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re: The weakest part of the offense is WR play

Posted on 10/24/23 at 10:04 am to
Posted by jangalang
Member since Dec 2014
37069 posts
Posted on 10/24/23 at 10:04 am to
quote:

If he's a real coach, he can find something in the players he's got. We'd see something of offense that looks like a bright spot for the future. I see nothing.
Well I've seen what Hugh can do already, so I'm not worried about whether he can coach or not. I think he can and he has proven it.

quote:

Sounds like the excuses people made for Tuberville/Malzahn in 1999-2001. "We just need to give them time to recruit for their system."

Tuberville did pretty well developing players. He is not applicable here.
Posted by FlyDownTheField
Member since Dec 2013
1770 posts
Posted on 10/24/23 at 11:19 am to
The issue isn't any one offense group. It's all of them that are sub-par. Sometimes having one group being sub-par can be made up if the other group/groups are good.

We don't have a good Line, QB or WR.

If the WRs get wide open, then the QBS will throw a bad pass. If the QB throws a good pass, the WRs will drop it. And both of those are dependent on good pass blocking allowing the QB to throw it.

The stars have to align perfectly for us to complete a pass.

This post was edited on 10/24/23 at 11:20 am
Posted by CharlesUFarley
Daphne, AL
Member since Jan 2022
248 posts
Posted on 10/24/23 at 12:40 pm to
quote:

Tuberville did pretty well developing players. He is not applicable here.


My mistake. I intended to type Mazzone (Tubberville's first OC at Auburn) but muscle memory made me type "Malzahn". Different issues.

I also take exception to that player development claim, but freeze still has time to prove or disprove that.
This post was edited on 10/24/23 at 12:43 pm
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