissive approach and was very conservative. Even with most of the 4th quarter to play, all he was concerned about was playing against the game clock. Just like the NFL and it's probably where he got that from.
When they trailed by 2 scores and struggled, all they could do was roll the dice and "huck-it and chuck-it" since nothing else worked well. Often times it actually worked!
During post game they may have referred to it as "players being resilient" or "never quitting". But in reality, the offense was in despair. Scrapping the game plan and just winging it, letting their athletic ability take over the rest of the way. Not as football players, but as college athletes, with speed and effort.
That was Bo's offense. And yes, his QB does look to the side, claps his hands, throws ball, hands off, or fakes and keeps it.
Even in the differences, they have what I hope we have. Experienced coaches, who know their system, will recruit to it and for all reports can recruit.Auburn, Oregon, Florida St, Bama, Ohio St....all different offenses
They all have really good offensive lines.Even in the differences, they have what I hope we have. Experienced coaches, who know their system, will recruit to it and for all reports can recruit.Auburn, Oregon, Florida St, Bama, Ohio St....all different offenses
Not saying we will win it all in the next year or two, but I feel very comfortable in saying we will not be on the receiving end of the a$$ beatings we have suffered for the past few years. I am anxious to see how we look. A few tough games in BYU and MIA. Some good tests before conference play.
Amen to that. I am so done with those beat downs. I like those two early season challenges. Last season felt like we hadn't played anyone (aside from Miami) the first six weeks. Football is more fun playing against competitive teams - as long as you don't get whipped!Even in the differences, they have what I hope we have. Experienced coaches, who know their system, will recruit to it and for all reports can recruit.Auburn, Oregon, Florida St, Bama, Ohio St....all different offenses
Not saying we will win it all in the next year or two, but I feel very comfortable in saying we will not be on the receiving end of the a$$ beatings we have suffered for the past few years. I am anxious to see how we look. A few tough games in BYU and MIA. Some good tests before conference play.
This is basically what we've had for the last several 4-loss seasons. It's a good scheme on paper, but hasn't lived up to its billing IMO.when we could be talking about how teams are going to have to deal with Imani pounding the middle, Newby/Taylor taking the pitch, or Armstrong finding a seam on a keeper.
Recruiting-wise, we wouldn't have to spend so much time looking for another Mannion or Anderson, and we're able to have athletes all over the field.You're always recruiting against the top schools for the top players. I don't think that's a reason to shy away and lock yourself into an "alternative" scheme in the hopes that you can win that way.
This is basically what we've had for the last several 4-loss seasons. It's a good scheme on paper, but hasn't lived up to its billing IMO.when we could be talking about how teams are going to have to deal with Imani pounding the middle, Newby/Taylor taking the pitch, or Armstrong finding a seam on a keeper.
Urbs seems to like him.It's not this guy anymore.![]()
Thats the best part for me.
I hated his finesse offense.
+1 you for the Stanford remark. I would be pleased with a similar style of Stanford, Wisc, Michigan State. Typically those three can pass the ball efficiently, yet they have a power running game as a staple. Plus they have some complimentary speed guys to stretch the field. I'd say they have a strong identity and a formula they stick to. If we incorporate a similar style to that, I would be even happier if it meant that we become the best offense in the nation doing it that way. If you don't have the talent, then you will play more like Rutgers and Penn State (down years).Someone mentioned Stanford. Now THERE'S an offense I can get behind, and it has very little option. They focus on o-line play, tough-nosed running between the tackles, power sweeps, play-action with some trickeration thrown in. We get an Andrew Luck or a Kevin Hogan - now we're talkin'.
The only issue I have is that we wouldn't be much different from Wisky, MSU, Iowa, Illinois, Penn State, Rutgers, and probably Michigan. We'd be recruiting against them for the same kind of ahtletes - maybe we win that, maybe we don't.
Stanford was 72nd in the nation rushing the ball last year. 158 yards per game. 4.3 yards per attempt. They were 78th in total offense, 389 yards per game.Someone mentioned Stanford. Now THERE'S an offense I can get behind, and it has very little option. They focus on o-line play, tough-nosed running between the tackles, power sweeps, play-action with some trickeration thrown in. We get an Andrew Luck or a Kevin Hogan - now we're talkin'.
The only issue I have is that we wouldn't be much different from Wisky, MSU, Iowa, Illinois, Penn State, Rutgers, and probably Michigan. We'd be recruiting against them for the same kind of ahtletes - maybe we win that, maybe we don't.
yes, according to Becker-head, we were like basketball on grass........i think OSU will have him filling Gatorade cups!Nebraska's offense wasn't a finesse offense. With an OL not up to traditional Nebraska standards, we remained a run-first offense and a pretty successful one.
We ran a read option offense with a running quarterback and prolific running backs named Helu, Burkhead and Abdullah.
About 40% of the time we passed the ball. No more or less finessey than more successful teams ranked ahead of us. Just less consistent.
We dropped the ball a lot, and killed ourselves with mental breakdowns and stupid penalties. Our quarterbacks have been exciting but flawed.
Historically, our offense held its own with past Nebraska teams. Historically, our defense was among the worst on record.