Goldenheart
Under Contract
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
- Messages
- 37
I think a lot of us are thinking about our offensive needs based on how bad our defense has been in the recent past. The reality is that offense and defense must coexist, and a quick look at the top spread offenses in the country generally proves this point. If you consider Baylor, Oregon, Northern Illinois, Ohio State, Fresno State, Auburn and A&M to have been the best "spread" offenses (however you want to define that term) this year, only one of them was in the top 20 in the country in Points Against Defense (Oregon was 13th at 20.5ppg). Ohio State was 28th (22.6 ppg), Baylor was 36th (23.5ppg), Auburn was 48th (24.7ppg), Northern Illinois was 52nd (25ppg), Fresno State was 74th (28.1), and A&M was 96th (32.2ppg). Clearly there is a correlation between teams that put up tons of points quickly utilizing a spread offense and giving up a lot of points on defense. Basically, if you play that kind of offense, you better score a ton of points because you are also going to be giving up points on defense. It seems unlikely to me that you can just choose your own spread coordinator, insert them into Strong's staff, and nothing changes on Strong's defense. It certainly hasn't worked like that for most of the prolific spread offenses in the country this year. Our problem, of course, is that our defense has been weak and we had a middling offense this year, but let's not let that delude us regarding our changing offensive needs under Coach Strong.
The good news is that that high scoring offense/weak scoring defense combo is not the only way to win football games. Charlie Strong's Louisville Cardinals were second in the country this year in points against defense (12.2ppg). On offense, Louisville scored 35.2ppg, averaging 314 yards per game passing and 146 yards per game rushing. That's materially better than what Major did this year (against a better schedule, admittedly) at Texas, who put up 29.3 ppg, averaging 212.5 yards per game passing and 196.5 yards per game rushing. It's also a little better than our best offensive team in the very recent past with Harsin's second season in 2012. That year Harsin's offense clearly did enough to win football games, but our defense was atrocious. Harsin's 2012 offense put up 35.7 points per game, averaging 263 yards passing per game and 171.5 rushing per game. The defense in 2012 was the problem, giving up 404 yards per game, 212 yards passing per game and 192.2 yards rushing per game (that's just ridiculous right there). And we gave up 29.2 points per game in 2012 (also horrific).
So here's the bottom line. If we could get Harsin 2012 like production, which was not earth shattering by any means, we will be more than fine with this Charlie Strong defense. And it appears to me that Shawn Watson is fully capable of putting that type of an offense together based on what he's done at Louisville. Is he going to come in and put up the 550 yards plus per game that you see at Oregon or Baylor? No. But defense will be the identity of this football team and I think our fan base is ready for that identity, and we will need a ball control offense that doesn't turn the ball over to help facilitate that new defensive identity. We don't need 550 yards per game, and there is solid support for the notion that if we want a defensive identity we don't even want to seek that out given the high likelihood that it will impact our defense (not quite a zero sum game, but close). The ideal would be a ball control offense that doesn't turn the ball over and produces results on the scoreboard (see Florida State this year for this type of offense - no spread).
Another important consideration that we can't overlook is continuity. More than anything I want a coordinator that will be here a few years. If you look at Harsin's first year, the offense was not great. 392.5 yards per game; 28.1 ppg. The improvement in the second year was dramatic (35.7ppg, 263ypg/pass, 171.5ypg/rush). And then when Harsin left we go back to square 1 and Applewhite's offense was back to 2011 levels (408 ypg; 29.3 ppg). While the offense was middling this year, even with this middling offense we would have had at least two more games if we had a Charlie Strong defense, which gave up 251 yards per game this year, and only 81 yards per game on the ground!! If we can get a Shawn Watson to come and stay for 3 years+, we will benefit from that continuity and get this thing rolling by year 2. I think year 1 in a new offense will create challenges, and we've seen that with Harsin 2011 and Major 2013. I would expect a bit more of that under Watson (or someone else), but I think the defense will be hugely improved game 1 next year, so I think we will see significant improvement overall next year. But year 2 and 3 should be very strong if we can get that continuity, even with Shawn Watson in control of the offense.
The good news is that that high scoring offense/weak scoring defense combo is not the only way to win football games. Charlie Strong's Louisville Cardinals were second in the country this year in points against defense (12.2ppg). On offense, Louisville scored 35.2ppg, averaging 314 yards per game passing and 146 yards per game rushing. That's materially better than what Major did this year (against a better schedule, admittedly) at Texas, who put up 29.3 ppg, averaging 212.5 yards per game passing and 196.5 yards per game rushing. It's also a little better than our best offensive team in the very recent past with Harsin's second season in 2012. That year Harsin's offense clearly did enough to win football games, but our defense was atrocious. Harsin's 2012 offense put up 35.7 points per game, averaging 263 yards passing per game and 171.5 rushing per game. The defense in 2012 was the problem, giving up 404 yards per game, 212 yards passing per game and 192.2 yards rushing per game (that's just ridiculous right there). And we gave up 29.2 points per game in 2012 (also horrific).
So here's the bottom line. If we could get Harsin 2012 like production, which was not earth shattering by any means, we will be more than fine with this Charlie Strong defense. And it appears to me that Shawn Watson is fully capable of putting that type of an offense together based on what he's done at Louisville. Is he going to come in and put up the 550 yards plus per game that you see at Oregon or Baylor? No. But defense will be the identity of this football team and I think our fan base is ready for that identity, and we will need a ball control offense that doesn't turn the ball over to help facilitate that new defensive identity. We don't need 550 yards per game, and there is solid support for the notion that if we want a defensive identity we don't even want to seek that out given the high likelihood that it will impact our defense (not quite a zero sum game, but close). The ideal would be a ball control offense that doesn't turn the ball over and produces results on the scoreboard (see Florida State this year for this type of offense - no spread).
Another important consideration that we can't overlook is continuity. More than anything I want a coordinator that will be here a few years. If you look at Harsin's first year, the offense was not great. 392.5 yards per game; 28.1 ppg. The improvement in the second year was dramatic (35.7ppg, 263ypg/pass, 171.5ypg/rush). And then when Harsin left we go back to square 1 and Applewhite's offense was back to 2011 levels (408 ypg; 29.3 ppg). While the offense was middling this year, even with this middling offense we would have had at least two more games if we had a Charlie Strong defense, which gave up 251 yards per game this year, and only 81 yards per game on the ground!! If we can get a Shawn Watson to come and stay for 3 years+, we will benefit from that continuity and get this thing rolling by year 2. I think year 1 in a new offense will create challenges, and we've seen that with Harsin 2011 and Major 2013. I would expect a bit more of that under Watson (or someone else), but I think the defense will be hugely improved game 1 next year, so I think we will see significant improvement overall next year. But year 2 and 3 should be very strong if we can get that continuity, even with Shawn Watson in control of the offense.