Taming The OU Defense & The Response

Image via newsok.com (Chris Landsberger)

We all remember last year’s Sugar Bowl and while the defensive performance was far less than perfect, at times it was down right nasty. And, of course, Trevor played out of his mind, but the lasting image for me was Eric Striker sacking AJ McCarron in the picture you see above. For the first the first time in a while, the OU defense was the talk of the country and a defensive player was the face of the program.

Those of you who read my posts or have engaged with me in the comments section below know that I love defense. So for me this sort of a renaissance was an exciting and welcomed one. I really believe a lot of you are like me in that you really want the identity of Oklahoma Football to be built on defensive excellence.

If you ask Mark Dantonio what the identity of his defense is, he’d say something like: we are an attacking style defense that seeks to suffocate opposing offenses. If you watch a little Michigan State, you can see that in everything they do, including their alignment. The question I’ve been trying to ask myself, and answer by watching this OU defense is, what is Oklahoma’s identity? Whether it’s from a broad perspective or more specific, I’m still looking for that answer. But I want to talk about one broad aspect of what appeared to be Oklahoma’s defensive identity earlier this season, namely an attacking style defense.

Coming into the year OU got right back to where it left off in the Alabama game…attacking. While Tennessee obviously had an inexperienced offensive line, Oklahoma put more pressure on them than anyone I’ve seen play them since. Once OU stuffed the run on 1st and 2nd down…the dogs were unleashed.

Since then however, it seems the OU defense has been tamed. And it seems to have affected all aspects of the defensive approach, including the overall swagger and general edge of the defense. I wanted to specifically address a few things that I believe have played a big roll in subduing Oklahoma’s defense, and once again it’s Dana Holgorsen who laid the blue print.

Max Protect

Mike Stoops built a defensive front that could get after the quarterback. In fact, one of his primary reasons for moving to an add front was in order to better disguise his pressure (well, that, and two years ago DL depth looked to be in issue, however now it’s easily the deepest position group on that side of the ball & in no small part to the work Jerry Montgomery has done since arriving in Norman). And to his, or really Montgomery’s credit they’ve amassed some tremendous pass rushers.

So what exactly did Dana Holgorsen do to counter this? Exactly what Mike Stoops would seemingly want, he added more blockers and removed receiving threats. Mike had made a chess move that necessitated a response. That’s the position you want to be in, dictating your terms to the offense. You want to spread us out? Fine, but we’re going to break your quarterback in half. However, when you make a good move, it has to be for the purpose of getting your opponent’s King. In other words, you have to anticipate the move you’re going to force them to make and then capitalize on it. The advantage you have at that point is you’re forcing the change, so you can anticipate the response and suffocate the team when they go to it.

So what was Oklahoma’s response to these extra blockers? Well initially it was to bring 4 to 5 rushers for 7 to 8 blockers. While not necessarily an overly conservative pass rush, it also wasn’t all that aggressive either. This allowed Clint Trickett time in the pocket and as a result, he hurt Oklahoma a number of times from this look. It also forced OU’s edge rushers, who are their best pass rushers, to come from farther away in terms of the angles they were having to take to Trickett. So as time has gone on, OU’s response to this type of look has been to drop more and more guys into coverage. This only got worse as OU faced more mobile quarterbacks these past three games, because it seemed to make Oklahoma feel like they couldn’t send A-gap pressure and their rushers became even more conservative (I’m sure some would say “disciplined”) in their pass rush.

In response to a reader question/comment yesterday, I mentioned that it seems to be the tendency of most defensive coordinators to reduce the ratio of pass rushers to blockers as those numbers of blockers increase. But I don’t know exactly why that is. It may simply be because of the distance the pass rushers now have to come (as I noted earlier). The other possible issue kind of cuts two ways. One could argue that with all the protection and additional pressure, you vacate the field for two receivers to move around in space and also potentially show the coverage right away (man-to-man). This could lead to bigger gains. Others would argue that you take away the easy pick routes, crossing routes, etc. and force the quarterback to make difficult throws against unimpeded DBs.

How should a great pass rushing team deal with this scenario?

I’m sure the OU defensive staff has ideas far superior and better researched than mine, but these posts wouldn’t any be fun (at least for me) if I didn’t offer some thoughts. Or if I didn’t get to read your ideas in the comments section below.

1. I think the first thing to do is get past the traditional idea that running QBs have to be contained. Against great running backs the worst thing to do is allow them to get a head of steam. You want to get them moving side-to-side.

2. Secondly, I think the response depends on the team, but I’d always test with pressure first. Obviously, with a team like WVU you’ve got to be really mindful of the screen game since it’s a staple of Holgorsen’s offense. But I don’t want to get bogged down with details in this post. Early pressure can keep a quarterback from getting in a rhythm and it can create pass rushing ghosts later in the game. I don’t want to give the quarterback any scenario in which he feels comfortable. Even a running quarterback that is pressured still has two unknowns: a) is he going to be able to find a receiver before he gets sacked and b) if he can’t find a receiver, can he find a lane to run through without getting dragged down?

I also don’t want the offensive linemen to get comfortable. Starting your pressure packages with disguised blitzes that don’t actually come allows an offensive line to get settled. Giving them an all-out-blitz and then following it up with disguised pressure packages may be more effective. In the Alabama game, that offensive line was playing on their heals so much that by the end of the game, it looked like OU could have sent one guy on a blitz and the whole line would’ve crumbled.

3. A-gap pressure. OU shows a double eagle look at time,s but I recall very, very few times when they’ve actually shot those two eagles or shot double A’s. If teams want to slow your edge pressure, start making life difficult on their interior linemen and get pressure up the middle.

4. Drop in coverage. OU does that but because the quarterback gets comfortable early, even when OU shows pressure and drops in coverage they can’t seem to get quarterbacks to get rid of the ball early. Instead, they’ve got a quarterback who is settled and waits on his wide receivers to find holes in the zone. So while I like the idea of dropping in coverage, I think it needs to be after the quarterback has had a healthy dose of pressure in the first couple series.

5. More split safety coverage. Perhaps my favorite coverage is the ‘trust 2 man under.’ OU employs this coverage at times on 3rd down and it just works more often than not.

6. Delayed pressure. Set their blockers up with an initial conservative pass rush, show them a full field, and then bring some delayed pressure to hopefully get a clean shot at the quarterback or to force him to get rid of the ball before he wants. A well-timed delayed blitz can be one of the most disruptive forces without sacrificing too many of your cover players.

7. Get more out of your front three. Yesterday, in post practice session, Tapper said, “as a defensive line (on 3rd down) we’re not as active as we were last year…we’re not flying off the ball like we were last year.” I know these guys are getting doubled and tripled, but they’ve got continue to fight through these blocks. I think giving them some delayed pressure could motivate them to really keep making the offensive linemen work.

Man-to-Man Coverage

One of the first times in the WVU game Mike Stoops sent a man coverage call in, Trickett hit Kevin White on a deep touchdown pass. It happened so fast, but White is also proving to be arguably the best receiver in the country. White gave Sanchez an outside move and got him (Sanchez) to open up right away. He cut back inside, ran straight up field, and it was over.

What Holgorsen did that day was something really simple. He knew OU only plays their corners to one side of the field respectively, so he simply put his big, fast, physical wide receiver on the left (offense’s right) and lined him up against OU’s smaller corner (Sanchez). And he put his small, shifty, quicker wide receiver on the right (offense’s left) and lined up against OU’s bigger corner (Wilson). So true to form, Snyder lines up his quickest receiver, Tyler Lockett, against Wilson this past Saturday.

How to combat this?

1. Move your corners around to create the optimal match-ups. That’s what OU did last week.

2. Let Julian play press the entire game. I truly believe Julian is a press corner. As is the case with most big corners, off-coverage is much more difficult to play. Now you might be saying, ‘well what about when OU is in another coverage like quarters?’ It’s still a match-man zone coverage and while he may have to pass off his route at some point, I still want him close to that defender at the snap.

Wide Splits

If you want to know what OU is and isn’t good at it, just watch whether a strategy employed one week by an offensive staff is used again the subsequent week by another staff. One thing you’ve probably noticed is OU continues to see these wide splits that they first saw against West Virginia.

Myself and some of the other guys have talked about this the past couple weeks, and it seemed pretty clear it was creating issues for OU. Primarily because it was creating huge running lanes and yet at the same time, it was also slowing down OU’s edge rushers.

In Stoops’ postgame presser this past weekend, he was asked about how those splits are affecting his team and he essentially said, not at all or minimally. But anyone can see that just isn’t the case. Yesterday, in the post practice media session both, Mike Stoops and Charles Tapper actually brought this issue up. Mike said they do indeed realize they are going to continue to see these splits until they can give their players some clear direction on how to attack them, and he put the onus on the staff. While Tapper spent almost his entire interview time talking about the splits and the problems it has created for the defense.

Since I had already intended on addressing this issue (despite what Bob Stoops said) before it was brought up yesterday, I reached out to a coaching friend earlier this week and he agreed to take a look at some of the plays. I have a particular way that I’d attack it, but I’ll hold off for now and offer those thoughts along with my buddy’s ideas (though I suspect they’re going to somewhat coincide).

Among other things, one of the issues the wide splits raises is that it forces your edge rushers to come from farther away. And of course everyone is trying to remain disciplined in their rush, but the lanes are just so huge! If you stay in your base alignment and send guys through the A-gaps, there is the threat of overrunning the play and leaving a huge hole for a ball carrier, or opening up the middle screen, or perhaps getting the interior rush chipped and you leave yourself open to the outside run or a potential pass against reduced coverage.

Again, I’ll address this with some thoughts from myself and a friend at a later date. But for now, these are some of my thoughts on the current issues I’m seeing with this OU defense. What are your thoughts?

53 Comments

  • Jordan Esco says:

    The idea of moving your corners around rather than forcing them to stay on one side of the field is a good one and IMO simple common sense, but I have a hard time believing it’s something they’d actually do.

    Last Saturday was only like the second or third time I can ever remember them doing that. And while that may a bit of an exaggeration on my part, it’s not that far off. So if you’re expecting them to change something that has been the case 99% of the 15 years Bob has been in Norman….sorry, just not seeing it.

    And, to your exact point, what makes it even dumber is just how easy it is to manipulate. You know you can line up a guy like White on Sanchez simply by your alignment b/c OU won’t make the necessary adjustment.

    • OUknowitscomin says:

      In reality, this has been a hallmark of OU football back to Switzer days. Remember many games where opposing team announcers said this exact thing, and they were right actually. ‘OU doesn’t try to outsmart you much, they just flat out telegraph this is what we’re going to do because we have better, bigger, faster players. You’re going to have to beat us & were betting our strengths will prevail.
      Well, they usually did back then….but they weren’t exactly facing O schemes like today.
      It used to frustrate me often back then, why so stubbornly do the same thing over & over, even when not working, counting on prevailing in end.
      Hard headedness has a long history at OU.

      • Boom says:

        If I was starting my coaching career and someone told me I would have Switzer’s record doing the same thing over and over with 3 nattys – I think I would take it.

        • OUknowitscomin says:

          lol. Barry was a heck of a personality and could recruit. Of course the rules were a tad different & he even surpassed those. I’m not minimizing him at all, one of best coaches in time for sure. Such a different era, playing B8 foes (Neb sums it up), and not having to play #2 team like began in BCS era. The road was certainly easier than modern conferences. The thought of those announcers always saying that just came to mind on this topic back then.

          • Boom says:

            Barry was more than a personality/recruiter. He introduced the wishbone, in one week. They made the switch midyear, not in the off season. In addition, they kicked ass the next year. I’m tired of hearing, well, it’s only our 2nd year in the 3-4 so give Mike some time.

          • OUknowitscomin says:

            I did say he was more than that, one of best coaches of time. I’ve heard many say they’re tired of this or that from coaching, but really we don’t have inside truth and bottom line is it’s Bob’s decision. Somehow I think Bob’s probably in tune with it.

          • Walter Sobcek says:

            Darrel Royal had his assistants help teach Barry the ‘Bone. Can you imagine that happening today?

  • Brian says:

    Yes to Julian pressing always.

    And I can’t help but think Bob’s denial is very frustrating. Love the guy but I just wish he’d be a little more honest with himself and the media.

    • Super K says:

      It’s funny cause Mike contradicts him in the post practice pressers…regularly haha.

      • SoonerOracle737 says:

        I think Bob abhors acknowledging any schematic information in the media. He just isn’t going to do it simply to not tip off his opponents. Mike is more open to talk about it. Two different personalities. Nothing more, nothing less.

        • L'Carpetron Dookmarriot says:

          Everyone has tape of the games. Telling someone about schemes in the media means nothing. By Tuesday or Wednesday OU’s opponent already knows their tendencies.

          • SoonerOracle737 says:

            He’s just making them earn it. I really can’t blame him for not commenting on schematic details. I know it irritates a lot of the fan base, but not me.

          • OUknowitscomin says:

            Agreed, doesn’t bother me at all. Either accept it or go nuts. Winning takes care of that, Belicek @ NE Patriots makes Bob look dynamic & forthcoming. I wonder how many of their fans have gone off edge not being able to get reliable/any info over the years.

  • SoonerfanTU says:

    Agree on moving the corners. We really have to completely different corners this year with different strengths. When we play offenses that can take advantage of that, I think it’s silly to not move our CB’s around to put them in the best position.

  • Sooner_Ace says:

    Adjustments! Adjustments! We don’t need no stinking adjustments!!! smh…….the arrogance of it all by this staff at times is mindblowing. Take a bite of humble pie, and LEARN from past errors…..

  • Jeremy Phillips says:

    Wide splits?? Stunts, twists, bring Dom & or Jordan right up the A gaps.. I don’t think that’s too difficult.. We have attacking style players.. Why not play to those strengths?? Im not a coach, just a guy.. so that may be completely the wrong thing to do…

  • Bluegrass Sooner says:

    K, great post. I think it is easy for us fans to remember the Sugar Bowl with Crimson-colored glasses because of all the huge plays the defense did make and the way they made those plays. The defense did give up several big plays and lots of yards. I think some of my expectations for this year’s defense came from remembering that picture of Striker. I am excited and hopeful that our guys will continue to work hard and will get back some of their swagger soon, which will come as the players and coaches make adjustments and have some success. Our defense is too talented not to improve IMO.

    • hOUligan says:

      Very true. OU D made big plays but gave up some too. But the staff attacked Alabama all night long on offense and defense. Were the Alabama alignments truly that easy to attack or were they truly asleep that night? It certainly seems that the OU staff has played it safe, played not to lose rather than attacking on both sides of the ball this season whereas in the SB, it’s like they put it all on the line and played aggressive.

      • Bluegrass Sooner says:

        I totally agree with you, hOUligan. The whole attitude of the Sugar Bowl was balls to the wall and attack at every opportunity. That attitude is what I have missed the last three games, and that attitude was what made the few games so fun to watch.

        • boomersooner says:

          My question is what did they see? What is it that Mike saw on video or in practice to make such a drastic change? Obviously its easier to chase a guy for 3 seconds than it is for 6 but to me the answer is the young safeties. He doesn’t want em to get burned all the time. But, to me, the answer k gives is the easy one that makes the most sense. Simplify everything so you lessen the chance of a breakdown

          • L'Carpetron Dookmarriot says:

            McCarron is known for freaking out when pressure gets to him. I think that’s what Mike saw. Also, it was a bowl game and Bob might have been tired of losing them.

          • boomersooner says:

            No. I mean now. I wonder if it is the safeties and them not being quite there yet. He doesn’t wanna leave em on an island. TCU game looked like a pro bowl with no rush

      • Walter Sobcek says:

        Bama’s offense last year was still designed as a typical run heavy SEC team. Big tackles who were not real quick, and vulnerable to fast rushers on the edge, like Striker and Grissom. It was a big matchup problem for Bama.

  • Mike seems to be taking on the persona of his brother…playing scared. It’s pitiful to watch. Why not shoot the gaps and make the QB make a stupid decision. Dictate the game to them instead of allowing them to dictate to us. This playing scared bit is annoying and its like dying a slow and painful death each weak. Our OC and DC have ruined this season for the Sooners with terrible game plans. Finally Heupel went to a game plan that works well with TK9, yet he still has one or two terrible, TERRIBLE calls that blow the game for us. Mike….just won’t attack…ugh!

    • boomersooner says:

      Blaming Heupel and Knight for this loss is like cowboy’s fans blaming romo for the defense giving up 30 pts every week. If he has even one turnover its all his fault. I get it, he’s the qb but you can’t blame the qb when the d gives up a bunch of points. And, what was it? A minute into the 2nd qtr? And he got the points back in 2 plays. You have your opinion and I’m not bashing just showing how other opinions differ and what I’m seeing. Whatcha think?

      • disqus_uj44WuVjt2 says:

        TK passed much better Saturday, he did not throw behind a crossing receiver. He also did not throw it in the dirt. JH is capable of coming out of his shroud cover occasionally but he goes back into the Black Pit quicker that he comes out. He called the play that was a pick 6 and was the dumbest play to call in that situation. TK has to share in the blame for throwing it. They did get the 7 back but why give up 7 to start with. I think JH is HEAVILY influenced by BS don’t lose philosophy. Not sure if BS could get an up and comer to come here if replacement is needed!!

        • boomersooner says:

          I agree that he shoulda ate that ball but you can’t pin this on Knight. He threw for 300 and 3 scores I think. And led us to 33 pts and should have been at least 40. You can’t hang this on him. Some sure. Maybe 10% sounds good to me

  • hOUligan says:

    Obviously not a coach but an old military adage, ‘get there firstest with the mostest’ comes to mind. Seems wide splits potentially put an OLman on an island and subject to pressure and would want to overwhelm those points along the line in a way that it is never coming from the same place. As said, aggressive linemen, 2 even 3 defenders at a single point where 2 drop or all 3 come, stunts and shooting LBs/safeties on delayed blitzes on occasion. Either you are attacking and setting up an opening or you’re reacting to your opponent.

  • Cush Creekmont says:

    Yes – PRESS the corners.

  • Krys Allen says:

    With the wide gaps, why cant we just shoot one guy up the gap… say striker while everyone else plays it safe.. I would think that with unimpeded access to the backfield, he would either get to the QB before he could pass, or at least be there quick enough to chase down whoever has the ball. Why not at least try something different?

    • disqus_uj44WuVjt2 says:

      He would at least hurry the throw.

    • OUknowitscomin says:

      This was my frustration with KSU game, I don’t recall ever shooting a guy up gap. Agreed, why didn’t even try is beyond me. Seemed like LB could be to QB in 1.4 seconds.

  • Sooner8494 says:

    In the case of mobile QB’s, why wouldn’t it be advantageous to use a ‘spy’ to just focus on the QB? It seems Evans is quick and savvy enough to play the spy. I’m just curious since if the counter to an aggressive defense with a mobile QB is not knowing what the QB will do, it just seems a spy would negate some effectiveness of this.
    If I remember right, watching the Oregon/Mich St. and Oregon/Arizona games, both teams employed a spy on Mariota. It worked for awhile with MSU and paid off for Arizona.

  • Steve Johns says:

    It’s even more of a problem, when teams use wide splits in a 4 receiver set. Shooting gaps is a crap shoot, how do you choose which gap?

  • OUknowitscomin says:

    I’ve just noticed for some time that the best D’s have handled elite running QB’s by getting pressure up middle, in their face. Since the RGIII game, I’ve been even less of a fan of ‘prevent/contain’ D. Didn’t work then, doesn’t now.
    Other thing I (think) I see is that our D lineman, as game proceeds & more secondary busts, lose their edge a bit, almost seems frustration, where they’re seemingly going through motions of rush 3yds then back off/contain. The busts seem to perpetuate this & have a bad effect on their psyche perhaps. Almost of a ‘what good am I doing whether I go full steam or not-it’s still contain & WR’s still get open’. That’s another aspect the pressure can help, D line psyche IMO

  • thebigdroot says:

    “3. A-gap pressure. OU shows a double eagle look at time,s but I recall very, very few times when they’ve actually shot those two eagles or shot double A’s. If teams want to slow your edge pressure, start making life difficult on their interior linemen and get pressure up the middle.”
    Thank you!! I have been saying this for awhile. Everybody and their dog knows we have pass rushers on the edge, so what do you do? Attack the enemy where he doesn’t expect it. Mike is calling these games safe, which is just crazy to me. Did Zona make him soft?

  • Boom says:

    Let’s make this simple. If you constantly pressured the QB (85 bears) you don’t have to have great safeties. If we did this and put massive hits and sacks on QB’s, do you think it may get in their head “before” the game?

    • Super K says:

      Boom, I def don’t think you need or should use constant pressure. You need the right pressure at the right time. But I actually like coverage calls against max protect. Just not a huge fan of the coverage sometimes.

      • Boom says:

        With ya. I should have been more specific on certain situations. Doesn’t belong on every play. However I would like for other QBs to know we r pin ing our ears in the right spots.

  • soonermusic says:

    “post practice media session” Is that available to view or listen to anywhere? I wanted to hear the the rest of M. Stoops’ comments…

  • Chris White says:

    When I was in High School (2 years ago) we ran an Odd front and I was a Defensive End. We weren’t huge like you would see in an odd front but we were fast as hell and you have to play to your advantage so one of our audibles, when we would see those wide splits, was called “Gamble”. I would scoot to the B gap so I was in between guard and tackle as if I was a Defensive tackle in a 4 man front, my job was then to crash down onto the center to form a rushing hole for the linebacker. The gamble was that I was giving up the C gap. It always worked because (Like Tapper) I usually picked up double teams from the center and Guard or the guard and tackle so this play was a blitz to confuse the guard. The point of this crazy long comment is that if teams are going to confuse our Dline with wide splits we need to confuse their O line with angles and tendencies like our Dline did in the first half against Alabama, we slanted all the time which made Alabama squish in resulting in a smaller pocket in the second half and a larger distance for their Tackles to guard blitzers like Striker

  • Walter Sobcek says:

    Texas Tech used to run wide splits under Leach, and we handled those pretty well. What did we then?

    • Sooner Ray says:

      I was thinking about that very thing this morning. The difference I see is that tech was a low run threat and hard to pressure because their pass game was about getting the ball out quickly with lots of options.

  • Wilson says:

    Pressure tested…..fan approved….

  • OUknowitscomin says:

    I watched KSU game again last couple nights, rewinding plays & observing things….to best of my ability anyway. Things that stood out to me:
    1. Tapper is really showing a lot of signs of fatigue, actually for a few games now. It was amazing how much better Dimon looked (fresh of course) when subbed. Tapper is getting turned pretty easily in 2nd halfs by O lineman. The big 40yd run by Waters was (besides A.Thomas whiff 15yds down field) something that I believe a fresh Tapper doesn’t miss. He seemed tipsy & weak on that play & flailed to reach out, with the slightest of rest he makes that play with just a little push. Ironically Dimon came in on next play. I know the sickle cell is likely most of this, the point is that had Dimon been back in game form & not 1st game back, more subbing will help immensely….along with Walker, this has hurt us MUCH more than has been given credit IMO.

    2. Plays where we have Obo & Bond on edges were FAR superior against max protect & power sets with their power over Striker rushing. Obvious to certain extent, but far under utilized.

    3. It’s not just a theory on applying more pressure vs dropping so many. I really focussed on plays bringing 4 or more rushers vs 3. Some will say that pressure isn’t necessarily good because you can get burned. We got burned with rushing 4 exactly one time with a 15yd pass. One could argue the Waters run is a 2nd (which it was) but I don’t count it because Tapper had great position to make play if he was more fresh it just looked like he easily would have made the play. I’ve seen this in other games as well, just looking worn out. On other side, times we rushed 4 & especially 5, we had very good success. I missed it the 1st time, but D looked good in 4th quarter and stopped 2-drives pretty quickly finally using more pressure, I hadn’t thought Mike had made much adjustments during game, but he did. Ironically this is the same time we saw more subs and pressure.

    4. There were quite a few plays I noticed where our backside LB just dropped to cover no one….and I mean no one. Drove me nuts. For life of me not sure why they don’t rush qb immediately when obvious they are covering nothing but open field with no WR anywhere near them. Perhaps just youth, or instructed, not sure. Most of them weren’t really drop backs, more swinging out to side to cover that portion of field when play was running the opposite way. There were also so many spots where we had 3 guys in same area guarding same player essentially. Youth? Good designed plays by Snyder? likely both

    5. Snyder wasted no time at all going after Gastelum when he had to sub for Evans helmet coming off. TD! But fortunately that was one that came back on penalty for man down field.

    6. KSU ran men downfield on 4 plays, 3 in 1st half and 1 in 2nd. Only called penalty on one, they were all big plays. It’s being claimed OU did same on last TD on Twitter, but Darlington was only 3yds downfield when pass released and not blocking anyone at all. Not 3 guys like KSU had plays designed where 1/2 of line was coming forward 3-5yds. Big difference in how a D keys on those with a front coming downhill like that.

    7. Frustration……we were SOOOO close on so many occasions. D actually played better overall than I first gave credit for. They actually got many more stops than I remembered, it’s just the others were so painfully bad that it made it seem like all game. So many close calls. Perine shoestring tackle on last drive, I could go on and on. KSU was SO fortunate to come away with W after review, but they did.

    8. Last play of game was painful to watch again. I still don’t like the fact that we ran basically same play 3times straight, but that last play was more about execution than play call after review. Darlington & Thompson were both just shoved back on left side, by single blockers(especially Darlington). That in essence was what blew play up more than backside pursuit IMO, I think Perine powers through if either O linemen get any push at all, they didn’t.

    We had so many players play so many quality snaps, but like other games it’s been sporadic between squads. Unfortunately it blended to create just enough errors to give game away. IMO still doesn’t take away that they are playing some very good football, it just has been holes that collectively and untimely have come together in wrong places at wrong times. It happens, but don’t agree it’s a complete indictment on coaches either. You need some bounces and we just aren’t getting any at all to help our lapses. We were getting good T/O’s for a while, we’ve missed on a bunch lately while giving some away.

  • JB says:

    “OU’s response to this type of look has been to drop more and more guys into coverage. This only got worse as OU faced more mobile quarterbacks these past three games…”

    There’s a single word that describes this defensive approach…FAIL

  • JB says:

    For the life of me, I just cannot fathom why Mike Stoops’ response has been to allow offenses to COMPLETELY dictate what we do, instead of attacking and forcing their hand. Sure, you may lose a gamble here or there. Alabama’s offense, McCarron, Cooper, Henry had some successes. But we clearly disrupted them with the sacks, forced turnovers, pressures, etc.

    My humble opinion is that we should use the speed of our 3-4 to our advantage. We’ve been rushing only the 3 down linemen, or the 3 downs plus a linebacker, especially on long yardage situations.

    An example scenario would look like this: rush the 3 DLs (Tapper, Phillips, Ndulue) and an OLB every play (alternate Striker and Grissom), but on 1st down, send a second LB (Alexander) on a delayed blitz up the middle. Next down, have that same ILB feign as though he’s coming but drop back once the ball is snapped, while either Wilson or Sanchez come on a corner blitz. The following down, give an all-out blitz look, but most drop back yet send a LB like Evans or a safety like Hayes in the middle and either Grissom or Striker from the outside. Using this scheme, you can bring 1 or 2 blitzers on most plays without sacrificing numbers. Do this throughout the 1st quarter, hit or sack or hurry the QB so that he’s rattled and is constantly wondering every down, “Where’s the next guy coming from?”

    As the game goes on you can choose when and where you want to send somebody, you can fake blitzes, send an occasional all out blitz, or just continue to send a 5th pass rusher from a different spot on nearly every down. Bottom line, they have to adjust their game plan to respond to your attack.