Mavric is now trying to turn an argument about how many oline players should rotated that has somehow shifted to an argument about which players were truly the best 5 last year into an argument about whether the offensive system is the right fit. This trail of weird tangents is pretty funny to watch.
That is the heart of the argument. It seems pretty obvious that most of the reason why certain players played over others - both on the offensive line and in the backfield - was because they were better pass blockers. Several players have said that themselves. It's pretty obvious that the coaches favored players who were better pass blockers.
Actually, you're the one trying to shift the argument. We weren't discussing is the offensive system is the right fit. We were discussing which players fit the system. There's a difference.
I haven't shifted anything, the argument was about 1) why the staff doesn't rotate more on the o-line and now 2) which 5 should have been playing and why certain players were playing over others. Somehow the 2nd was the immediate go to once Milt blew up the argument on 1. Your the one that made a statement about the offensive system being the wrong system due to the high number on INTs and that the coaches know they need to modify it going forward.
Wrong. Go read the thread again.
The question was posed wondering if we were really playing the best 5 guys. I agreed, saying I think the coaches were intent on playing the best five pass blockers, not necessarily the best five lineman overall and noted that the backups seemed to play as well or better than the starters when given a chance later in the season. It was In the Deed the Glory and you who brought up using a different system.
Just because you took the time to reply I went and reread the entire thread again and my assessment still stands. Yes you had a post or two about why certain players were playing over others, but Colorado Husk and yourself turned it into an argument about whether Langs's system is the right fit. Here is a quick synopsis:
The initial post was the story about Milt addressing the fan argument that Cav should have substituted more last year because that is what was done in the glory years. Rotate linemen while the game was still in the balance to get backups ready to play, Milt's interview pretty much blasted this one away.
The real question IMO is are we starting our actual best 5? The main reason I wanted some rotation last year is b/c I thought there were guys not getting a chance to play that were better than what was on the field.
The argument then shifted to whether or not Cav played the "BEST" starting 5 linemen.
The real question IMO is are we starting our actual best 5? The main reason I wanted some rotation last year is b/c I thought there were guys not getting a chance to play that were better than what was on the field.
This. Last year we were told that there was a noticeable gap between the starters and the second string. Yet when those backups got a chance to play later in the year, they played just as well or better.
I think the actual reason was much closer to "the starters can pass block better."
Gerald Foster was one player who many thought was a dominant run blocker during practice, but because he wasn't the best pass blocker he didn't start.
I understand needing to do "all aspects of the job", but this is where Riley's/Langsdorf's/Cav's focus on the pass game gets in the way of a successful run game.
The second conversation about the "best" 5 players continued into more about why they didn't play as a result of the Coaches's philosophy of playing the 5 linemen that could run their system the best as opposed to whom the fans think should be starting instead. Colorado Husk makes the first post in a shift to a 3rd argument about whether or not the Offensive system is the right system, with a nod to the "run the ball!" cry that has been popular since the middle part of last season.
So now we are upset that the guys playing are the ones that fit the coach's system not the one we want them to run.
Makes perfect sense.
Well, the coaches' system led the nation in interceptions, was a big part of having a 6-7 record and was admitted by the coaches that they probably should have been doing things differently during the year.
So ..... yeah.
Deed points out how far the argument has shifted from why the lack of rotation to posters complaining about which starting 5 were playing and finally to complaining about the system being run. Then you have a post that continues on the theme that Colorado Husk started by blasting the offensive system.
So now we are upset that the guys playing are the ones that fit the coach's system not the one we want them to run.
Makes perfect sense.
Well, the coaches' system led the nation in interceptions, was a big part of having a 6-7 record and was admitted by the coaches that they probably should have been doing things differently during the year.
So ..... yeah.
You are really reaching on this one...
Stumpy, before people jump down your throat, I think you should specify why you disagree.
Mavric is now trying to turn an argument about how many oline players should rotated that has somehow shifted to an argument about which players were truly the best 5 last year into an argument about whether the offensive system is the right fit. This trail of weird tangents is pretty funny to watch.
I simply point out where you, and also Colorado Husk, have taken this topic to a 3rd topic derailment. The thread started on the topic of the lack of o-line rotation, then it went to which 5 o-linemen should be playing, and finally to complaining about the system being played. The last 2 topics have a connection since the primary reason the 5 starting o-linemen were chosen was because of system fit, but yourself and Colorado Husk took the argument a step farther to complain about the system and not just which o-linemen should be in the starting 5. I am not sure how you can claim that In the Deed and myself shifted the argument since both of us simply commented on the changing narrative, but I guess we can agree to disagree.