Jump to content

Chad Morris to have full control


Maverick.AU

Recommended Posts

52 minutes ago, Carnell said:

I dont think he is even a good CEO coach considering the incompetent hires he has made on the offensive side of the ball. The majority are high school coaches and( in the case of OL coaches ) retreads.

Far be it from me to give Gus the benefit of the doubt anymore (since I've done that @ 5 years already) but I must admit that after hiring CCM as a FOR REAL OC (okay *hopefully*, as the jury will be out until a few games into the '20 season) and CJBjr as OL coach and extra emphasis on OL recruiting this season (FFIINNAALLLLYY!!!!)......

.....I dunno.....maybe he's.......

....turned a corner.....

Sigh...... I'm so tired of us having to say this every year.

But......what choice do we fans have?  So, I guess I'm just gonna roll with it.  ....again....

Link to comment
Share on other sites





  • Replies 209
  • Created
  • Last Reply
56 minutes ago, AUsince72 said:

Far be it from me to give Gus the benefit of the doubt anymore (since I've done that @ 5 years already) but I must admit that after hiring CCM as a FOR REAL OC (okay *hopefully*, as the jury will be out until a few games into the '20 season) and CJBjr as OL coach and extra emphasis on OL recruiting this season (FFIINNAALLLLYY!!!!)......

.....I dunno.....maybe he's.......

....turned a corner.....

Sigh...... I'm so tired of us having to say this every year.

But......what choice do we fans have?  So, I guess I'm just gonna roll with it.  ....again....

Know where you are coming from we are going to have him at Auburn High at least this year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, AUsince72 said:

Far be it from me to give Gus the benefit of the doubt anymore (since I've done that @ 5 years already) but I must admit that after hiring CCM as a FOR REAL OC (okay *hopefully*, as the jury will be out until a few games into the '20 season) and CJBjr as OL coach and extra emphasis on OL recruiting this season (FFIINNAALLLLYY!!!!)......

.....I dunno.....maybe he's.......

....turned a corner.....

Sigh...... I'm so tired of us having to say this every year.

But......what choice do we fans have?  So, I guess I'm just gonna roll with it.  ....again....

At least this season it will be EASY to tell who is running the offense. Just watch completions or at least attempts to the TE position. If we attempt/complete a lot of passes to the TE then Chad is in control. The TE is a vital part of his offense. 

We have not had this opportunity to easily tell who is running the offense as we do this upcoming season. 

Lashlee and Dilly Dilly were both brand new coaches that had no offensive identity of their own. You COULD tell with Lindsey but it involved going back and watching the offenses of his previous OC stops...which lets be honest... most would not do. Most just saw us pass more and automatically thought well that must be Lindseys doing. Most wouldnt actually do the work of watching film from his previous stops. They just saw what was on the field for us. 

Well this time we can easily tell... Just by watching our own plays. If the TE is really involved in the offense all season, Chad controlled the offense all season. If the TE is as absent as its been since Lutz... then we easily know its the same old same old...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Auburn2Eugene said:

At least this season it will be EASY to tell who is running the offense. Just watch completions or at least attempts to the TE position. If we attempt/complete a lot of passes to the TE then Chad is in control. The TE is a vital part of his offense. 

We have not had this opportunity to easily tell who is running the offense as we do this upcoming season. 

Lashlee and Dilly Dilly were both brand new coaches that had no offensive identity of their own. You COULD tell with Lindsey but it involved going back and watching the offenses of his previous OC stops...which lets be honest... most would not do. Most just saw us pass more and automatically thought well that must be Lindseys doing. Most wouldnt actually do the work of watching film from his previous stops. They just saw what was on the field for us. 

Well this time we can easily tell... Just by watching our own plays. If the TE is really involved in the offense all season, Chad controlled the offense all season. If the TE is as absent as its been since Lutz... then we easily know its the same old same old...

Why is that.  Does Texas High Schools use the TE more than Arkansas High Schools.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/16/2020 at 11:12 AM, Auburn2Eugene said:

At least this season it will be EASY to tell who is running the offense. Just watch completions or at least attempts to the TE position. If we attempt/complete a lot of passes to the TE then Chad is in control. The TE is a vital part of his offense. 

Another tell is Auburn going through an entire game without throwing a 30 yard fade route on 3rd and 4. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

33 minutes ago, SumterAubie said:

Another tell is Auburn going through an entire game without throwing a 30 yard fade route on 3rd and 4. 

Don't forget the double play-action with the opponents' max pressure defense and DE's pinning their ears back on said play.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/6/2020 at 10:38 AM, bigbird said:

I think him seeing what O accomplished by stepping back has had a positive effect. We'll see though.

Cautiously optimistic...

Hope your right, but ...

bart.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 2/16/2020 at 1:10 PM, Carnell said:

Why is that.  Does Texas High Schools use the TE more than Arkansas High Schools.

There isn't a huge difference, but you are about 3% more likely to find a TE in Texas vs Arkansas.

https://stateofchildhoodobesity.org/adult-obesity/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quote

What should Auburn expect from Chad Morris’ offense? Let his former players explain


Posted Feb 25, 2020
Chad Morris bowl practice
Auburn offensive coordinator Chad Morris during bowl practice on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2019 in Auburn, Ala. Todd Van Emst/AU AthleticsTodd Van Emst/AU Athletics


By Tom Green | tgreen@al.com


C.J. O’Grady always hated Alabama, but the former Arkansas tight end absolutely loved “Bama.”

That was the name of O’Grady’s favorite play during his nearly two seasons playing tight end in Chad Morris’ offense at Arkansas, where the 6-foot-4, 253-pounder turned into one of the Razorbacks’ top weapons in the passing attack.

“I actually love Chad Morris’ offense,” O’Grady said Tuesday at the NFL Combine in Indianapolis. “It kind of sounds selfish, but I got the ball a lot. There were a lot of plays drawn up for me and, really, I think it helped me get to where I am today. I’ll forever be grateful for that.”


O’Grady played in 17 games for Morris before leaving the team in early November — less than a week before Morris was fired by the program — and totaled 63 receptions for 772 yards and nine touchdowns, averaging 12.3 yards per catch and nearly four catches per game. He was one of two offensive players at this week’s NFL Combine who has played in Morris’ offense, with the other being former SMU receiver James Proche.

Each gave a bit of insight into what Auburn should expect from its new offensive coordinator, whom Gus Malzahn entrusted with play-calling duties in 2020, as far as the passing game is concerned.

“Get in shape,” Proche said. “Get in shape. Get ready to run, man. Get ready to run.”

Proche spent the last four seasons at SMU, playing for Morris during the 2016 and 2017 campaigns before the coach accepted the head coaching position at Arkansas. During his freshman and sophomore seasons under Morris, Proche appeared in all 25 of the Mustangs’ games. He was SMU’s second-leading receiver his freshman year, catching 57 passes for 709 yards and six touchdowns while averaging 12.44 yards per reception, and he followed it up with a sophomore campaign that included fewer receptions (40) but more yards (816) — averaging 20.4 yards per catch — and the same number of receiving touchdowns as the year prior.


“We were always going to throw the ball 40 times a game,” Proche said. “But even if you’re not getting the ball, you’re working on your routes in practice, running your routes on air for three periods. Really, you had to develop yourself and work on your craft.”

While Morris was at SMU, the Mustangs threw the ball north of 35 times per game and averaged 260 passing yards per game — including 294.1 yards per game during his third and final season with the program — while throwing the ball 47.2 percent of the time. While Auburn threw the ball just 41.9 percent of the time last season, the arrival of Morris on the Plains should signify some changes coming to the passing game, even though he and Malzahn run similar systems and are likeminded from philosophical standpoint offensively.

“There’s a lot of same but different in our offense,” Morris said in December. “A whole lot of same, but there’s a little bit different. I think I’ll be able to add to — obviously there’s a lot of really good things and Coach (Malzahn), as I mentioned earlier, is an incredible offensive mind, he’s got great, great, the way he thinks is incredible — when you can bring two people in that think a lot alike but have a few different ideas whether that’s in some of the things we can add and we do a little bit different or have done a little bit different in the passing game. Bring some value there, bring in some new ideas, but still be able to what our players can do.”


Those changes could be both in how often Auburn passes — potentially more in line with how the Tigers used Bo Nix at times later in the season last year, relying less on the run and more on the freshman quarterback’s passing ability to spread the ball — and the manner in which it utilizes its personnel at receiver and, most notably, tight end.

Auburn’s usage of tight ends in the passing game has been notably absent in recent years, with no Tigers tight end finishing a season with double-digit receptions since C.J. Uzomah had 11 during the 2013 season; by comparison, O’Grady had 10 through his first three games last season. During Malzahn’s tenure at Auburn, tight ends have accounted for just 38 receptions for 456 yards and 11 touchdowns in seven seasons — or just 2.6 percent of the team’s catches, 2.4 percent of its receiving yards and 8.6 percent of its touchdown receptions over that time.


Morris, meanwhile, has always emphasized the use of tight ends in the passing game, whether at Arkansas, SMU or Clemson. According to Malzahn, that will carry over to Auburn, finally, after years of lip service about the position’s role in the offense.

As O’Grady explained Tuesday, Morris’ offense not only used a lot of single- and multiple-tight end sets during his two seasons in Fayetteville, but found an array of ways to incorporate the position into the gameplan and try to create mismatches, whether it was on tight end screens or more advanced routes — including that “Bama” play-call that O’Grady was so fond of.

“It was probably my favorite play, even though we hated Bama,” O’Grady said. “We were looking for man coverage to get the tight end on an out-and-up on the linebacker or the safety. We used the tight end a lot…. We love tight ends in that offense.”


Proche said playing in Morris’ system was similar to playing under Rhett Lashlee — who spent the last two seasons as offensive coordinator for SMU following Morris’ departure for Arkansas — just with different terminologies. That stands to reason, since Lashlee, like Morris, comes from the same coaching tree.

Lashlee, of course, came up under Malzahn’s tutelage and spent four seasons as Auburn’s offensive coordinator from 2013-16 before moving on and trying to branch out more on his own. In his two years at SMU, the Mustangs has a near 50/50 run-pass split — with Proche the leading receiver each season, as well as an added emphasis on tight end usage last season.

“It was very, very similar (to Morris’ offense), just different terminology, different names,” Proche said. “But very similar.”

Proche expects more of the same from Morris at Auburn, but he was mostly just happy to see his former coach, who reached out to him to wish him luck ahead of the Combine, get another opportunity after things went south at Arkansas.


“Coach Morris is the type of guy who was always going to land on his feet,” Proche said. “I feel like he can talk his way into any room, and he’s very personable. Most importantly, he knows his football, man. He’s a great football mind. I wish they would’ve gave him more time at Arkansas.”

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.




×
×
  • Create New...