We are poor little lambs who have lost our way.

Kirby Smart, pre-37-10:

LSU and Alabama, likewise, are playing to the strength of their talents, Smart explained.

“We’re not built like those two teams, we’re built very differently, and that’s not always by nature,” Smart said. “It wasn’t like all of a sudden Alabama decided they were going to throw the ball all the time. They got a stellar group of wideouts in one gathering. It’s like they all came in at once and became really good players.

“Same thing at LSU. I mean LSU, they’ve had good wideouts over the years. But they have a really stellar group at the same time, along with a transfer quarterback who has been impactful. So I don’t know that philosophically both those guys made huge changes, as much as they inherited two quarterbacks who are unique, who can do special things, and they’ve got some special players around them.”

Kirby Smart, post-37-10:

Q. Kirby, what’s the biggest thing about LSU’s offense that just kind of took the SEC by storm this year? Is it the quarterback, the play calling, the running back, combination of all of it? What can you put your finger on?
KIRBY SMART: That’s a great question. First of all, I’ve been in this league for a long time, and I don’t know that I’ve seen the combination of things they’ve got. They’ve got an elite quarterback that’s a really good athlete. They have a back that is a matchup guy. He can match up on anybody and go in. They’ve got really good wideouts, and they’ve got an experienced offensive line. So they go tempo, but they don’t go tempo to just run the ball, they go tempo and take shots. They never change personnel. It’s like 28 consecutive snaps with the same people on the field. So it does not allow you to substitute in the pattern that you want to.

So there’s a combination of a lot of things, and it is scheme oriented, [Emphasis added} but it’s a lot more than scheme. They have plays that they’ve run all year, that we’ve run all year. Our plays haven’t looked like their plays because a lot of times we might not have the same guys doing those plays.

They’ve got a great group of wideouts combined with an extremely athletic quarterback, and it hit at the right time. I’ve got a lot of respect for what they’re doing and who they’re doing it with. They’re hard to defend.

He really wants to sell what happened yesterday as a personnel issue, which is a somewhat remarkable admission from a guy who’s coaching reputation is built on a recruit first approach.

Now, I’m not totally unsympathetic to his point.  Georgia was short-handed on offense yesterday and I’ll concede it’s well within the realm of probability that may have contributed to the scope of the loss.  But it’s awfully simplistic to boil everything down to this:

I’m not a coaching savant like Smart, nor does anyone pay me $7 million a year to figure things like that out.  But what I keep coming back to is Coley’s comment in the preseason that success in being an offensive coordinator is remembering that it’s about “players, not plays”.  Does anybody really believe that Georgia’s offensive game plan is similar to LSU’s in that regard?

If you want some idea of how scheme matters, take a look at this chart Andy Staples ($$) put together:

staples_qb_comp_12.07

QB No. 1 is Jake Fromm, this season.  QB No. 2 is Joe Burrow, last season.  You tell me what’s changed between them.

Let’s face it — Georgia’s 2019 offensive philosophy is about Kirby Smart, not players.  How else do you explain the reluctance to employ tempo?  The SECCG was no exception to what we’ve seen in every other game this year.  When the offense goes up-tempo, it works.  Fromm relaxes.  The team gets in a rhythm.  The ball moves downfield.  (And, inevitably, it seems, a defender suffers an injury.)  Despite that, Coley simply won’t stick with it for any long period of time.

Why?  Because Georgia is addicted to substituting.  It’s in Smart’s DNA.  Read the first paragraph from that presser quote of his again.  LSU ran 28 straight plays in 11 formation yesterday.  Certainly that frustrated Smart the defensive whiz who loves matching players to situations, but it’s also an alien concept to him on offense, because it’s ingrained in his approach that mixing and matching personnel and sets is the way to go, even if his quarterback’s performance suffers.

And it clearly has.  Fromm finishes 2019 failing to complete 50% of his pass attempts in five straight games.  Think about that for a minute.  Not only is that a remarkable regression on the part of a junior quarterback who is the national leader in consecutive starts, but it’s a stat that’s virtually unheard of for a current top five team.  Even if, arguing for a moment that the South Carolina loss never happened, Georgia had made the CFP field, there’s no way it would have held up in a group with elite quarterbacks at the three undefeated teams that are the top seeds.  Nobody competent plays offensive football like that anymore.

Kirby clearly wants to point fingers at his receiving corps.

“The first two years, Jake’s numbers were better, so the indicator of that was four wide receivers were on our sideline that were drafted that are playing in the NFL,” Smart said. “And the loss of those wideouts, the vertical threat, has probably hurt our team. That’s my responsibility, right, to replace them. That’s my responsibility to replace them in recruiting, and we probably haven’t done a good enough job of that.”

Too simple.  It’s not just a matter of replacing departures with recruits.  Hell, Pickens and Blaylock aren’t perfect, but as true freshmen they’ve certainly been bigger contributors this season than several returning players.  The problem this season hasn’t just been talent; it’s been player development just as much, if not more.  We’ve already discussed shortcomings like route running, technique and downfield blocking out the wazoo.  By game thirteen, there’s simply no excuse for players like Landers and Simmons to have shown little to no improvement over the course of a season.

There really isn’t.  Look on the other side of the ball, where we saw true freshmen and other newcomers making a meaningful impact against a dominant offense.  Player development has been a strong suit for Smart’s defense.

The reason I suspect it’s not so much the case for Georgia’s offense is because of the subservient role it’s expected to play to the defense.  For Smart, the first responsibility of the offense is to wear the other team’s defense down over four quarters and control the clock, making the defense’s job easier.  When that doesn’t happen, it leads to close games against teams with inferior offenses and 37-10 losses to teams with dominant ones.  (And, I might add, after a season of judgment about receivers’ ability to block as a measure of game time, complaints from the head coach about a lack of explosiveness.)

And that’s what Kirby’s real responsibility is now.  Kick ass results on the recruiting trail are nice, but where the rubber meets the road is figuring out how to turn that into a means of keeping up with the Alabamas, Clemsons, LSUs and Ohio States of the world.

There’s more than one way to skin the proverbial cat of protecting a defense.  Endless read option calls when the quarterback never keeps the ball isn’t one of them, at least not anymore.  It’s up to Smart to figure out a different and successful path forward from that.

67 Comments

Filed under Georgia Football, Strategery And Mechanics

67 responses to “We are poor little lambs who have lost our way.

  1. gastr1

    I read a preview article that mentioned that LSU doesn’t substitute much on offense. At that point I was really worried that our defense would be cooked.
    There is no doubt that complementary football is important. Paul Johnson never learned this lesson, and he was a genius. But there has to be a way to balance this (there is, obviously– even Oklahoma is figuring that out).

    I hope Kirby is more like Saban, Orgeron, and even Dabo in that sense. I guess we’ll soon find out if he is –or if he’s ultimately Richt 2.0.

    Like

    • Bulldog Joe

      The tempo / core 11 was the same approach successfully used against Georgia last season in Baton Rouge. Can’t say Georgia was not prepared for it. Georgia did a better job overall on gap coverage and getting players in position, but the three man + spy contain approach was not executed well and was easily defeated.

      Successful offenses are often measured by how good they are at improvising when the primary play options are covered. The playoff teams, Baylor, Oregon, and Virginia were good at it this weekend and LSU did improvisation better than all of them.

      We’ve also seen improvisation from Georgia’s offense in recent seasons.

      Just not this season.

      Like

  2. The other Doug

    Great point about Kirby’s addiction to substituting. I never made the connection to the offense doing it also. I wonder if Saban substitutes on offense a lot?

    Smart protects the defense at all cost is the same as what Muschamp did at Florida, so he knows how that ends.

    The coaches break down the film, so regardless of what BS Kirby says in the presser he does know where the problem is. Might be Fromm or it might be him. Coley isn’t great, but I ended the season realizing that he calls an ok game.

    The best solution for Smart is to bring in a better OC who can run that side for him. Chaney was that kind of guy and it worked. Maybe that’s Bobo or maybe it’s someone else.

    As for Fromm, he’s the guy next year so there needs to be a plan to get more out of him.

    Like

  3. George Jones

    I’m glad to see some accountability questions being directed at Kirby Smart. During the off-season all we heard was about all that 5 star talent that Georgia had stacked like cordwood and yet they managed to look totally out manned and outclassed by LSU. That’s coaching and it begins with the head man.

    Like

  4. Kirby needs to find his Kiffin: an insubordinate jackass who just happens to actually be correct in dragging him kicking and screaming into the modern times.

    Like

    • The other Doug

      I kind of agree. I don’t want a Kiffin type guy at UGA, but that’s what it took for Saban to move and Saban knew he had to do it.

      Like

      • Well the only reason it happened is because Kiffin didn’t listen to him. Saban would rant and rave and the Kiffin would do whatever he was going to do anyway. Once the results were undeniable, Saban saw the light.

        Like

  5. Greg

    Spot on…..changing OC will do no good until Kirby changes – and I do not look for that to happen.

    Like

  6. Dylan Dreyer's Booty

    We didn’t have any where near this kind of problem when Chaney was OC. And I know that is probably an oversimplification, but I sometimes wonder if Chaney was asked to leave by CKS because he kept telling Kirby he knew what he was doing and Kirby basically suggested that if he wanted to go elsewhere he wouldn’t stop him, and maybe that means that there isn’t anything wrong with Coley except that he isn’t willing to tell Kirby to leave him alone and let him do his job.

    The game would have been much closer if we had Cager, and Blaylock and Pickens for a whole game, (or if Simmons or Landers could catch a cold), and we may have even won, but even with the injuries we can play better than we showed last night. C’mon Kirby, look across the field at the other head coach. He had a huge problem, and he realized it and went out and got a new OC and let him work. YMMV, but give it a chance.

    Like

    • Oeaux did not get a new OC. Ensminger is still the OC and QB coach. Brady came in to provide a new spin on the passing game. Oeaux got out of the way and look what happened.

      Like

  7. 69Dawg

    Let’s face the big problem Kirby cares more about how well his coaches recruit than how well they coach. This might work for the defense since Kirby coaches them exclusively (our DC is just a title given to a good recruiter). Where it sucks is the offense. Chaney lost his QB coaching position to Coley last year and we now have a Jake that has gone backward to the point the announcers that once praised him for his field general abilities are noticing his lack of mechanics.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Mayor

      Yeah. Whatever happened to the Jake Fromm who was “like having a coach on the field?”

      Like

      • Macallanlover

        Yeah,how did he get “struck stupid”, forget how to throw the ball, read a defense, you know, forget how to play QB? We have folks here that believe that.

        Like

  8. Reality is lack of (Quality)depth at skills positions. The need to overuse Swift due to lack of WR production and missing Herrien some resulted in a similar situation that Auburn had with Kerryon late in season.
    The change in LSU’s production points exactly to what CKS states, their schemes due to addition of Brady help them to make quantum leap in production. That he(Brady) probably noticed they D trends in the SEC vs HUNH O’s pointed him to scheme with present on field personnel and distribute ball in your D’s weakness. Note how many times last night(and this season) where they shifted RB out wide to open middle of the field and then exploit that. Not to mention you’ve got to give Burrow credit for the backbreaking plays he made via his feet.
    Without a doubt Offensive areas need to be addressed but the reality is that Dawgs fielded the youngest playing depth in the league which bodes well for the next few seasons. Emphasis on the obvious (which to his credit CKS acknowledged and owned last night) WR improvement and depth, RB depth and QB depth/production.
    Eyes seem to be on possibly Bobo coming back as OC/Co-OC but one that needs to be at least be given a look is Rich Rod from Ole Miss. given their O production vs SEC West opposition with primarily Frosh skills. Imagine that with Dawgs OL depth/quality.
    FWIW-FL can thank Dawgs for helping to increase their Spring Game attendance in 2020.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. 69Dawg

    I got call away. Lets face it we basically let a QB go because he felt he was not being used and that he felt capable of competing. He is now in the Playoffs and we are not. If that does not tell you all you need to know about Kirby and his lack of concern for his offense nothing can. By the way OSU let Burrows transfer and then got Fields to take his place. It will be interesting to see them play each other. The transfer portal has made this CFP the first with 3 out of four QB’s being transfers. Also 2 out of the four are GA boys. Everybody but Lawrence played in the SEC at some point. Weird times indeed.
    I’ll be watching how many of our offensive 5* go into the portal.

    Like

    • The other Doug

      3 out of the 4 QBs that are in the playoffs transferred.

      Liked by 1 person

    • Bat City Dawg

      the empirical evidence last december was that Fromm > Fields. Tough to argue how it shook up at that time. The more concerning thing, is summarized nicely in this post above, is that Fields, a guy who looked clueless last year, yet would likely win the heisman any other year were it not for Burrow. There is nothing more indicting of our scheme/philosophy. If your scheme requires Manning/Brady football IQ at the qb position, it is a bad scheme. If your only reliable throw is the back shoulder fade, you have a bad scheme.

      To get to the point in your profession that Kirby is at, it requires a ton of intelligence, hard work, and a ton of ego. These guys typically fail when ego starts to dictated decisions.

      Liked by 2 people

      • Classic City Canine

        Agreed. Our scheme is bad and I’m afraid Kirby’s ego is too big to realize it.

        Like

      • Bingo.

        Where is our QB development?

        With all of our money, fan, and alumni support, why can’t we find a creative OC who can run a creative, modern offense to complement our defense?

        Like

  10. The Old Jeffster

    Very informative post. Nice job Senator. This is the caliber of work you’d expect to see on The Athletic site. You’ve brought up some nice points as we begin drilling down into how this offense has tanked so badly. The substitution idea is something I hadn’t really thought about on our O—clearly it has worked well on the defensive side. I agree 100% that WR development has been nil this season and contributed to last night’s debacle. But I really would like to know what’s happened to Fromm. Hardly looks like the same player from just a year ago. We’re getting the players in here but it doesn’t appear they are getting coached up. I’m not sold that an overhaul in scheme is needed, but its become clear that Kirby needs to find an O/C he can trust, give this guy the keys to the offense and then get the heck out of the way.

    Like

    • Napoleon BonerFart

      I suspect that Fromm’s problems are caused by a perfect storm. Poor coaching, poor execution, and lack of trust.

      Fromm’s not stupid. He knows that running into a stacked front isn’t going to work. But that’s what the coaches keep calling. So he hands it off for no gain. Then the pressure builds up on 3rd and 8 for a great passing play. The receivers don’t run great routes and the plays aren’t designed to scheme them open. So Fromm has to fit the ball into a tiny space. And if he can do that, the receivers drop the ball.

      And the head coach appears to have no problems with the situation.

      Whether Coley can be competent as OC, it appears clear that Cheney was/is a better QB coach than Coley is. I suspect that Kirby is holding Coley back more than Coley is incompetent. But the solution to the offense isn’t to bring in a few more top recruits and then spend next year running into stacked fronts again.

      Like

  11. Outside of Pickens and Swift none of our receivers or running backs would be on the 2 deep at AL or LSU. We have a talent problem. It can get us by against teams below the top 10 and struggle against 4 through 10. But it gets you pummeled by Elite teams.
    This is magnified by the fact that we have played one style of offense all year until the last three games. That doesn’t match up well with great teams who have played the same since spring ball.

    Like

    • Connor

      I think that’s too simplistic. Kirby wants it to be a talent problem because that’s a problem he thinks he knows how to solve. He can Recruit his way out of it. But I think he’s “fighting the last war” if that’s all he takes from this. He has to look at his entire offensive philosophy and challenge it. If he thinks he solves this by signing more 5 star receivers and doing everything else the same he’s probably never going to take uga as far as he or we want him to.

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      • Gaskilldawg

        I agree that if our problem is subpar wide receiver talent then that is Smart’s fault. If he thinks, as you say, he recruit away the problem he is going to find that HS wide receivers will prefer playing in a LSU or Alabama or Oklahoma or OSU scheme over being a split wide offensive guard at UGA

        Like

      • I noticed that you did not dispute my first sentence.

        Like

    • Russ

      Disagree. Pickens, Blaylock, Swift, White and Robertson were all 5 * recruits everyone wanted. Robertson was freshman AA and set records at Cal as a freshman yet never got a pass all last season at UGA. Cook, Woerner were 4* and have plenty of talent. Simmons, Landers, Bush were all sought after and Landers and Bush have the big body we are supposed to want at WR. Our raw talent is not the problem. How that talent is (not) developed IS the problem.

      Like

  12. Gurkha Dawg

    Senator, I agree with every sentence in your post. I was thinking about our lack of development in the WR group. I wonder how the practice reps of the WR’s are run. It seems all KS talks about is working on improving the WR’s blocking, not on improving their route running, rhythm with Jake, etc. I would bet that most of the practice reps involve improving blocking rather than improving the passing game. Jake seems to lack confidence that the receivers will be where their supposed to be and vise versa. There seems to me no confidence or rhythm to the passing game. I have no evidence of this except the crappy state of our passing and a lack of improvement in the WR’s.

    Like

    • Gaskilldawg

      Gurkha: remember we had a Georgia kid who was the top ranked WR in the country committed, then he decommitted and signed with Oklahoma. I figured he knew he would be developed better as a WR and get more passes thrown his way somewhere other than UGA.

      Like

      • Normaltown Mike

        Pickens had a better season than Hazelton so not sure about that.

        The idea that Simmons or Landers are great WR’s, just waiting to be “coached up” is ludicrous, If they were at Bama, they’d have been processed or declared medically ineligible. They wouldn’t sniff the field at LSU, other than special teams.

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        • Gaskilldawg

          Sure, Pickens has had a better season; that isn’t my point. My point is that Hazelwood decommitted because of the way we use WRs. I will bet he isn’t the only WR concerned about our offensive scheme.

          I do not know how Simmons and Landers would have been developed at LSU, and neither do you. I darned sure know we did not get receiving production out of 2 big, fast guys. Maybe it is all their faults and coaching and scheme are blameless. Maybe not.

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  13. doofusdawg

    I have always felt that the mass substitutions were just the coaches way of letting the kids know who runs the show and letting the fans and athletic department know how well they earn their money.

    The bigger issue is the kids are just not having fun anymore… you can see it in their mannerisms… and not just in losses. It was reflected in the early departures last year and will be more apparent in the transfers this year. Kirby needs to address this first and foremost. Good luck with that.

    Like

    • sniffer

      I have always felt that the mass substitutions were just the coaches way of letting the kids know who runs the show and letting the fans and athletic department know how well they earn their money.

      That is the dumbest comment I’ve read here in 10+ years and there have been some real doozies. Congrats.

      Liked by 1 person

  14. Gaskilldawg

    We played this year with Kirby Smart’s 4th recruiting class. He inherited Tyler Simmons. Otherwise every WR is his recruit, and every one he recruited contributed to his recruiting class scores.
    You think Ogeron thinks blocking is the most important skill his WRs have?

    Like

  15. Whiskey Dawg

    I believe there is some truth to the graduation of players at WR and injuries this year which contributed to the loss; however, Fromm has not played well and a receiver like Demetris Robertson seemed under utilized given his experience. The passing game in general has just looked under developed all year.

    Like

    • Gaskilldawg

      The SEC is a physical league. When teams play Alabama, LSU and Auburn receivers have to be physical with DBs in man to man. Robertson is really fast but he isn’t physical. I do not know if it is coaching or of it his nature.

      Receiving is in many ways similar to playing the post in basketball. A post player in basketball has to know how to position to seal his defender from a pass and has to be willing to engage in contact to get the defender off of the passing lane.

      Part of it is learning how to do it. The other part is the willingness to bang with the defender

      Like

  16. J.M.

    Football’s never been about just Jimmies and Joes or X’s and O’s; it’s a complex mix of the two. If you want to be great, you need good players AND good coaches — it’s not either-or.

    Anyone with working eyes can see that Burrow is a more physically gifted QB than Fromm, yet just last year Jake was the more productive player. What has changed so dramatically in such a short time? To hear Kirby tell it, LSU just has better players around their quarterback this year than we do. And while that’s probably true, it doesn’t tell the whole story. Brady has completely transformed their offense and optimized their talent in ways we’ve never seen before. If you fail to mention Brady’s contributions to LSU’s offensive explosion this year, you’re leaving out a crucial part of the story.

    I get that Kirby doesn’t want to throw his offensive coaching staff under the bus. I can only hope his private evaluations are different than what he sells to the public.

    Like

  17. No Country For Old Dawgs

    Really since our reputation as RBU and having an elite O-Line goes Kirby and staff should just embrace it. Jake should play under center and we should build around running our offence out of the I-formation. Man-Ball to the Max! Results may very, but there’s a definite identity to be found in the straining. We’ve not found a consistent offensive identity all season. Play action Jake to the rescue!

    Like

  18. Anonymous

    Because Georgia is addicted to substituting. It’s in Smart’s DNA. Read the first paragraph from that presser quote of his again. LSU ran 28 straight plays in 11 formation yesterday. Certainly that frustrated Smart the defensive whiz who loves matching players to situations, but it’s also an alien concept to him on offense, because it’s ingrained in his approach that mixing and matching personnel and sets is the way to go, even if his quarterback’s performance suffers.

    It is posts like this that lead me to call you a Psychic Psychiatrist. The moniker is 100% deserved.

    Like

  19. Dawg questions

    Two questions here.
    1. Why is no one concerned with the fact that Georgia played a three man d-line for much of the game. Reminded me of when the Dawgs played against Peyton Manning. Wait, was Kirby playing then? He started with a defensive scheme destined to fail.
    2. What is the ranking (if there is one) of o-lines for the CFP final four. I’m starting to wonder about this whole focus on the biggest and baddest o-line when they often can be out-schemed by smart o-coordinators.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Gaskilldawg

      In response to your first point, so we could get 7 DBs into coverage. Believe it or not we held LSU to its lowest offensive output in points, total yards, and passing rating except for Auburn, and held LSU to its fewest rushing yards.

      In other words, we defended LSU better than 12 other teams it played. I can’t complain about our defensive plan, and Burrow complimented it in his press conference.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Normaltown Mike

        And even when we called blitzes from surprising angles, JB stepped aside like a high schooler playing against the Pee Wee team.

        I was annoyed when Kirby played his base 3 DL on the first series but thereafter, he varied it consistently. Notwithstanding, Burrows is an amazing talent – far more athletic than I realized. The completion to himself for a 1st down was a harbinger of a looong night

        Liked by 1 person

        • Gaskilldawg

          Yes. You have to just tip your cap to Burrow for the plays he made. When our D linemen chase him around and he evades them and completes a pass it isn’t the defensive scheme’s fault it is just a great play by the other guy.

          Like

  20. Bill Glennon

    “Our plays haven’t looked like their plays because a lot of times we might not have the same guys doing those plays.”

    Whoever recruited these guys needs to be held accountable.

    Like

  21. Gaskilldawg

    UGA steamrolled 9 straight opponents in 1929 running the Notre Dame Box offense. If Kirby wants old school then he needs to see if the Hargett Library collection has old UGA playbooks from that era. An get 10 blockers on the field every play.

    Like

  22. Charlottedawg

    Simmons and Landers are so bad I started getting pissed just seeing them on field starting the middle of the season. Landers. drops. EVERYTHING. He is so shitty, so consistently I am truly amazed. I mean you’d think he’d catch a ball at some point just because nobody is capable of doing something 100% of the time, but here we are. These two can’t block, and they can’t catch passes. Why are they seeing field????? That’s a serious question. We would be better off putting a tight end or James Cook or a defensive back out there, the sad part is this is not an exaggeration. these two are so bad we’d be better off lining up with ten guys because right now S&L act like a twelvth defender.

    Like

    • Gaskilldawg

      I think with those two it has become a mental thing. They are so worried about drops that worry causes them to drop the ball.

      Like

  23. Aladawg

    Tell it all brother Blutarsky twelfths it all. I just hope the congregation at Butts Mehre not only hears it but listens. Amen

    Like

  24. Bill Glennon

    You make a compelling case. One thing that give me pause however is the difference in the passing game with Cager. Using Cager as an independent variable supports Smart’s point pretty convincingly too. When he was in, the same scheme that didn’t work before, worked. Drilling down on one game, we were a different team against the same defense when Cager went out in the Missouri game. One player, all other things constant, different outcomes.

    https://www.dawgnation.com/football/uga-wr-lawrence-cager-ruled-out-against-missouri-with-injury

    You can blame the Jimmys and Joes AND the X’s and Os, but the biggest culprit, as you alude to, may be that the people in charge of developing the Jimmys and the Joes to competently execute the Xs and Os, ie, the WR position coaches and the OC. That’s my biggest takeaway. The coaches failed to mold the players to a scheme so that the offense was functionable. There was no synergy. LSU had synergy.

    Our offense was a collection of talented guys not on the same page.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Bat City Dawg

      Great data. I have said it here before this season. It is really amazing that our offense was a house of cards built on one grad transfer who was the #2 receiver on a 7-6 team in 2018.

      This speaks volumes about recruited talent, development, and scheme.

      Like

    • Will (The other one)

      True, but I’d say that’s an indictment of poor QB coaching. Fromm using Wims as a security blanket as a true freshmen made sense. By his third year though, he shouldn’t be that reliant on one target, to the point that his ypa goes down that drastically.

      Like

  25. Mayor

    Has it occurred to you, Senator, or anyone else here for that matter, that Justin Fields saw what you are talking about in this post and THAT is the real reason he left? That’s what is scary here, not the loss of one game however big a game it was. Kids aren’t stupid. If top recruits see the same thing…….

    Like

    • Occam’s razor suggests he didn’t want to sit on the bench another year, Mayor, which is why he applied for the transfer waiver.

      But if UGA’s recruiting ratings drop dramatically, you can take the credit for knowing why.

      Liked by 3 people

      • Macallanlover

        And I think they will, especially the WR and TE positions. WE were in good position with 3 TEs earlier this year, we find out tomorrow if we get even one of those, we aren’t the leader for him according to reports.

        Like

    • Will (The other one)

      I’d say the more likely fear is if no offensive changes are made, all the top WR prospects just saw Kirby through his WR corp under the bus rather than admit a failure in scheme.

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  26. 2675miller

    My (maybe) final thoughts on the offense: 1. The Texas game bothered me all year. Everyone has insisted that the problem was that the team was unmotivated. It turns out that it was a harbinger of things to come. All the problems in that game on offense carried over. 2. They decided to beat LSU throwing the ball (Just like 2nd quarter on last year with the same results). They knew that they could get wrs open but didn’t count on not being able to throw accurately or catch the ball when they did. In the meantime very capable backs and what is supposed to be a road grading ol were not part of the plan. What did the staff know that led them to believe that our qb would suddenly start hitting above 50% Do they not know that you can’t sustain drives throwing less than 50%? 3. Speaking of road grading ols, if this line couldn’t do it then it can’t be done. Maybe Mark Richt was on to something. 4. The biggest mystery isn’t why Jake has been struggling but why the rushing game has struggled so mightily. If there is an argument for looking at the offensive staff, start with the regression of the run game. 5. If a shortage of wrs was the source of the problem this season what will next season be like with Jackson, Robertson and Landers as our top three returning healthy pass catchers. (Some are saying that Pickens might not make it to next season.) 6. Some of the folks who crunch numbers say that the greatest correlation to success on offense is returning catches and the least is returning ols. That is exactly what we saw this season.

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  27. Shawn Wilkes

    Great reasoning and hard not see your points.

    The only thing i would add to the criticism is that I think the issues we see are 100% a philosophical approach to coaching and a conservative mind set. I don’t think the game plan or scheme this past game or against Auburn was inherently bad. Kirby, in his own words, said he knew they had to pass more to win this game and open things up, which is obvious to everyone. My question and critic is, “why now try and evolve for this one game or any other specific game?”

    In most games against inferior talent, Kirby prefers just to try and run the ball and minimize risks, especially in the passing game. We see a very vanilla game with a ton of jet sweeps (that don’t work against any decent team and just pad the passing stats) and even more generic comeback routes, wings and outs to the sidelines. He knows he can beat Ark St, Kentucky, Tenn, Murray st, Vandy, Mizz, Tech with that strategy. We are happy to just win those games and be conservative in our game plan.

    The problem is that this conservative mindset and game planning to beat inferior teams leads to our offense never improving throughout the season. Our QB and WRs (or playcaller) never get that in game experience and rhythm to build upon. This, in addition to your comment of playing to many players on offense holds us back. Instead, we create a pass oriented, spread, up tempo game plan for a few games (or series) we know will be challenging and expect the players to just perform and learn the game plan for that week. Can’t happen. This is also the reason Fields transferred. When he was used, he was just sent in to hand the ball off vs. actually letting him throw the ball and get experience despite the score.

    Kirby has to change his mindset and become more aggressive on offense throughout the year. Perhaps we wouldn’t let teams like Auburn and Florida get back into the game and our offense would be peaking if we had a scheme all year that was aggressive. I first started realizing this when Fields was here and saw it throughout the season beginning against Vanderbilt when we went conservative after getting a 21 point lead. Hope Kirby can change and let the offense develop and learn as the season goes.

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  28. 79Dawg

    The substitution is nuts. They were pressing on O, and we were trying to substitute, and so our guys had no idea what was going on or what to do… LSU was not subbing at all on offense, yet we were still subbing almost every play. And the substituting on O, which keeps anyone from getting in a rhythm, is bonkers and keeps us from pressing.

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    • Bat City Dawg

      seems like if you have to sprint from the field to the sideline and to the field again over and over, fatigue would set in

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  29. kevinsauer

    ($$) That’s why Smart must make the same choice Orgeron made, because you can’t win titles with a Les Miles philosophy in an Ed Orgeron world.

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