Yep and they were probably missing their best dlineman. They blitzed the A gap quite a bit. Biggest thing is they didn't try and defend Oregon, they attacked their ass.Oregon is the epitome of pretty boy West Coast flash Football. They are damn good, but will usually lose to a set of nasty old school FB players...especially if they have a good OL and DL.
you and me both. I have been toot'n Oregons horn all season. Oh well, next.I admit that I thought this was the year Oregon finally broke through. Alas, they've been exposed once again. Disappointing.
No. I think Stanford's offensive gameplan was sensational because it relied on ball control to keep Oregon's offense off the field. Nine more first downs and 21 more plays than the opponent is hardly inept. In fact, quite the opposite. It took a blocked FG return and an onside kick recovery for Oregon to even make a game out of it. You seem to believe Stanford's ground game had nothing to do with their defensive success. Strange argument to make.
Oregon is the epitome of pretty boy West Coast flash Football. They are damn good, but will usually lose to a set of nasty old school FB players...especially if they have a good OL and DL.
...hence the phrase good OL and DL...The big assumption is that you have to be really good at nasty old school football. Just because you play that style does not mean you will be effective. Oregon beats the crap out of teams that play old school if they're not good. It's stating the obvious, but maybe not based on your comment. It's not about style, it's about execution.
I don't know about that, az. He may have said as much, but his recruiting told a different story. Signing a bunch of short RBs and DEs is not really the Stanford way.
Outdated notion? Did you actually watch the game? Stanford ran 79 plays and only attempted 13 passes. Ball control was clearly the gameplan from the start. Again, Stanford had nine more first downs and ran 21 more plays. The Cardinal clearly wanted to keep Oregon's offense off the field and it worked. Oregon rarely needs much time to score, but they care about complementary football too. If their defense cannot get off the field, it is really hard for their offense to exert pressure on the opposing team. It was pretty clear last night one team set the tone on both sides of the ball. If you think that one has no effect on the other, I can't help you.
Stanford has provided the blueprint for beating Oregon. Not that it's easy, mind you. But just like there was a blueprint for beating those Nub teams in the 80's and 90's, there is now a blueprint for beating Oregon. Having seen that game last night, I came away convinced Alabama would beat Oregon. BTW - I hate that F**king horn that they blow at the Stanford games. Annoying as Hell. Maybe it has to do with the fact that the last time I went to a game there, that damn thing went off about 20 times.
No. I think Stanford's offensive gameplan was sensational because it relied on ball control to keep Oregon's offense off the field. Nine more first downs and 21 more plays than the opponent is hardly inept. In fact, quite the opposite. It took a blocked FG return and an onside kick recovery for Oregon to even make a game out of it. You seem to believe Stanford's ground game had nothing to do with their defensive success. Strange argument to make.
yea, he was a shadow of himself. But he got worse as the game went on. So rattled.I figured after three pages somebody would have said the obvious, but Mariotta's injury was the difference in the game. You can't effectively run a read option if your QB is hesitant to keep and run. The offense becomes one dimensional without the QB as a viable threat. Stanford was able to close the middle because they no longer had to respect the threat of the backside keep.
Stanford won because of the defense. TOP is not a major factor. For example, Oregon beat UCLA but had a lower time of possession by almost 5 minutes. It really doesn't mean much. Scoring 26 points is very average and won't be good enough to win many of yoru games unless you have a very solid defense.
You will notice I have not mentioned TOP, but rather first downs and plays run. You seem to keep ignoring those two stats. TOP is usually an overrated stat, but in conjunction with first downs and plays run, it can become pretty meaningful. Good luck winning many games in which you are dominated in all three stats. You keep wanting to separate how Stanford approached the game on offense and defense, but it is impossible to do so. The gameplan was to keep offensive drives alive by grinding the clock. It kept Oregon's offense off the field and it kept Stanford's defense fresh. So calling Stanford's offense inept and arguing that the defense was the sole reason for winning the game is bizarre. Can most teams play like Stanford did last night and win against Oregon? Of course not. But Stanford can, so whether 26 points is enough to beat Oregon in most games is irrelevant.
Helfrich is not a top shelf name coach. This loss wasn't good for him. I am not saying hot-seat at all, but the way they lost (including star receivers crying one minute into the fourth and other star receivers openenly laughing) will result in his coaching pedigree being questioned.Coaching matters, too. Helfy got smashed.