Favorite team:
Location:
Biography:
Interests:
Occupation:
Number of Posts:394
Registered on:12/9/2010
Online Status:Not Online

Recent Posts

Message

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/17/15 at 8:21 am
quote:

The biggest difference in between the two is the responsibility of the skill players (QB, RBs, Wrs) & the center. In spread offense, every aspect is predetermined & any audibles whether it's a route adjustment, change from run to pass or vice versa, or change in protection all come from the sideline. In a pro style, it's the responsibility of those skill players to read their keys to make the adjustments themselves.


This statement is simply not true at all. There are a lot of spread offenses in college football that do allow post snap adjustments by the QB and who he reads and what route the RB's & WR's run based on the coverage, alignment and leverage of the secondary.

quote:

The spread is simplified & easier to digest but if a defense can adjust & audible after the second call comes from the sideline then a defense can create problems.


The ony adjustment pre snap that comes from the sidelines for quote "Spread" teams is when they are freezing or freeze looking a defense. That is when the defense makes the second call to either stick with the defense called or audible to something different.

quote:

That's the whole reason the majority of spread offenses go uptempo to negate the ability for a defense to audible.


No it's not. The main reason the spread offenses go no huddle is because tempo is the great equalizer. Defensive lineman as a whole are always going to be superior athletes compared to offensive lineman. The reason for Tempo is to wear out the defense especially the defensive line so over the course of the game the Offense can can begin to imposs their will physically because when a man gets tired his mind goes. Physical fatigue makes a coward of all men.

quote:

The spread is simplified & easier to digest


Which is why so many teams across America at every level of football are having so much success with running spread offenses. If you can get a great athlete on the field going fast as possible and not having to think about so many things because he knows how to line up, where to line up, where he's going then his talent will be maximized. When players have to think they slow down because doubt is created. The beauty of a lot (NOT ALL) spread offenses is that you aren't trying to reinvent the wheel or build rocket ships. Remember at the end of the day it's just football it's not nuclear physics. A lot of good coaches outsmart themselves because they try to make football a lot more complicated than it really is.

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:41 pm
quote:

You're right. Coaches do.



X 1,000 :cheers:

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:38 pm
quote:

When the OC can signal a touchdown before the quarterback releases the ball, you know the quarterback isn't the one making the read.


You've never been a coach obviously

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:28 pm
quote:

‘It’s doomsday if we don’t adapt and evolve’


Wish Les Miles thought this way

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:23 pm
quote:

Our offense next year will be nothing short of amazing to watch


Been hearing this line for the last 8 years

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:22 pm
quote:

You can't have gaps in QB recruiting or you will pay the price.


This statement is true no matter what offense you run. You also can't fail to DEVELOPE the talent you bring in. LSU doing that? Meh, not so much.

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:20 pm
quote:

You guys are missing the real question. If spread offenses are easier to learn AND we keep recruiting the top tier dual threat guys AND we have better athletes at the skill positions than 95% of the colleges in the world then there is one inescapable conclusion....
We should run the spread.
Our athletes running all over the field combined with our shutdown defense would be a potent combination!


Ding Ding Ding we have a winner, what do we have for him Johnny!!! :popcorn:

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:17 pm
quote:

You're essentially saying that it's better for LSU to run a more complex, NFL style offense than constrains our team's offensive production for a few years while the QBs adapt to the system, only so that our QBs are more "NFL ready" by the time they leave.


You're trying to make sense bro, don't do that. :lol:

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:15 pm
Dude you say stuff that I'm thinking for real! You seem like the kind've LSU fan that I could actually have a rational conversation with. You're all over the real issues at hand. I'm with you, who gives a freak about the NFL. This College Football and LSU's job is to win and do whatever it takes to win by using all the talent they have at their disposal with coaches that will put them in the BEST position to be successful play in and play out, game in and game out, year in and year out. The one thing that all my non LSU friends always say to me about LSU's offense and lack of good QB play year after year is this: "At the end of the day, it's simple your mother freaking LSU, how do you not have elite QB's and an elite offense with all the freaks ya'll have at the skill positions year after year". That's the really sad truth of it all, it really does boil down to scheme, the head coaches personality and what he is willing to do or in Les Miles case NOT willing to do on offense to be successful.

:geauxtigers:

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:06 pm
quote:

How about our coaching staff worry about developing college quarterbacks?


quote:

N COLLEGE, which is the level LSU plays, Clemson is better at getting quarterback production. That can't be disputed.


quote:

And the NFL comparison is ignorant. For one, there are only 32 starting quarterbacks in the entire league. Any school's chances of getting more than one quarterback to "tear up the league" are slim to freaking none.


quote:

And, secondly, how many LSU quarterbacks are "tearing up the league" right now?


Look an LSU fan who is actually smart and has common sense. I have a want to see more posts like this that is truth. Good Job! :cheers:

re: BH "still just a true sophomore QB"

Posted by Kunka on 9/15/15 at 8:00 pm
quote:

Harris is being developed to run LSU's style of offense, which is more multiple than the spread shite you see with 95% of college teams


Multiple doesn't equate to being better. I think we can all attest to that truth in regards to LSU's offense in the last 8 years. That spread shite that you speak of is a whole hell of a lot more productive and hard to defend than what LSU has been doing on offense in the last decade. You don't see coaches across the country beating down doors to come see what LSU is doing on offense and trying to add it to their game. You see coaches across the country going to places like Oregon, Baylor, Texas A&M, UCLA, Cal, Auburn, West Virginia, Texas Tech, TCU just to name a few because they want to stay on the cutting edge of football and not be stock in the 1970's like LSU does with Miles.

re: No one complained in 2011

Posted by Kunka on 9/13/15 at 12:56 pm
I've been frustrated since the Auburn game in 2006.
Tom Brady, Joe Montana, John Elway, Peyton Manning, Dan Marino could be the QB at LSU and it wouldn't matter. We are going to always consistently run the ball into 8-10 man boxes and let all those freak athletes stand on the sidelines in the LSU uniform looking pretty and wasting their talent because by God this is the 1970's and we are going to be a tough Michigan football team and be tougher than the other team by God, even if we lose we'll know we were the tougher team, NOT the smartest team just the toughest. Watching LSU's offense is like watching a constipated person try to take a crap, it's incredibly painful to watch. It's like watching someone die a slow death

re: I wonder if Steele...

Posted by Kunka on 9/13/15 at 12:21 pm
Sadly he is serious and that's how ignorant, blind and stupid most LSU fans are about Miles and his offensive philosphy. Tom Brady, Joe Montana, John Elway, Peyton Manning, Dan Marino could be the QB at LSU and it wouldn't matter. We are going to always consistently run the ball into 8-10 man boxes and let all those freak athletes stand on the sidelines in the LSU uniform looking pretty and wasting their talent because by God this is the 1970's and we are going to be a tough Michigan football team and be tougher than the other team by God, even if we lose we'll know we were the tougher team, NOT the smartest team just the toughest. Watching LSU's offense is like watching a constipated person try to take a crap, it's incredibly painful to watch. It's like watching someone die a slow death.

re: I wonder if Steele...

Posted by Kunka on 9/13/15 at 12:09 pm
Fixed it for ya

Les's style puts an incredible amount of pressure on the Defense
:wtf:

re: Manny Miles

Posted by Kunka on 6/5/13 at 12:19 am
If anythings for certain he has the chest to play any position.



:rotflmao:
quote:

We scored a lot of points in 2011


Yep sure did, thanks to a ton of turnovers by the defense and special teams. LSU's offense has sucked a major donkey dick the last 5 years.

re: Cam and the triple option?

Posted by Kunka on 4/10/13 at 2:37 pm
The only difference between the Triple option from under center and in the gun is who the QB reads. In the gun the read is the backside DE just like Zone read. The first read under center is the 1, 2 or 3 technique of the DT.

re: Cam and the triple option?

Posted by Kunka on 4/10/13 at 2:17 pm
All 3 of those teams run the Triple option out of the gun with a lot of success. :popcorn:

re: Cam and the triple option?

Posted by Kunka on 4/10/13 at 2:12 pm
quote:

Triple Option is garbage


Tell that to Oregon, Arizona & Nevada