Started By
Message

re: Gus Malzahn

Posted on 12/7/08 at 1:45 pm to
Posted by Tigercoop40
Northwest Arkansas
Member since Apr 2006
7539 posts
Posted on 12/7/08 at 1:45 pm to
I agree that LSU's offense has become predictable.
Against Arkansas LSU had i think 9 3 and outs in the 2nd half that helped spark Arkansas's comeback.
Gus Malzahn has installed a offense that many teams now are running. LSU even runs it, even tho we do it pathetically.
I grew up around Gus Malzahn and have played in his offense and i think the tigers would be very benefited if he became our coordinator.
He is a very hard working coach and continues to find holes in defenses.
Also he knows how to use talent that the team has. LSU this year normally ran Scott up the middle, Holliday on the sweep, Hatch on the option, or Lee's int for a TD. Malzahn tho found ways to get McFadden, Felix, Fish, and the other skill players at Arkansas the ball.
But evidentally his "highschool offense" works cause wherever hes been those teams have had one of the nations highest ranked offenses in the nation.

not saying Crowton should leave, just needs to become less predictable and Malzahn is a good coach.
Posted by crazy4lsu
Member since May 2005
36350 posts
Posted on 12/7/08 at 1:57 pm to
quote:


That is not what I'm saying at all. I mention those programs because they call games offensively the way I do.


I can understand that, but there have been times when those coaches have made calls that were not good. But there is a difference.

quote:

I agree with you that just because a mistake is made it is stupid to stop being aggressive


The difference between those coaches at those schools you mentioned and LSU is that they bounce back, show confidence in their team through their playcalls. In 2004, we lost a couple of games that I think you could say were entirely due to Saban/Fisher's mishandling of the QB situation, where you could see each QB lacked confidence in himself because the coaches lacked confidence.

This year, Jarret Lee might be destroyed as a football player because of the lack of confidence that our coaches showed in him, in my opinion. They were trying to make him do things that he couldn't do, i.e. hit passes up the middle with precision like Flynn could do, instead of letting him air it out along the sidelines, setting up wide receiver screens that allowed playmakers space. One thing Fischer was great at was WR screens; we were the best in the nation at arrow screens and inside screens, and I thought with Crowton's background, we might keep that up, which doesn't seem to be the case.

This year, at least I hoped, made Miles/Crowton aware of their how much holding back players, making them think too much, hurts a teams confidence. We played best this year when the players were allowed to play, i.e. JL against Auburn and Troy.

The reason I don't think Miles will ever be a great coach is that his he loses confidence in his players too easily, which affects how the game is called. Sometimes Miles is brilliantly aggressive, and other times you wonder whether he knows anything about the game. It is odd that between 2005-2007, our teams always had confidence that they could overcome any deficit. If Miles can find that again, then maybe LSU can bounce back and win the SEC, or at least compete for it, next year. Like always, it seems that the year for Miles is the next year.
first pageprev pagePage 3 of 3Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram