I know everyone is giving cotton crap for not being a good o line coach but i have a feeling with these extra eyes our o line will be alot better they might even be the best o line in the big ten at the end of the year. you never know
That will belong to Iowa or Wisconsin. Cotton has failed to develope guys real well and its a poor excuse to say he had too many guys to watch. They are also are very poor at maintaining plays for the actual length of the play on a consistent basis. Its starting to happen but I want to see it in a game and every game. When the RB or QB rips off a big run the O line should be knocking people to the ground 30 yards down field next to the runner when the guy is in traffic. Our guys are still too worried about looking at the husker vision to see if they are on TV or if the rb has scored. It will take a while to break those habits.
I understand the criticism of Cotton, but I don't think it's a poor excuse to say he had too many guys to watch. If you're going to give a player specific feedback, that's the guy you're going to watch on that play, and only that guy. That means there are 4 other guys who just did a rep and didn't get any feedback. Then the next play you have to watch the same guy again to make sure that he actually took to the feedback you gave him, and if he did then you might move on to the next guy.
It'd be a poor excuse if people said that the RB or QB coach had too many guys on the field. But Milt Tenopir didn't coach the offensive line by himself (he had Dan Young), and the standard you're holding Cotton by himself to is the one that Tenopir and Young were held to together. That's how it should be at Nebraska, but you have to realize that Tenopir and Young had more talent and better depth, and that came from the entire staff recruiting, and from years and years of perfecting the system as much as anything. Not to mention it was before the 85 scholly rule.
Our offensive line is never going to be "The Pipeline" again, those days are just as long gone as having a team dominate everyone on its schedule the way the 1995 team did. Now, we should expect to see our offensive lineman blocking downfield - that's what Nebraska football is all about. But you're talking about having guys 30 yards downfield like it's a bare minimum, when really it's on par with the kind of freakish offensive performance we had in the 90's. If we get that happening, then that's great, but it'll be the best offensive line in the country. I have a hard time getting down on a guy (Cotton) just because he didn't by himself produce the best offensive line in the country in his first year in a new system.
What I want to see is for the offensive line be consistent - they showed last year that they could blow open holes just as well as Oregon or Wisconsin. They just didn't do it consistently - no different from the rest of the offense. I don't think it's about effort, I think it's about execution, understanding the game, and technique. If the coaches can get them comfortable within the scheme to the point where it's second nature, then they can focus on their technique, the game will slow down, they'll become more physical, and the penalties will decrease.