59bear said:I don't understand the confusion about Baldwin's system. To my (admittedly inexpert) eye, it is what about 80% of the teams in college ball run: QB set deep, receivers set wide with pre-snap motion incorporating some "RPO" or read option elements. It may be too multiple for our skill position talent which, IMO, is rather middling but I think Beau is trying to do what nearly everyone else is doing. The main alternatives seem to be: 1) some version of Leach's Air Raid; 2) some version of a ground based triple option; 3) traditional pro set or some modification thereof. I don't think we have the personnel for either option 1 or 2 and option 3 seems to be evolving at most schools that still use to something more like what we are doing, so I have no problem sticking with what we're doing and continuing to upgrade talent.Fyght4Cal said:
I'm still trying to figure out Baldwin's system. But I do like our emphasis on the run/pass balance. Wilcox always emphasizes the importance of explosive plays (20+ yards). So clearly he wants quick strike capability, along with the ability to sustain drives. I expect that we will remain 'multiple', with increased attention on an effective ground game.
Baldwin's offense is "multiple" and agree that most commonly it was a spread with the QB in shotgun and an RPO element. With nearly all runs between the tackles. WRs each run a pattern, but the patterns have no obvious connection to each other, nothing to get the WR open (the idea is more to spread the defense and have the QB make the right read).. Except when it wasn't. Sometimes it would seem like a grab bag of disparate ideas with plays pulled from a hat. We would go pro set, QB under center, playaction throw to the tight end for a big gain, then never run that again. Basically Baldwin's system is "we can do anything." Like Tedford's 2007-2012 offenses it needed editing. So it wasn't the "system" that was the issue, per se, it was Baldwin developing a coherent strategy and implementing it through effective playcalling that was the issue. Though clearly the heavy reliance on shotgun spread was not a good fit for our WRs and RBs over the last three years.