Ohio State Breakdown: Quarterback
Let's start this breakdown with the offense, which we've obviously begun the dialogue on. First up: Colt McCoy
Quarterback After that sparkling debut against the Denton Pop Warner squad, I must admit to feeling pretty good about McCoy coming into this game. Why? He seemed comfortable and poised, which are the two characteristics you don't often see in such young signal callers.
There was a big problem on Saturday night, though. Whatever McCoy's strengths, and however far along the development curve he is (by all accounts, ahead of where Applewhite, Simms, and Young were at this stage), there was one key ingredient lacking under the lights for this game: trust.
This is something we've covered here before. There's been a problem at Texas with Greg Davis not trusting his quarterbacks in big games. It clearly never helped Chris Simms, and it took a transcendent player like Vince Young to get into a wide open offense where the quarterback was unleashed and completely trusted.
Saturday night, though, the reins were put right back on.
Let's be clear about what we're talking about here, though. After all, there's nothing inherently bad about screen passes. Screen passes are a valuable arrow in the offensive quiver. But they should be situational, and by that I don't mean "every time we decide it's a passing down." It's a change of pace play, and one that you can set up to be a valuable weapon.
On Saturday, Colt was taken to the amusement park and told he could only ride the kiddie rides. "Screen passes and underneath routes only, now, ya hear?"
Well, that's 1) not difficult to defend and 2) not particularly helpful in bringing a young quarterback along. The first point, of course, is the important one - at least for the game at hand. The offensive gameplan obviously leaned on lots of "passing," but it was entirely the predictable, underneath stuff that serve as, effectively, running plays. Colt did okay throwing it out in the flat, but there was no room for him to actually make much of a play, while there remained, of course, the opportunity for him to mess up the play. Don't forget, kids: all else being equal, you should prefer a run to a pass; the risk involved in the pass is simply greater. Why, then, you'd throw only passes that were the equivalents of runs is anyone's guess. It didn't help Colt, though it certainly aided their defense.
Grading Colt's performance, then, has to take into account the offensive plays that were relayed in. Well, he wasn't given much chance to go down field, though on the one occasion he did, the ball was badly under thrown and nearly intercepted. Colt did have a very nice scramble and throw on the run that rolled in and out of Jermichael Finley's arms. And he was decent enough dumping the ball off on screens over and over.
Of course, what was working so well was the power running game. And this brings us to the next great mystery from Saturday night. Why, exactly, were we running the zone-read option, when there was, in reality, no read and no option? Colt never kept the ball to run, which begs the question why it was ever faked, or considered? The defenders quickly figure out that he wasn't going to keep the ball for himself. Why, then, wouldn't you just run out of a power I formation? Or any other power running set? What purpose did the zone-read serve? If Colt's not going to run the football, and isn't going to be making a read on "run or hand off," then there's no read for the defense, either.
On that score, I'm not sure where the blame totally falls. Part of it needs to be on Davis, who ought to have been telling him, "Son, you gotta keep that football sometimes. That's how the play works." Some of it's on McCoy, then, as there were multiple plays when McCoy handed off on the wrong read - Vince, for example, would have ran the same play, but upon seeing the end race up the field, kept the football and cut inside himself. Colt never made that happen.
Colt, of course, is a freshman. The Ohio State defense, however questionable as it breaks in some new faces, was a lot for him to handle, and in the end, he wasn't up to the task. Part of it was, as discussed, because he wasn't put in much of a position to succed. And part of it was just poor performace from a frosh in his first huge game.
Hopefully, it's a learning experience, and conference play will give Colt plenty of opportunities to shine. For Saturday, though, the freshman showed his true color: green. We might have been just a bit too hopeful to ask for more. Winning 21 straight will do that to ya. Grade: C
Next up: the tailbacks
--PB--
0 recs |
15 comments
Comments
Zone Read
Either Sweed didn't know/hear the play or didn't block the corner becuase he didn't think Colt would ever fake the handoff. We probably won't ever know the answer and it doesn't really matter.
PB is correct in the analysis of the play in general. You must have a QB capable of running and scaring the defense or don't run the play. Colt is not that QB. So run counters, draw plays, sweeps, or just straight ahead out of the I formation. Please eliminate the zone read and the option.
--AW--
by awiggo on Sep 11, 2006 12:09 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Colt
Plus, that interception was bad. Talk about zoned in on a receiver, there was nothing disguised about the coverage on that play.
by Jason Mayer on Sep 11, 2006 8:20 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
You hit on exactly the problem that I saw...
Greg Davis pulled the reins back so hard that the only direction Colt's head could see was to the flat. That resulted in a lot of 3-and-out scenarios, which meant that the defense was on the fielt very often. Everybody knows that when the D doesn't get time to rest on the sidelines, they are going to hurt in the 4th quarter.
I thought Colt did a decent enough job running the offense, and the plays that were called. The game plan though was just terrible.
by Brandon 97 on Sep 11, 2006 8:24 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Pocket Presence
by bendj on Sep 11, 2006 9:09 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Way Harsh
I was impressed by a young kid stepping up, knowing his skill and experince limitations, exposing himself to all the criticism and crap he's gonna get for not filling the shoes of a very big talent and suffer by comparision. And still he came out an took his shots (and now his lumps).
The biggest mistakes made are of expectation and perception
by Xerxes on Sep 11, 2006 9:14 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Dont know where this comment should go
Colt just needs experience. And GD needs experience with Colt. We've got three games to get them gelling.
by the other Andrew on Sep 11, 2006 9:21 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
The style of offense
They handcuffed an offense that is already sleak and simple. My thoughts earlier http://www.burntorangenation.com/comments/2006/9/10/183818/412/4#4
It would be like if I wanted to cut back on gasoline waste or the wear on my car, so I decide to remove the back two wheels.
That's fine, because it certainly eliminates the possibility of fuel costs and problems with my car.
But I can't go anywhere either. The car doesn't operate anymore.
Get rid of the zone read if Colt can't run it. He isn't actually reading anything -- and is just treating it like a run play. GD borrowed it from VY's HS coach, so he can return to sender and eliminate it all together.
We can beat are heads against the wall all day, but we should know by now that Davis will continue what he's doing.
My theory is that his heals are dug in by self insulating himself from criticism to the point of not ever having the ability to admit fault or deficencies. He just sits in his office and strokes his cheap pawn shop Broyles award.
by EYESofBEVO on Sep 11, 2006 9:36 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Colt vs. GD
I put ALL of the blame on GD. Why? Many reasons:
- He is the quarterbacks coach.
- He calls screen, screen screen ... all day long.
- He DARES to blame the QB for opting out of long-ball plays, when ...
- ... we have all seen the same style of east-west playcalling for YEARS ON END.
It's going to be painful.
by EddieTheAlbinoSquirrel on Sep 11, 2006 10:31 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
He doesn't need anyone to play the Frosh card
by BrooklynHorn on Sep 11, 2006 11:26 AM CDT reply actions 0 recs
Broken Record
Colt will come along, but he was not ready for this game. A C is harsh, but my be deserving if we are comparing him to Smith or Vince. I still think he will be a good QB for UT, but because of his arm strength he is going to need to read the defense better because he can't out run and pass over the defense like Vince could.
by Wells on Sep 11, 2006 12:49 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
The spread worked with Vince
It is not an easy offense to run with a true passer who can really only scramble.
by EYESofBEVO on Sep 11, 2006 1:46 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Agreed
by Wells on Sep 11, 2006 2:01 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
But with a hefty pay raise
Louisville runs a spread offense, but runs from the I formation.
I truly don't think they need to reinvent the wheel, but installing some elements of a pro style offense would not be a huge change. Teams flex in and out of the gun all the time.
If GD is truly a Broyle worthy candidate making close to half a million a year than he should be able to make that change.
by EYESofBEVO on Sep 11, 2006 2:13 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
I think he will make the change
Everyone will then ask why they did not do this sooner, but I think the answer to that is it we would not have been ready for OSU if we changed too much in the spring and summer practices.
by Wells on Sep 11, 2006 2:20 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Also
by kicker on Sep 11, 2006 1:07 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs


























