Join the groupHis pass defense gave up the lead on his normal busted coverage. Remember, his defenses' always gave up at least one big pass play because of busted coverages.
VERY good question!Can't understand how anyone could blame any coach when a player busted coverage. You are faulting the player for not following his assignment....yet including the coach for the player's error. How does that work EVER? Coaches get plenty of deserved blame so there is no reason to pile on unless you just like finding fault, however stupid it may be, simply to rag on someone.
Clemson played tough, take away those busted TE coverages and that trick onside and it would have been a blow out for Clemson.
I put the blame on the coach and the player. Either the coach didnt prepare the player for TE coverage or the player just did his own thing. I tend to think the player wasnt prepared properly before the game AND again at the half.How the heck do you let a TE go for 200 yards and different TE for a long TD unless you didnt prepare properly for it.
I "like" and reply in violent agreement!Oklahoma would have beaten Alabama. My opinion and dont feel like going into the details to substantiate my claim. If you agree like the post if not... let me have it
I "like" and reply in violent agreement!
Of course, I'm asking WHY couldn't have the MOUTH CB from Clemson not gotten hurt in OUR game????????????Yep, what hath been done less than two years before can be repeated with a monster QB like Baker Mayfield.
You're going to have to define "prepare for it".Clemson played tough, take away those busted TE coverages and that trick onside and it would have been a blow out for Clemson.
I put the blame on the coach and the player. Either the coach didnt prepare the player for TE coverage or the player just did his own thing. I tend to think the player wasnt prepared properly before the game AND again at the half.How the heck do you let a TE go for 200 yards and different TE for a long TD unless you didnt prepare properly for it.
You're going to have to define "prepare for it".
Sometimes, kids aren't perfect. And no matter how well you "prepare" for another team, kids make mistakes. Is that on a coach because every player didn't execute every play perfectly every time? Sounds like an impossible standard, one that we don't adopt for ourselves in our daily lives. Do all your employees make perfect decisions every single time? If they don't (which they don't), are you to blame for not preparing them properly? Even if you've shown them what to do?
I agree it's likely a combination of both, but I usually think player first. Unless I can just see that a wrong scheme was called for (see continuously only rushing three against a spread offense).
But EVERY team has weaknesses, risks that are repeatedly there. Even Alabama. You can not construct a perfect defense that never has the same types of risks. If you run a 4-3, there are inherent risks in that defense against some offenses. Same thing for the 3-4.
Brent's philosophy at OU (and Clemson) is to take away certain areas (maybe the underneath). It's always a risk then that another part of the field is exposed. You do the best you can to minimize those risks, but each and every philosophy on how to defend offenses come with risks. So you may call it a weakness on Venables part, but if he were to change it up and decide that he'll give up the underneath but makes sure he never ever gets burned, people will switch their tune to "He's always giving up the easy 5-10 yard passes. He doesn't prepare his team well enough for that." The problem is you can't do both. It's an impossibility people are searching for.
I'm not saying Brent doesn't have flaws, I'm saying his defenses (all defenses) come with certain risks, and they're going to be exposed by those who can expose them. OU couldn't, and he had the same philosophy against us as he did Alabama. Were his players just more prepared against us, or is it his style of defense just matched up better against us than Alabama?