The View From Section 241 — Air Force | Page 2 | The Boneyard

The View From Section 241 — Air Force

And also, before the refs confirmed the TD on replay, the color dude was saying if JF hit the outside of the pylon with the ball, it’s not a TD, he needed to hit the inside. Nice knowing the rules, my friend…lol
Just to give a name to the color dude. His name is Randy Cross. Since I’m an OG, I remember him playing guard and center for the 49ers until 88. He played college ball at UCLA. He was praising Mora so I wonder if he knows Coach even though he played 40 years before Mora was HC. Coach was also assistant with San Francisco after Randy had already retired in mid 90s
 
Just to give a name to the color dude. His name is Randy Cross. Since I’m an OG, I remember him playing guard and center for the 49ers until 88. He played college ball at UCLA. He was praising Mora so I wonder if he knows Coach even though he played 40 years before Mora was HC. Coach was also assistant with San Francisco after Randy had already retired in mid 90s
Randy Cross was an excellent player. Won three Super Bowls for the 49ers. His broadcasting career has been on a downward spiral. At one time he was on the NFL today show on CBS sports in the 1990s.
 
They couldn’t stop a basic fullback dive.
the fullback dive in a triple option is not exactly a straightforward fullback dive in the traditional sense. I understand why there was difficulty there.

there are so many attack points for the defense to cover, and attentions become so divided on covering them all, that the most "basic" play becomes hard to defend. And as JM said, scout team can't replicate it because no one really runs it as quickly and smoothly as the service academies. it really is a gem to watch those schools run these ancient offenses. It makes me feel like it's the year 1947 again.
 
the fullback dive in a triple option is not exactly a straightforward fullback dive in the traditional sense. I understand why there was difficulty there.

there are so many attack points for the defense to cover, and attentions become so divided on covering them all, that the most "basic" play becomes hard to defend. And as JM said, scout team can't replicate it because no one really runs it as quickly and smoothly as the service academies. it really is a gem to watch those schools run these ancient offenses. It makes me feel like it's the year 1947 again.

When you are allergic to tackling at times it’s tough to stop.
 
The frustration with the D was in part the 2 to 3 yards after a hit the AFA players got consistently. This was the ultimate bend don't break D on display.
 
But it's not snide. It's the truth. There are like 3 guys carrying that unit.
You called players "allergic to tackling." Correct? If our guys our allergic to tackling and we held them to less points than any of their prior opponents, isn't it possible that all schools have problems with one on one tackles against that type of option offense? It seems rational to me that if you're not sure who you are tackling until they get to you with the ball, you're not going to make a lot of tackles that are your shoulder into their numbers where you stop them cold. But if you understand it better than all the D coordinators who dealt with it worse than we did, you should cash in on your ability.

99% of our fanbase would have been happy Saturday morning if they knew that Air Force would be held to 16 points. Notwithstanding that you don't like the manner in which we did that. Bully for you. I don't think "snide" is a bad word to describe attacking the manner in which a team accomplished something positive.
 
But it's not snide. It's the truth. There are like 3 guys carrying that unit.

the beauty of the triple option is its chaos. Every play looks exactly the same pre AND post-snap, until the last millisecond. at the speed/fluidity the service academies run it, you as an DT or MLB, are stilllll trying to figure out who has the ball, by the time the fullback is barreling past you, 2 yards deep. By the time you drag him down, there's your 4-5 yard gain we saw over and over and over. Unless there is a certified gap in talent (ie. air force vs. oregon), any similarly talented FBS team can struggle against it. a UMass or Kent State would get demolished by it.

We are not superheroes, but to bizlaws point, we held them to 16 points, partially because we didnt' break, but also because they didn't kick FGs. the game could have been closer in the 4th Q had Airforce not gotten cocky about those 4th downs. We must credit the defense, for that.

I HEAR YOU on our defense. we sorely sorely miss jelani stafford, gourdine, travis jones, someone of that profile. And yet.. this unit is greater than the sum of its parts. no studs except for 2 or 3, but they are doing just enough to assist the offense. Not what we hoped for, but STILL better than we've had pre-Mora.

no beauty points this game, but W is a W, of course. UConn used to lose these academy games horribly.
 
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