
Originally Posted by
Blitz44
Just a thought.
Nearly all teams now use multiple checks, and audibles at the line of scrimmage. Offenses have dozens of formations with hundreds of possible plays. Defenses have multiple fronts, personnel packages for every down and distance, complicated twists and rotating coverages. Yet for all this complexity, game statistics have changed only a little in the last half century.
In the end, football is STILL about how you line up and play. Does complexity accomplish anything? Sunday, no one at all from the Ravens covered Garcon of the Redskins on his touchdown catch. Maybe a simpler scheme would suffice.
Then there's the profusion of coaches.
Example: The Vikings employ 22 coaches, most in the NFL. Having 22 coaches sounds like having five girlfriends -way too many to juggle.
Does a football team really need separate coaches for inside and outside linebackers? Two defensive line coaches and two wide receivers coaches? (That's the actual for Minnesota.) The Lions have surrendered four kick-return touchdowns in four games, yet employ two coaches who do nothing but special teams. Maybe Detroit would perform better on special teams with fewer special-teams coaches! The Raiders have 20 coaches, including an offensive coordinator, a senior offensive assistant, an offensive quality control coach and two offensive line coaches. Yet their offense is 29th-ranked. Maybe they would perform better with fewer coaches and simpler schemes!
IT'S NOT ALWAYS THE COACHES FAULT. The players play the game. Execute the plays called. Caldwell isn't going to come in and work miracles. He will run the same system Cam Cameron has instilled at this stage of the game. Nothing will change. There is a reason Caldwell tanked after Peyton got hurt. Is Fox that good a coach that his record is what it is....hell no. Peyton made Caldwells job easy.