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re: Dispelling the myth of "3rd and Chavis"

Posted on 7/29/15 at 9:50 am to
Posted by KaiserSoze99
Member since Aug 2011
31669 posts
Posted on 7/29/15 at 9:50 am to
The 2-minute D is a problem that I can understand. With the exeption of the 44-41 Georgia game, most of the time, the offensive production was pitiful. I am sure Chavis' response to his critics would be that the defense was too tired to play man cover that late in the game and he went to a10-yard cushion to prevent his tired DBs from getting burned and giving up a big play.

It is still not an excuse. If the offense sucks arse, it is his job to make sure his D players are properly conditioned.
Posted by Guava Jelly
Bawston
Member since Jul 2009
11652 posts
Posted on 7/29/15 at 12:02 pm to
quote:

am sure Chavis' response to his critics would be that the defense was too tired to play man cover that late in the game


If this is his excuse, he's either a liar or he's just dumb. And his problem will only get worse at TAMU.

Time of possession is usually a pretty worthless stat, but in this instance it means rest for the defense. Miles' game is ball control. Since Chavis got to LSU the average time of possession is roughly 31 minutes. That puts LSU teams at or near the top of the league every year.

Meanwhile, over the same timespan Sumlin's teams (at UH and TAMU) averaged roughly 27 minutes in TOP.

Now on the surface, 4 minutes doesn't seem like a lot of rest. But remember this is game clock. The average length of current college football games in real time is 3hrs 23 mins, or 203 minutes.

Thus one game minute is about 4 mins 13 seconds in real time on average. Which means that a 4 minute difference in TOP equates to nearly 17 minutes in real time.





TL,DR
But your argument is invalid.
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