Can Foley reverse the damage done? | Page 3 | The Boneyard

Can Foley reverse the damage done?

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The strength and conditioning issue is an interesting one. Might contribute to our 2nd half collapses, too. I think part of it is that zone blocking teams tend to have somewhat lighter lines than power blocking teams. Cincy's oline last year had some smaller guys but not 275 small. More like 290-300.
that's one example.
 
The strength and conditioning issue is an interesting one. Might contribute to our 2nd half collapses, too. I think part of it is that zone blocking teams tend to have somewhat lighter lines than power blocking teams. Cincy's oline last year had some smaller guys but not 275 small. More like 290-300.
that's one example.

I felt last years' line was undersized, deliberately so. This year weights are up to past numbers for upperclassmen. You can't expect freshmen linemen to put on that much weight and muscle so soon.

I know UCONN has a top S&C staff, curious if they were following P's gameplan or if the weight room/nutrition intensity wasn't up to snuff.

Bottom line is we are stuck with whatever physical attributes for the season. Best to focus on how they use them. We don't need to recreate the Donald Brown era, 120-140 yds a game on the ground with a more responsible passing game will do wonders in the win column.
 
It somehow feels like a new season, doesn't it? What a nice shot in the arm...
It is opennimg day again.
Plus we have something new to talk about at the tailgate, the "old" conversation was getting"tired".
 
Unless you know what play is called, what adjustments are made, and what blocking schemes are called ... It is very difficult to judge the o-line ... Even if you know what to look for.
If you watch the play a few times, you can usually figure it out, most of it anyway.
Talent you can see, adjustments not unless you know what didn't work before.
 
Yes and no. Offensive line is very much a results oriented position. Was a hole opened? is the QB's jersey dirty? How many yards did the back gain before getting touched? Over the past year+, the line couldn't generate a push and couldn't open holes. Fine. No problem. Tweak something. It seemed that the former regime would either 1) yell louder, 2) blame talent.

If someone asks you a question in Italian, and you respond in English, they aren't going to understand you, no matter the volume of your voice. You have to figure out a way to communicate the answer or ignore them and move on. One answers the person's question, the other is what the former O-line coach seemed to do.

From all accounts, UConn has relieved itself of the first excuse (the kids don't understand). Let's see if the talent was really as lacking as they thought.

There are many ways that plays can result badly. The QB may get sacked ... but did the QB make the proper adjustment? Call the right protection scheme?

At the end of the Michigan game on the 3rd and 17 Chandler gets sacked. Did you notice that Michigan rushes only 3, but 4 guys on the left side of the O-line block 2 and leave Hemingway 1 on 1 with Frank Clark. Was that a blown read?
 
There are many ways that plays can result badly. The QB may get sacked ... but did the QB make the proper adjustment? Call the right protection scheme?

At the end of the Michigan game on the 3rd and 17 Chandler gets sacked. Did you notice that Michigan rushes only 3, but 4 guys on the left side of the O-line block 2 and leave Hemingway 1 on 1 with Frank Clark. Was that a blown read?

I'd love to give Whitmer the benefit of the doubt as to who is the best QB on the team, but far too often, he gets sacked or turns the ball over in crucial situations (i.e. 3rd and short, long drive, inside the red zone, 2 minute drill). Given enough time (i.e. over 4 seconds), I don't see breakdowns as a referendum on the offensive line. This much I agree with you. However when adjustments on the field are not timely made and the entire stadium (generally) knows what play is about to be run, I put that on coaching. Far too often the previous regime would throw it right back on the players. Many believe that the talent is there and that Coach Foley is a better teacher/communicator/relater to the players. I'm hopeful that is the case and we will see one week from Saturday.

Related: in a perfect world, I'd also love to go to Cochran and save Boyle's 5th year. Alas, UConn Football does not exist in such a world.
 
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I'd love to give Whitmer the benefit of the doubt as to who is the best QB on the team, but far too often, he gets sacked or turns the ball over in crucial situations (i.e. 3rd and short, long drive, inside the red zone, 2 minute drill). Given enough time (i.e. over 4 seconds), I don't see breakdowns as a referendum on the offensive line. This much I agree with you. However when adjustments on the field are not timely made and the entire stadium (generally) knows what play is about to be run, I put that on coaching. Far too often the previous regime would throw it right back on the players. Many believe that the talent is there and that Coach Foley is a better teacher/communicator/relater to the players. I'm hopeful that is the case and we will see one week from Saturday.

Related: in a perfect world, I'd also love to go to Cochran and save Boyle's 5th year. Alas, UConn Football does not exist in such a world.

I agree with you on saving Boyle's redshirt ... but wouldn't it be great to see the team rally around Boyle and play with synergy?!?! I call it the Frank Reich syndrome. The Bills always seemed to play better and rally behind Reich whenever he had to play for an injured Jim Kelly. The Carolina Panthers learned about that the hard way.
 
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