Yeah, the special teams and offense in September games have been hot garbage in the Campbell era. There's no way to sugar coat it. He's 1-5 in Big 12 openers. 0-6 against Iowa. Hammered by Louisiana. Two of the wins ISU was lucky to escape against UNI.I saw WI hold Iowa once to like 60 yards TO with a 3 man front.
ISU hasn't made basic plays in that game and that's been a bigger deal than the defensive alignment.
JFC, the defense has done their job against Iowa but way to pick an extreme outlier....
It's just incredibly frustrating when the staff can find and get undervalued guys at every other position. Well, maybe CB not so much. They can evaluate and project so well that they don't have to battle the blue bloods very often to get good B12 players and even all-conference players. OL has not been that...I don't know if scouting is easier there or what. But we're getting (for the most part) iowa's leftovers, Minnesota's leftovers, Mizzou's leftovers, Wisconsin's leftovers. Yes, there are exceptions like Hasert and Downing, but mostly, our OLs are living up to their recruiting rankings, which isn't great. Other positions, they perform above their rankings. Something needs to change there for us to take the next step.
I loved Purdy, but I'm really looking forward to a QB who isn't throwing from 12 yards or scrambling from 17 yards behind the LOS for a 2 yard gain on a crossing pattern.A few years ago I know they did a G/C flop when one got hurt and the best backup was in the other position. But I don’t think they tend to as much. I really don’t like moving G to T.
Last year they thought flopping guys all over was better than just plugging Miller in at T. They ran out of options and had to play him against the most athletic front ISU faced all year, and after getting settled in he was great in the second half. By the 4th quarter they were leaving him on an island without TE help.
And yes, Purdy was a terrific player and was tough as nails, but he was not good at climbing the pocket. There was a good example on a sack vs Clemson in the 4th.
Yes... I tried to show this in the chart.It might be hard to analyze this without sufficient data from other schools. There might be a change in how or who PFF evaluates line play. I'd be interested in seeing the difference between ISU line play and the average CFB line play each year to weed out any effects that might be due to changes in evaluation standards/quality year over year.
There are clear trends within the data in terms of performance evaluation year-to-year (did all line play get worse in certain years or did evaluators changes). I would be interested in seeing data normalized.
It's also hard to really compare years when things change in terms of offensive philosophy. Are we expecting the O-line to do more or different things? Changes in philosophy or style likely would both cause and be caused by poor play in some way. It would be good to compare to more meaningful metrics like offensive output and team success.
It's interesting because our "best" o-line year was 2015 yet that team was 3-9. Our "worst" o-line year was 2018 when we were 8-5. Defense was a big cause of that. That said, we were a completely different team philosophically by the time 2018 rolled around. 2018 still had a higher yards per play offensively than 2015. A large part of that was Brock Purdy's 10ypa throwing the ball. 2018 had like 12 less offensive plays per game than 2015 but scored more. (This isn't due to defensive turnovers, because they were about equal.)
I loved Purdy, but I'm really looking forward to a QB who isn't throwing from 12 yards or scrambling from 17 yards behind the LOS for a 2 yard gain on a crossing pattern.
At the 9:25 mark you see a great example. TE chips and the LT stonewalls the DE. The three interior guys destroy a twist or a stunt inside. The guy that gets the sack takes a terrible, path of least resistance route about 3-4 yards outside the tackle box and 11 yards downfield. The LT lets rides him downfield and wide. This should never, ever be a sack.
But there was also the play in the 4th where Purdy had a great scramble to convert on 3rd and long.
You just had to accept some mistakes from Purdy in exchange for some great plays. After all, sports are entertainment, and there's no disputing Purdy was entertaining.
At the 9:25 mark you see a great example. TE chips and the LT stonewalls the DE. The three interior guys destroy a twist or a stunt inside. The guy that gets the sack takes a terrible, path of least resistance route about 3-4 yards outside the tackle box and 11 yards downfield. The LT lets rides him downfield and wide. This should never, ever be a sack.
But there was also the play in the 4th where Purdy had a great scramble to convert on 3rd and long.
You just had to accept some mistakes from Purdy in exchange for some great plays. After all, sports are entertainment, and there's no disputing Purdy was entertaining.