DAG 33,997 Posted October 10, 2017 Share Posted October 10, 2017 It’s been said countless of times, yet the same people keep coming up with bull crap narratives. Most of us knew we would beat Ole Miss, Miss State, Mizzou, etc. AU should always be able to beat those teams unless they have some sort of extraordinary player. Those are standards built by Auburn’s recent success. If you can’t handle that, please, go support UK or someone like that, who is content with staying in the game. Most of us also said the games he will be judged on are LSU, UGA, and Bama. I don’t care if we beat those teams by 1 or 100. You need to at the very least be splitting with those teams to hit the next level. Whether it be recruiting, national recognition or on-field success. Lastly, you need to play 60 minutes with intensity. That is what separates great teams from good teams. Complacency isn’t an option. I don’t care if you are playing the 1st string or 4th string. That needs to be the mentality. If you have a team down, you take they will. It’s up to them to stop you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leglessdan 1,934 Posted October 12, 2017 Share Posted October 12, 2017 On 10/10/2017 at 5:21 PM, DAG said: It’s been said countless of times, yet the same people keep coming up with bull crap narratives. Most of us knew we would beat Ole Miss, Miss State, Mizzou, etc. AU should always be able to beat those teams unless they have some sort of extraordinary player. Those are standards built by Auburn’s recent success. If you can’t handle that, please, go support UK or someone like that, who is content with staying in the game. Most of us also said the games he will be judged on are LSU, UGA, and Bama. I don’t care if we beat those teams by 1 or 100. You need to at the very least be splitting with those teams to hit the next level. Whether it be recruiting, national recognition or on-field success. Lastly, you need to play 60 minutes with intensity. That is what separates great teams from good teams. Complacency isn’t an option. I don’t care if you are playing the 1st string or 4th string. That needs to be the mentality. If you have a team down, you take they will. It’s up to them to stop you. Bingo my friend. We have the capability to throttle teams, but we don't. We get relaxed and vanilla and it doesn't do us any favors. It also strains the hell out of defense imo. If the game is in hand, put the 2nd and 3rd string in and get them some experience running to playbook outside of dive left or right. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Charleston Tiger 134 Posted October 12, 2017 Share Posted October 12, 2017 I'll have a cigar ready. All I'm gonna say. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
logan adams 333 Posted October 12, 2017 Share Posted October 12, 2017 Something I just saw.. in 3 of the last 4 games, LSU has given up at least 194 yards rushing. Feed. KJ. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AUld fAUx@ 2,584 Posted October 12, 2017 Share Posted October 12, 2017 Probably not worth its own thread, and only sort'a, kind'a, a little relevant here, but Cluelessness on my part? Or is Mr. Ferguson’s analysis of our pace surprising to others? “Alright, let’s run some numbers here. The best way to measure offensive pace using stats is average time between plays — that is, total time of possession divided by number of plays run. This is how that looks so far in the Gus Malzahn era: YEAR POSSESSION PLAYS AVG. BETWEEN PLAYS 2013 425:14 1,014 25.2 seconds 2014 388:25 939 24.8 seconds 2015 368:43 892 24.8 seconds 2016 379:21 934 24.4 seconds 2017 182:57 (6 games) 427 25.7 seconds So while it may seem like Auburn isn’t going as quickly as it used to, the difference between this year’s team and others under Malzahn is thin — 1.3 between 2016 and 2017 being the biggest gap. Auburn is only a half-second slower this season than it was in 2013. For comparison, according to Football Study Hall, 1.3 seconds was the difference between the 10th-fastest (Oregon) and 17th-fastest (Clemson) last season. Those are two of the most well-known no-huddle offenses in college football. One of the aspects of Lindsey’s offense that stood out to me in the first half of the season was how the Tigers immediately went tempo after a big play. That’s been a hallmark of this attack, no matter if the huge yards came through the air or on the ground. I think Auburn might be slightly more prone to changing up personnel packages after minimal gains this season than it was last season. Lindsey likes to keep defenses on its toes, and part of that comes with rotating different sets. But when Auburn is moving the ball effectively this season, it’s still up-tempo.” https://www.seccountry.com/auburn/auburn-football-mailbag-lsu-preview-offense Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tiger 8,829 Posted October 13, 2017 Share Posted October 13, 2017 19 hours ago, AUld fAUx@ said: Probably not worth its own thread, and only sort'a, kind'a, a little relevant here, but Cluelessness on my part? Or is Mr. Ferguson’s analysis of our pace surprising to others? “Alright, let’s run some numbers here. The best way to measure offensive pace using stats is average time between plays — that is, total time of possession divided by number of plays run. This is how that looks so far in the Gus Malzahn era: YEAR POSSESSION PLAYS AVG. BETWEEN PLAYS 2013 425:14 1,014 25.2 seconds 2014 388:25 939 24.8 seconds 2015 368:43 892 24.8 seconds 2016 379:21 934 24.4 seconds 2017 182:57 (6 games) 427 25.7 seconds So while it may seem like Auburn isn’t going as quickly as it used to, the difference between this year’s team and others under Malzahn is thin — 1.3 between 2016 and 2017 being the biggest gap. Auburn is only a half-second slower this season than it was in 2013. For comparison, according to Football Study Hall, 1.3 seconds was the difference between the 10th-fastest (Oregon) and 17th-fastest (Clemson) last season. Those are two of the most well-known no-huddle offenses in college football. One of the aspects of Lindsey’s offense that stood out to me in the first half of the season was how the Tigers immediately went tempo after a big play. That’s been a hallmark of this attack, no matter if the huge yards came through the air or on the ground. I think Auburn might be slightly more prone to changing up personnel packages after minimal gains this season than it was last season. Lindsey likes to keep defenses on its toes, and part of that comes with rotating different sets. But when Auburn is moving the ball effectively this season, it’s still up-tempo.” https://www.seccountry.com/auburn/auburn-football-mailbag-lsu-preview-offense I wonder how this compares to 2009 and 2010 Gus offenses. Interesting that we were even faster in '16 and '17 than '13. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
boisnumber1 2,819 Posted October 13, 2017 Share Posted October 13, 2017 This should not be a close game. That's what I expect. We are just better. Much better. The only way I see this close is if we have a turnover frenzy like weve had before this season. Other seasons, I would not be as confident as I am because we havent had D like we have. If we take care of ourselves, we win handily, regardless of what LSU does - but thats why you play the game. Stranger things have happened. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
McFU 205 Posted October 13, 2017 Share Posted October 13, 2017 20 hours ago, AUld fAUx@ said: Probably not worth its own thread, and only sort'a, kind'a, a little relevant here, but Cluelessness on my part? Or is Mr. Ferguson’s analysis of our pace surprising to others? “Alright, let’s run some numbers here. The best way to measure offensive pace using stats is average time between plays — that is, total time of possession divided by number of plays run. This is how that looks so far in the Gus Malzahn era: YEAR POSSESSION PLAYS AVG. BETWEEN PLAYS 2013 425:14 1,014 25.2 seconds 2014 388:25 939 24.8 seconds 2015 368:43 892 24.8 seconds 2016 379:21 934 24.4 seconds 2017 182:57 (6 games) 427 25.7 seconds So while it may seem like Auburn isn’t going as quickly as it used to, the difference between this year’s team and others under Malzahn is thin — 1.3 between 2016 and 2017 being the biggest gap. Auburn is only a half-second slower this season than it was in 2013. For comparison, according to Football Study Hall, 1.3 seconds was the difference between the 10th-fastest (Oregon) and 17th-fastest (Clemson) last season. Those are two of the most well-known no-huddle offenses in college football. One of the aspects of Lindsey’s offense that stood out to me in the first half of the season was how the Tigers immediately went tempo after a big play. That’s been a hallmark of this attack, no matter if the huge yards came through the air or on the ground. I think Auburn might be slightly more prone to changing up personnel packages after minimal gains this season than it was last season. Lindsey likes to keep defenses on its toes, and part of that comes with rotating different sets. But when Auburn is moving the ball effectively this season, it’s still up-tempo.” https://www.seccountry.com/auburn/auburn-football-mailbag-lsu-preview-offense I think the difference this year as in years past is in the way it looks. From what I have read is in previous years both Gus and Chip looked at the defense then had to discuss what each saw then call a play. Usually we ran up to the line and then held the formation until the play came in. I'm surprised that they were able to get to the pace they did doing it that way. I thin with Chip he is assessing the defense on his own for the most part and then calling the play. It seems like there is less time between getting up to the line and snapping the ball than in previous years. Overall yes it may average out to close to the same amount of time per play but it looks very different. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AUld fAUx@ 2,584 Posted October 14, 2017 Share Posted October 14, 2017 21 hours ago, McFU said: I think the difference this year as in years past is in the way it looks. From what I have read is in previous years both Gus and Chip looked at the defense then had to discuss what each saw then call a play. Usually we ran up to the line and then held the formation until the play came in. I'm surprised that they were able to get to the pace they did doing it that way. I thin with Chip he is assessing the defense on his own for the most part and then calling the play. It seems like there is less time between getting up to the line and snapping the ball than in previous years. Overall yes it may average out to close to the same amount of time per play but it looks very different. Might be it, and it sure does. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TigerOne 1,148 Posted October 15, 2017 Author Share Posted October 15, 2017 Stupidity is not an excuse. Auburn coaches gave the game away..again. Never seen a team try and run the clock out starting in the second quarter until yesterday. Auburn coaches continue to not use all of its playmakers. Sitting on the bench is not an excuse.. its stupidity Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AUDynasty 585 Posted October 15, 2017 Share Posted October 15, 2017 We've come full circle. There's no excuses not to fire Gus. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TigerOne 1,148 Posted October 15, 2017 Author Share Posted October 15, 2017 5 minutes ago, AUDynasty said: We've come full circle. There's no excuses not to fire Gus. sad thing is today Gus probably doesn't see anything wrong with the gameplan. He will say its just execution, well that's true all of the time. Bet there is no blame by any of the coaches its just lets get back to work guys its ok. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AUDynasty 585 Posted October 15, 2017 Share Posted October 15, 2017 On 10/10/2017 at 6:21 PM, DAG said: It’s been said countless of times, yet the same people keep coming up with bull crap narratives. Most of us knew we would beat Ole Miss, Miss State, Mizzou, etc. AU should always be able to beat those teams unless they have some sort of extraordinary player. Those are standards built by Auburn’s recent success. If you can’t handle that, please, go support UK or someone like that, who is content with staying in the game. Most of us also said the games he will be judged on are LSU, UGA, and Bama. I don’t care if we beat those teams by 1 or 100. You need to at the very least be splitting with those teams to hit the next level. Whether it be recruiting, national recognition or on-field success. Lastly, you need to play 60 minutes with intensity. That is what separates great teams from good teams. Complacency isn’t an option. I don’t care if you are playing the 1st string or 4th string. That needs to be the mentality. If you have a team down, you take they will. It’s up to them to stop you. The post of the year. This rings more true now the dust has settled in. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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