- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

WTF Is Guilbeau Talking About?
Posted on 3/4/10 at 5:59 am
Posted on 3/4/10 at 5:59 am
quote:
Offensive coordinator Gary Crowton went into 2009 thinking he could do so many things with his offense, and he did.
Unfortunately, few things worked, and he finished 112th in the nation in total offense. Crowton and Gonzales and Miles need to find out just a few things that suits this team best and work on it now.
Variety is the spice of life, but it was the curse of LSU’s offense last year.
That offense was the most bland, obvious, and predictable offense I may have ever witnessed. From people watching on TV to opposing players on the field, they all knew what LSU was going to run before they even lined up.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:08 am to GABlueDog
He is talking about how it seems that Crowton had LSU running under several different offensive mindsets - from spread to pistol option, to throwing in the wildcat with RS, to an I-form. Which is fine, but the packages that Crowton put together were ineffective and because they were, that's where what you were saying came into place - that when we did run the ball, it seemed that the other team knew what was going to happen. When you are effective at doing all the other stuff, then you can run the ball effectively because they have to respect a PA pass and can't just stack up the line.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:12 am to GABlueDog
I actually kinda agree with him. Yeah we were predictable, but we still tried to do a lot of things instead of establishing consistency.
hmmm. I could sometimes guess on down and distance or personnel, but I usually needed to see the formation before I could be sure.
quote:
they all knew what LSU was going to run before they even lined up.
hmmm. I could sometimes guess on down and distance or personnel, but I usually needed to see the formation before I could be sure.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:16 am to ATLTiger
quote:
I actually kinda agree with him
I do too. I like how Gordy Rush described it, "jack of all trades, master of none".
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:18 am to GABlueDog
basically he's saying the Crowton has lots of different formations and looks but only a limited amount of plays out of each formation. IMO, he would be served better by sticking to basic I-Form, pistol, Ace and shotgun formations and drawing up a ton of different plays from each.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:26 am to GABlueDog
quote:
Offensive coordinator Gary Crowton went into 2009 thinking he could do so many things with his offense, and he did.
Unfortunately, few things worked, and he finished 112th in the nation in total offense. Crowton and Gonzales and Miles need to find out just a few things that suits this team best and work on it now.
Variety is the spice of life, but it was the curse of LSU’s offense last year.
That offense was the most bland, obvious, and predictable offense I may have ever witnessed. From people watching on TV to opposing players on the field, they all knew what LSU was going to run before they even lined up.
Miles talked occasionally after games about repeatedly attempting to do what they WANTED to do (run up the middle mainly) instead of what was working. I think watching LSU play it was obvious. The staff ran what they wanted to establish instead of what appeared to be working.
Pretty sure opposing coaches could figure this out as well. Lets hope the addition of Billy G will promote some kind of change to this attitude.
Offensive coordinator Gary Crowton went into 2009 thinking he could do so many things with his offense, and he did.
Unfortunately, few things worked, and he finished 112th in the nation in total offense. Crowton and Gonzales and Miles need to find out just a few things that suits this team best and work on it now.
Variety is the spice of life, but it was the curse of LSU’s offense last year.
That offense was the most bland, obvious, and predictable offense I may have ever witnessed. From people watching on TV to opposing players on the field, they all knew what LSU was going to run before they even lined up.
Miles talked occasionally after games about repeatedly attempting to do what they WANTED to do (run up the middle mainly) instead of what was working. I think watching LSU play it was obvious. The staff ran what they wanted to establish instead of what appeared to be working.
Pretty sure opposing coaches could figure this out as well. Lets hope the addition of Billy G will promote some kind of change to this attitude.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:28 am to Rohan2Reed
quote:
basically he's saying the Crowton has lots of different formations and looks but only a limited amount of plays out of each formation.
+1
and most plays were known by who was in the tailback spot
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:50 am to TheDoc
quote:
basically he's saying the Crowton has lots of different formations and looks but only a limited amount of plays out of each formation.
BINGO +2
Might as well just told them what we were going to run, & that blocking scheme...we better have some more meat on the line for that to work.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 6:54 am to GABlueDog
and another note:
We were always reacting to the defense instead of making the D react to us.
We were always reacting to the defense instead of making the D react to us.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 7:37 am to loogaroo
quote:
We were always reacting to the defense instead of making the D react to us.
This is one of many things that is wrong with Crowton. He has this "Lets confuse the defense by running plays they will never expect" mentality. Every now and then a play will work, but for the most part it causes confusion on offense which probably explains why our players don't know where to line up and why our execution is poor. The best type of offense is the type of offense where the defense KNOWS what you're doing, but still can't stop you. With Crowton, everyone knows what he's doing except the players.
This post was edited on 3/4/10 at 7:39 am
Posted on 3/4/10 at 7:52 am to RogerTheShrubber
quote:
Pretty sure opposing coaches could figure this out as well. Lets hope the addition of Billy G will promote some kind of change to this attitude.
It might help if our quarterback could complete a pass down field.
Without better QB play, predictable is all there is.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 8:09 am to C Lafong
They still won't let Guilbeau watch practice
Posted on 3/4/10 at 8:10 am to C Lafong
its Guilbeau, who cares what he says anyway..he'll be back bashing the Tigers tomorrow..
Posted on 3/4/10 at 8:14 am to GABlueDog
quote:
Crowton and Gonzales and Miles need to find out just a few things that suits this team best and work on it now.
I agree. We tried way tooo many different offensive sets/formations w/ limited success in all. I think part of our struggles is that the offensive guys weren't really comfortable in the schemes bc there were so many....
Posted on 3/4/10 at 10:13 am to Chimlim
Hurry up offense... Look to the sideline for direction... Fail! Crowton GFY!
Posted on 3/4/10 at 10:55 am to C Lafong
quote:
Without better QB play, predictable is all there is.
112th ranked offense for a reason
Popular
Back to top
6









