bud fox wrote: ↑13 Aug 2023 22:18
Come on you can't be serious.
It feels like people can be watching two different games. You don't think the very least the first series was by design?
I guess I just don't understand what you think you're saying?
Yes, the offense can, intentionally, design itself to try to get the ball out quickly.
But the people who have experience in schemes like this will walk you through every play, point out the personnel packages and route combinations, explain how the defense responds, and show that in a concept, you might have a 1-2-3 progression to one side based on one defensive alignment or a different 1-2-3 progression based on a different pre-or-post snap action by the defense.
They'll say "ok, this combination of 3 routes is called [whatever]. If you have this concept against a single-high safety or closed middle look, you do X, then Y; if the D starts or drops back into a 2-high look, then you'll do Y, then Z.
Or "if the LB moves X direction, you go to your first read; if he moves to the Y direction, you go to your second read."
I'm not a QB or an offensive coordinator. But the people who crunch film and do the work have made detailed videos showing that Love is accurately reading the defense and adjusting his progressions. He is using his eyes to help manipulate the way defenses react to the route combinations to give him the look they want.
So yes it's a quick passing game. And SOMETIMES, the play calls for Love to make one read--if the D does X, you do Y; if it does Z you do Q. But he is not running some sort of half-field, one-read, screen-and-dumpoff offense. He's commanding a complex offensive system in full control of what his options are when the defense reacts.
I'm not sure why this is controversial or anything. It's the minimum requirement to be a competent starting QB in the NFL. There's still much more to know and explore. This isn't weird optimistic homerism. It's, like, what experts are telling me about our QB's eyes and decision-making and processing of opposing defenses in the various route combinations of our offense. And it's not some sort of glowing praise that merits responses like "you can't be serious."
If you are arguing with what I'm saying, you simply haven't done the homework and analysis. These aren't super opinion-y or interpretive. While every analyst will say "I can't say for sure how it's being taught or how this specific play is intended, here is how these concepts typically work in similar schemes and QB rooms and defensive calls."
There are people who do this for a living... who have a broad depth of knowledge. And they share that knowledge with us. Only a cynic or a narcissist rejects expertise in search of an opinion or a narrative. I'm neither. Which are you?