Guy Chamberlin said:
I love a good ground game. Every coach loves a good ground game. I want to know that given three downs the Huskers will always get at least 10 yards. But it's not as simple as some folks here want to think. Beck doesn't abandon the running game too quickly. We tend to forget those three and outs where we ran the same rushing plays that had worked in the first half, only to find the defense had adjusted. When the coach of a trailing team runs the ball three times in a row before punting, the fans howl even louder. We have more fumbles than we do interceptions, so that excuse really doesn't play. And when you're down a couple scores in the fourth quarter, an incomplete pass is preferable to a four yard run that lets the clock burn. Passing sets up the run as much as running sets up the pass. Beck's balance is pretty reasonable, but nothing looks good when desperation sets in, and that's a teamwide issue, not a playcalling issue.
Guy Chamberlin said:
Huskers so far this season:
202 rushing attempts, averaging 5.6 yards per attempt
111 passing attempts, averaging 7.8 yards per attempt.
Five lost fumbles
One interception
Decent numbers there, and a bit more balanced than a lot of people would think.
I think we are good not great in the run game, and I feel the same way about the passing game. Good not great. Although, I think the passing game upgrades with Armstrong and RK3 at QB.
That aside, I guess my only other goal for this offense is just to take that next step. Become great at something. Establish a part of your offense that you feel like you could impose your will on someone at anytime when needed. I just want that staple, that thing that we fall back in that when other things are failing, we feel like we can always fall back and execute "this" to perfection.
I know this is easier said than done but I felt like we had it at one point. Back when Taylor burst onto the scene our zone read was just unstoppable. Now understandably, that aspect kind of faded when Taylor suffered a few injuries over the last few years. Still, I felt like we never expanded on that zone read enough. It seems we almost put it on the back burner trying to turn Taylor into a passer. We could have taken a lot of pressure off Taylor by using those zone reads with two backs in the back field. Maybe even more use of that "diamond" formation that everyone loved so much. These were neat aspects that our offense clearly could have built upon and learned to execute to perfection. Instead we ran that very periodically til they've almost faded from memory.
The one question that I don't know that can be answered is "what is the direction of this offense"? Is it passing oriented? Is it option? Is it zone read? Is it power running? Or are we really going to try to be all of the above. I hate this multiplicity concept. I think it holds us back from once again being "great" at something. I hope we figure it out soon because I think we have a special one up and coming through the QB ranks.