atticus;536199 said:
Nearly all types of systems can perform at a high level. Simple offenses, complex offenses, spread, pro, pistol, whatever. They can all be great.
I've seen Tedford do a lot of tweaking over the last several years. Maybe he should just stick with something and figure out how to make it work.
Of course, everything is moot when our OL can't block. Many complain about poor play calling, but I think it's simply that Tedford knows that a screen on 3rd and long is realistically the only play that could work when the OL can't block for more than 2 seconds. If our OL performs at a high level, a monkey could install the veer and an ape could call the plays and we'd win 9 games this season.
"The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result."
Maybe adopting a single system and recruiting to it worked for power programs in the days before scholarship limits. However, given the constant personnel turnover in college football, if you are going to get the most from your team and have success, you have to "tweak" the strategy to fit the players you have in any given year. Most years trying to force square pegs into round holes is not going to get the most from your square pegs. Also, there is a great range of talent on most college teams, so it is imperitive that you maximize the use of your best talent.
I agree that IF you have a great OL any system works, but it very unlikely that we have a great OL this year. Rather than write off the year, it makes perfect sense to adopt a strategy that does not require a great line, no?
Similarly, complex systems are great, especially in the NFL where you have virtually unlimited practice time and you can have a QB for more than a decade. However, college has restraints: limited practice time, players that need to go to class and study, and again, constant turnover in personnel so it is often critical for a first year QB (freshman or transfer) to be able to learn and execute your offense in a couple of months.
That is why I really like the direction Tedford is going. He is not changing the system (as far as we can tell), he is just taking a portion of the system that it appropriate for the players we have in 2011 and he is going to work on improving execution of those plays, making sure that he has plenty of misdirection and creativity in there. That (hopefully) will be further refined each game, depending on opponent, and strengths that emerge in the team, with new wrinkles added for creativity and surprise (Harbaugh's Stanford team did this very well last year).
Think of the system as a cookbook of 500+ plays, he is preparing a menu of 100 plays based on the ingredients that are on the shelf or in season. To be consistently successful in college sports, (other than the dominant programs) you have to be flexible.
In some future year when we have a dominant OL again (or even if it emerges this year), Tedford can go back to a more predictable, smash mouth, "establish the run," mentality, because that will be what fits the team.