Pompous Elitist
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1) You play to the strengths of your own team. I look at the Gopher offense and see the run-blocking of the offensive line and the talent of our runners as the main strengths. Our QB is talented but he seems to still be finding his way. The receivers are good, but certainly not great. It's wise to go with what you do best.
2) Whether you or I agree with him or not, Fleck believes that the best way to win any game is to take the air out of the ball, control the clock, and thereby give your defense time to rest, recuperate and make adjustments. I'd wager that Fleck believes this is especially true when playing against an opponent that is "just better" than the Gophers, like Michigan.
3) My own opinion: any attempt to play a more pass-oriented approach against the likes of Michigan would be a disaster. The Gophers played pass-first against Nebraska and were fortunate to win a game against a team that is clearly inferior to Michigan.
I haven't seen any evidence, to date, that more passing would lead to more success.
I think MN tried to run it on Nebraska but it was tough sledding. The pass game didn’t look good either. My memory could be off but that’s my recollection. Very fortunate Sims is a turnover machine. We’ll take it as a W and a learning experience.
The spread approach historically took off because it was a field leveler versus teams with better individual players. Now that most of the blue bloods have fully embraced the forward pass and “spread” principles including USC, Alabama, Georgia, Ohio State that leaves Jim Harbaugh carrying the run first, run often flag and hey, it works for them.