[Husker] Risky Business
Kaufsss at aol.com
Kaufsss at aol.com
Thu Jan 4 13:18:44 CST 2007
In a message dated 1/4/2007 12:37:13 PM Central Standard Time,
pgaule at cox.net writes:
As I have mentioned about 3 previous times, if the play had worked, NU
still would have 40-50 yards out of scoring range. I am not convinced
that momentum would be enough to carry the team down the field.
Just because you say it alot - doesn't make it true - I think it looks like
it would have gone quite a ways and momentum WAS carrying them down the field.
K-state the first down. Nonetheless, their drive stalled immediately
thereafter. At best, it gained them a slight advantage in field
position. Similarly, NU ran a fake punt against USC early in the game
and the drive stalled immediately thereafter. To take such a big risk
for a possible "momentum change" is simply a horrible decision.
I respectfully disagree - I think it wasn't a momentum change, but trying to
continue the momentum
>>.Everyone is calling Peterson a genius, but if the ball got dropped
>>in the statue of liberty play or the ladder didn't hook- what would
people be
>>saying?
>
>People need to watch the replay of that play and realize that BSU likely
>wouldn't have converted the first down if not for the lateral. Whether
>or not it worked, I would have been applauding the call. I know this is
>hard for some fans to grasp, but there are some of us that judge the
>quality of a play call on more merits than whether it worked.
Well I guess my limited 'some fans' knowledge can't grasp these tough
concepts - but I liked the Boise State calls, all of them - the idea is to throw
under the defense and then get the first down with the lateral/RAC. I think
both plays had merit.
>The Huskers were trying to make things happen- just like
>Osborne did going for 2 against Miami.
>
>From the standpoint of winning that game, it was the only decision
>Osborne could have made. I don't think you can even try to compare that
>to a fake punt on 4th down in the 1st half, deep in our own territory.
I was comparing the idea of making something happen - did he have to win the
game to be #1? He was trying to make something happen.
>As I said when people were
>complaining about the previous trick plays - this shows a great deal of
confidence in
>his players and the abilities - not the opposite.
>
>I don't think anyone is complaining about "trick plays." I think people
>are complaining about when they are run. When Callahan runs trick plays
>where the penalty for error is not a complete disaster (i.e. NU has a
>comfortable lead, good field position, first down, 4th down and just
>outside of Congdon's range, etc.), then the results have been
>overwhelmingly positive. The problem people have is when they are run
>in a high risk situation, where the benefit is minimal and the penalty is
huge.
Again - respectfully disagree - I think the benefit far outweighed the risk
- the play would have worked if not for the timing being off from I think the
snap. And by the way - people were complaining about the trick plays, when
they were run, how they were run... everything about them. Maybe not you, but
some have been. Then 'they' complain he closed the playbook later!
>The players like them -
>look at the kids from Boise State. I do not believe (as some have said)
that
>even if it worked, they would be complaining. It is all risk and reward-
>hopefully next year the ball always bounces the right way!!
>
>
>
>
>The decision to run a certain play should never be entirely reliant on
>"the ball bouncing the right way." There should be a specific reason why a
play is called, and the >implications of succes or failure always
>need to be taken into consideration before all else. The ball is
>*never* going to "always bounce the right way."
>Furthermore, I never said I would complain about the call if it had
>worked, but I would not hesitate to call it a "needless gamble." As
>I've said many times before, a play call is not necessarily bad if it
>fails, and a play call is not necessarily good even if it succeeds.
>Sometimes, a team gets lucky after making a poor decision. Other times,
>a team will fail despite flawless execution and a perfectly designed
>play. Sometimes, coaches make a bad decision and it costs the team.
>That's what happened to Callahan on Monday.
As you said - sometimes they make a good decesion and it costs the team also
-
Steve Kauf
A Husker fan deep in South Texas
NOT THE VICTORY BUT THE ACTION
NOT THE GOAL BUT THE GAME
IN THE DEED THE GLORY
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