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Comments
I'm not fluent in Air Raid offensive design, so who takes care of OLB's when they crowd the LOS? That was typically Charlie Woerner's blocking responsibility.
Have a hard time seeing Newman with that many passing yds. Would be 300/game over 15 game schedule. Did you mean 4500 total yds (I don't think the post specified)? I just don't see Newman playing enough snaps to throw that much. Hopefully there will be multiple games where the backups are playing the last 1 - 1.5 qtrs.
I think it's also worth noting that while Monken has a clear track record of success on offense it wasn't done against SEC defenses. The quality of defense of the opposition may hold the totals down a little. Love the dig into the numbers, though!
Great points. I thought about lowering all of my numbers to factor in SEC defenses. Then I thought about what Burrow did last year.
I'm not saying Newman is on Burrow's level. Or that we can replicate LSU's offensive production. My projections actually reflect those realities.
Burrow: 5,671/60/6
Newman: 4,500/38/12
@texdawg Is this one you can answer?
@kurganofprussia?
@LBCoach?
Am I missing any of the coaches?
5 to block 5. Blitzes are normally accounted for by quick game pass concepts and they leave a lot of one on one matchups. There is almost always an oh **** route to the backside as well.
The inside zone read with an RPO makes blitzing very risky.
I figured the answer was something like that. My less artful way of saying it, at least from what I've seen of Monken, is that he will make you pay a steep price for being over aggressive on defense.
@SoFL_Dawg or anyone else who wants to take a stab at this.
Which RB will benefit the most from Monken's offense?
I've already gone on the record that I think Zamir will put up great numbers as the lead back. I'm more curious about Cook, McIntosh, and Edwards.
Different skill sets for each. I think ALL benefit from Monken's philosophy, especially his affinity for utilizing backs in the pass game. But there's a wide range of possible outcomes here.
Cook could go for 500/500, or he could remain a relative non-factor. McIntosh could go for 750/250, or he could be an afterthought. Edwards could splash the scene and claim a lot of those yards for himself, or maybe he has to wait a year before getting any action.
Milton is obviously a factor as well, but he's kinda in another category. Feel free to weigh in there if you like.
What say you?
I think I’d lean Zeus as well just because his talent pre injury was just so much greater than the rest of the room. Considering two years removed from last injury, hopefully the stability and more importantly the confidence has fully returned. In addition, the weapons on the perimeter and the TE talent, there should be less defenders in the box to stop Zeus. Newman is also another threat to account for. Hopefully Zeus does enough to secure a second round pick up. Can’t take him in the first with the injuries despite fresh legs.
I also think Cook could take huge steps forward, showcase his versatility in time to be drafted in the 3rd-4th round next year. Hopefully Monken figures out how to scheme him against LBs and Cook has to make a play in passing game; he hasn’t showcased the ability to beat SEC opponents one on one yet.
Thanks for weighing in, SoFL. If I can follow up, two questions: (1) do you think Cook has any chance to get substantial carries, or will he be mostly a receiving threat; and (2) is McIntosh in the driver's seat to be RB2, or do you think Milton/Edwards either/both could take that from him?
On Cook sure there’s a chance but he’s gotta he more productive running through arm tackles. He just hasn’t shown any contact toughness or enough wiggle given his opportunities.
On McIntosh, I think the versatility does have him primed for RB2 in addition to what’s going on with Cook above. Milton has struggled running routes/catching the rock in 7 on 7. Going to take some time there but if he’s moving the chains when given opportunities, his size is a competitive advantage in that room.
From the handful of games I've watched from his Osu days, he seems to work the field horizontally, creating creases for big plays. I watched the Texas game from 2012, Manny Diaz was the DC at UT. It seemed like they had 4 or 5 formations and just played with pace. No real traditional TE usage, they'd bring in a 6th OL on those situations.
I watched a half from a So. Miss bowl game in 2015 and it was a totally different product. More typical run formations with TE/H-back type guys. Downhilll run, short pass game attack. Really balanced offense.
I'm curious to see how he calls games at UGA. He's shown he can adapt to what he has at his disposal and be highly productive. Flipping the So. Miss program is grossly underappreciated IMO.
He has NFL experience.He's been very successful in the NFL. He seems like more of a WR guy than a QB guy and that causes a bit of pause but he's a professional. I think I remember his name coming up for the Packers HC opening but didn't get much traction, obviously highly respected. Feels a lot like a "prove it" type stint that'd get him right back into NFL coaching searches.Side note: on offense we now have an OC who was a former HC at a G5 school and NFL OC. An O-line coach who has SEC HC experience. RB coach who was an interim HC at a G5 school. That's a TON of highly qualified individuals on that side of the ball. This staff has a totally different feel for me, in a good way. Kirby is surrounding himself with guys who have legitimate credentials. I'm excited.
I hope we trust who ever plays QB enough that we never run the ball with more than 6 players in the box.
Great post!