I don't know what you are talking about as to the drills themselves (and don't need to know). My only point is that it was one thing to "hold back" in practice starting the season due to risk of injury and lack of depth, but at this point, starting conference play without having lost anyone, it's time to not hold back.
For that to be true, you'd have to know that the depth that you've built is reliable. From my LAY-Z-BOY coaching job position, if I'm confident in the depth I've built, I see no reason not to start to really challenge the big guys up front in practices, and start running some very physical drills. Thing is, if you're going to do that, you have to accept that the lineup you started healthy last saturday, might not be the same lineup that starts healthy the following the saturday.
I don't know. I'm perplexed by our offensive line this year. One snap, I'm like - wow, they get it, we can ride these guys. On the next, I"m thinking they're a bunch of flowers, and then they're great again, adn then they're pansies, and then they're great.
Consistency. The majority of the players on offense, need to block, on both pass plays and run plays.
Practice doesn't make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect. I really wonder what practices look like for this team on offense. I remember talking about it after the NC State game.
The passing game is doing quite well. Is it as simple as we're just going to have to wait til next year until the running game gets installed into this offense? It seems like on the other side of the ball last year, the run defense was built, and this year they've put the pass defense on top, which is still elarning.
The offense didn't have the same starting point to work from last year though, and they rode the mccummings offensive package as hard as they could for any consistency in moving the chains......the D had a different starting point in 2011, on O, there was, and is, a LOT of rebuilding to do.
I do know that i want to beat Rutgers this week.