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re: The game I watched yesterday fell squarely on Chavis's shoulders

Posted on 11/28/10 at 12:17 pm to
Posted by blueTunaTiger
Gulf of Mexico, USA
Member since Feb 2009
3696 posts
Posted on 11/28/10 at 12:17 pm to
quote:

Can you or any one with more knowledge about college football then me please explain why JJ quit rolling out on passing situations.


No one with any rational thought can accurately describe Gary Crowton's offensive play calling. If you talk to people in the know, he out-thinks himself to the point of becoming predictable. That being said, if you roll out, you effectively cut the field in half and eliminate the center of the field, unless there is some sort of throw-back. There were huge openings in the center, but the offensive line failed with the protection.

Look closely at the game-plan and what LSU attempted in the 1st half. The sacks to Jefferson were made while attempting to exploit the center of the field. However, the offensive line was getting pushed around all over the place and JJ didn't have any time to throw.

The other thing which was mind boggling was the snap counts and ARKY getting jumps like they knew when the ball was being snapped. During teh Auburn game, Nick Fairley made double and triple teams look stupid because he was jumping the snap count. This also falls back on the coaches not changing the cadence, or even recognizing such.

If you go back and listen to the post game press conferences of the opposing team's PLAYERS, nearly everyone interviewed either hints or outright states they knew what LSU was going to run, or when they were snapping the ball. The All-American on West Virginia's defensive line was adamant about knowing what Crowton was calling. He was upset because even though they KNEW what was coming, they could not stop it. On a couple of plays in that game, JJ even audibled into run plays when they already had 8 in the box. The WVa linemen admitted that as well.

I have not done this, but if you were to run a regression analysis with the down, player personnel, formation, and QB as variables, I would almost bet the house that the play selection would be narrowed down to 1 or 2 plays. THIS has been Crowton's MO for years 2 and 3 of his stints at various programs. He outsmarts himself setting up the "mis-direction" without ever getting to the prize. I explained this exact concept to my 14 year old Godson 3 weeks ago, and he called every deep pitch dive with Ridley the past two games.

The reason JLee was so effective in his 1st few appearances was he had not been long enough for defenses to build the database. Yet, as he played more, it was easy to predict what was getting ready to happen. Go back and look at JJ's 2 minute offense. It's all improvisation, so the defense can't get a jump on what's coming. This is also the case when they go to the "hurry-up" during other times in the game. That's why he's so much more effective in that set.
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