plenty of last years issues concerning running the play clock out are on Lafleur getting the play to Rodgers on schedule, and Rodgers getting all the players up to speed on there assignments, we had 7 or 8 different OL man through the season and 3 rookie receivers in the mix.Madcity_matt wrote: ↑11 Aug 2023 09:15There's a big difference between utilizing the play clock and expending it to .5 seconds. You can run it down to 5 seconds each time and still be a slow tempo offense. Running it until you take a penalty or call a timeout is closer than it needs to be.Yoop wrote: ↑11 Aug 2023 08:01your right CD, I'am probably wrong about slow pace going forward, we'll see.
during the McCarthy era we where a faster pace team early at least, then we gradually slowed it some, since Lafleur we lead the league with slower pace, but with excellent success, with Love we may see a increase in pace
On the complete other end of the spectrum, the Green Bay Packers had the league’s slowest offense by seconds per play at 32.83 in neutral situations — though that is the fastest time for the 32nd ranked team since the 2013 season. While the Cardinals “don’t want to sit there and diagnose the defense,” that’s exactly what Aaron Rodgers and the Packers did. It’s ok to be the slowest offense in the league when that offense is also first in yards and points per drive. That could be repeatable in 2021 with Rodgers back under center, but speed could be needed as an additional weapon if a younger, inexperienced quarterback is forced to be the starter.
https://www.sharpfootballanalysis.com/a ... -prescott/
again we where one of the most efficient offenses in the league for Lafleur first 3 seasons, so last seasons issues where not consistent with prior success.
the game evolves, up tempo and speedy pace for us started the last decade, but has been on the decline ever since, we use more deception now to confuse the defense, versus the more simpler just run and I'll get you the ball, more backfield motion takes more clock, same with jet sweeps.
I think if Love can deceiver the defense Lafleur will keep using most of the clock, ball control, long time consuming drives keeps our defense on the side lines and theres sweating bullets and wearing down, we always have known that if ya got a lead then ya milk the clock, why people think that should only happen in the 4th quarter makes no sense, and that if ya have a lead keep pouring it on ala the Sean Payton approach, but he hasn't even been as successful as we have, same with Andy Reid, obviously both tendencies have success, and also failure, ya probably do need a very good QB for either to work, but the analytics don't lie, and that college graph shows that slower pace has lead to more efficient offense production.