OK, a bit of a long night at work so that might be what's confusing me here. It seems to contradict what you were saying earlier—we should have been prepared to defend a bunch formation we hadn't seen before, in an offensive system that was new.
The negative concord in the last sentence has my head spinning. :devil:
Here, we're certainly in the same chapter of the book, but not on the same page. Personally, I don't compare a performance of a team in a bowl game and weigh that against a regular season game (IE: Utah.) IF we were to do so, we'd have to stop at turnovers and penalties which both come down to execution and concentration—not preparation. (Loss of personnel fits for both games but in this last one it was more spread out versus it being the left side of the line against Utah.)
This very well may be you and I just see things, or rather interpret things, differently. I don't see lack of prep resulting in delay of game penalties: with one exception. The delay calls in the second half, after Kelly went down, could fall there. We see offensive lineman get reps when they are part of the two's and three's. We don't see the second string center get a lot of work with the first string in situations like we saw Saturday. HOWEVER, that has to be weighed properly.
With two guys vying for the starting role at QB any staff would want both guys working with their #1 center. It doesn't allow for a lot of time for either to work with the backups other than situational drill work. On one hand you can say backups should be getting a lot of reps in case of injury. But then again, with limited practice time how wise is it to focus a lot of individual work on a backup center (in case of injury) when there's no way to judge if we'll have an injury or not. (It's reminiscent of 2005 with Closner getting hurt and Britt taking the C position. I'm still of the opinion that loss of Closner—and I wasn't a big fan of his in the first place—had more to do with that seasons collapse than the loss of Prothro.)
————
Just a thought, for all.
When Ole Miss went to that bunch formation, does anyone recall who was lined up on the other side? Ideally, a trips formation is defended by sliding one of the safeties over. IF OM had Treadwell on that other side, did we really want him in single coverage? It would be enough to make me think twice about where I would/should line up.
Sorry man, I was trying to do all this on my phone and it's a little more difficult than typing on a computer, plus I had a lot going through my head and it came out wrong. What I meant to say is that with two weeks of preparation we should not have been surprised with anything they did on offense. It wasn't like we were preparing for Georgia Tech and Navy where we needed to focus on a completely different offense. We had seen variations of this against West Virgini and I even think a hair from Florida, so we should have been better prepared in that instance is what I meant. Now I'm sure a play or two here and there were changed up on their end, but they are who they are. I think this still shows our weaknesses at defensive back. Tony Brown will be great, but he got thrown into the fire covering a Top 5 wide receiver right out of the gate, and actually did a pretty good job for the most part until the end of the game. I consider it like going to the casino, you may win in the beginning, but in the end the house will eventually get your number if you keep going to the well too many times. Landon Collins had a poor game as well. I hate to even criticize, because even the best are allowed to have an off day, but he just seemed lost in the end when they made their comeback.
I honestly believe losing Drake killed our will and spirit. I don't think I have ever seen or thought that losing a third string back could hurt a team as much as Drake. I say third string back, but a 2B is more truthful since we use these guys more than most teams would. I can honestly say I felt like it was my own kid getting hurt for some reason. Maybe it's because he's my favorite player, maybe it's because I followed him during high school, maybe it's because he was very nice and graceful to my kids, and maybe it's because he's from only about 15 minutes down the road from me, but it hurt me, so there's no telling what it did to our team to see one of their teammates screaming in pain and looking at his foot like that.
As far as the comparison to the Utah game, I was still a Georgia fan at the time, but couldn't think of a game in the last few years where we looked as bad, so I went to one I remember watching on TV and just shaking my head at the bad play. Not sure if you read any of my other posts a long time ago, but I was raised a Georgia fan and became an Alabama fan about four years ago when I decided to go to school at the University of Alabama, so my roots aren't near as deep as a bunch of y'alls (or memory), but I have jumped in the deep end since starting school and now that I have graduated. So I can agree that bowl games and regular season games are apples and oranges due to a number of different things.
And I don't put the blame as much on the back up center as I do a fifth year quarterback and an offensive coordinator making millions per year. I know he stepped in and called a couple timeouts to avoide penalty yardage, but I know they have to have wristband type plays to quickly get to the line. We have ran the hurry up a little, so I know we can get going quicker than we did. So in all, that's why I say lack of preparation, because we just weren't ready. We gave those guys the game and they took it and won with our mistakes, much like we have done to countless other teams. We have a lot left to play for, and better get out head screwed on straight, because Arkansas, Texas A&M, and Tennessee aren't no joke this year, which will lead to a HUGE matchup with Mississippi State and obviously Auburn.