imthewalrus
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Tackled better on third and long situations rather than giving up numerous first downs?
Iowa would have had more three and outs and less big play opportunities and would have given the Gopher offense better field position and not as many long fields to drive.
What if the well rested Gopher defense had defended the pass better by getting some more pressure on the passer…a few qb sacks…hurried passes or held on to a few of the dropped interceptions?
What if the Gopher defense had wrapped up a tackle on a short pass completion that turned into a td and became the dagger in the back that could not be overcome in the fourth quarter? That was, perhaps the biggest blunder of the game and had a chilling, crippling influence on the final outcome of the game.
The game plan for the offense was to:
1. Not turn the ball over with fumbles and even more importantly by having passes intercepted. Result: no turnovers and especially NO interceptions.
2. Keep Iowa’s defense on the field and Iowa’s offense OFF the field.
3. To not give up BIG plays to Iowa. “The ball is the program…”. The Gopher offense succeeded in that with the exception of the blocked, long field goal attempt
4. The “cut back” runs and blocking schemes were executed beautifully. That game plan was totally effective against the vaunted Iowa defense, especially in the first half.
5. The Gopher offense had and held the ball 40 minutes and kept the Gopher defense OFF the field and out of harms way for 2/3rds of the game.
Iowa’s vaunted defense succeeded in frustrating the Gopher offense in the red zone.
I think the Gopher offensive game plan was incredibly well conceived. Total execution of the game was not perfect. Having to settle for three field goals and one blocked field goal attempt that could have been better served by punting the ball to put Iowa on a long field was a bad decision by the offensive brain trust.
Staying free of turn overs, especially intercepted passes was accomplished by the offense and that was a plus in this game. THAT turn over statistic is what Iowa rode to a number two ranking on earlier in the season, whether it was deserved or not.
In the end, the offensive game plan did NOT succeed in large part because the defensive execution allowed too many third and long situations AND too many BIG pass completions. The defense SOLD out to stop the run…and got burned a few too many times.
The way I see it, other than a number of defensive break downs, the Gopher offense was pretty damn effective in his game.
When all else fails we just might have to give some credit to the opponent and the great home field crowd Iowa plays in front of in Iowa City.
Still, I love the spirit the Gopher Team showed even in defeat . They never quit. That is about culture. That is about coaching.
Beat the stinking Hoosier, Gopher!
Iowa would have had more three and outs and less big play opportunities and would have given the Gopher offense better field position and not as many long fields to drive.
What if the well rested Gopher defense had defended the pass better by getting some more pressure on the passer…a few qb sacks…hurried passes or held on to a few of the dropped interceptions?
What if the Gopher defense had wrapped up a tackle on a short pass completion that turned into a td and became the dagger in the back that could not be overcome in the fourth quarter? That was, perhaps the biggest blunder of the game and had a chilling, crippling influence on the final outcome of the game.
The game plan for the offense was to:
1. Not turn the ball over with fumbles and even more importantly by having passes intercepted. Result: no turnovers and especially NO interceptions.
2. Keep Iowa’s defense on the field and Iowa’s offense OFF the field.
3. To not give up BIG plays to Iowa. “The ball is the program…”. The Gopher offense succeeded in that with the exception of the blocked, long field goal attempt
4. The “cut back” runs and blocking schemes were executed beautifully. That game plan was totally effective against the vaunted Iowa defense, especially in the first half.
5. The Gopher offense had and held the ball 40 minutes and kept the Gopher defense OFF the field and out of harms way for 2/3rds of the game.
Iowa’s vaunted defense succeeded in frustrating the Gopher offense in the red zone.
I think the Gopher offensive game plan was incredibly well conceived. Total execution of the game was not perfect. Having to settle for three field goals and one blocked field goal attempt that could have been better served by punting the ball to put Iowa on a long field was a bad decision by the offensive brain trust.
Staying free of turn overs, especially intercepted passes was accomplished by the offense and that was a plus in this game. THAT turn over statistic is what Iowa rode to a number two ranking on earlier in the season, whether it was deserved or not.
In the end, the offensive game plan did NOT succeed in large part because the defensive execution allowed too many third and long situations AND too many BIG pass completions. The defense SOLD out to stop the run…and got burned a few too many times.
The way I see it, other than a number of defensive break downs, the Gopher offense was pretty damn effective in his game.
When all else fails we just might have to give some credit to the opponent and the great home field crowd Iowa plays in front of in Iowa City.
Still, I love the spirit the Gopher Team showed even in defeat . They never quit. That is about culture. That is about coaching.
Beat the stinking Hoosier, Gopher!
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