Hendrix also mentioned that the one sack was a result of the play call - the one guy we designed not to block was the one guy that WCU opted to blitz.
Going back and watching a bit, Sisson was doing a good job of looking off defenders and going through progressions. They didn't post a lot of great clips on twitter (I think our offense was moving faster than the broadcast could keep up with), but there's a lot to like here:
As a hat tip to the offensive line, Furman sends out 5 receivers and WCU brings 6 rushers. So, our 5 offensive linemen kept 6 WCU defenders from really getting anywhere near Sisson. You can see LG (Krober, I think) basically holding out two defenders - one on each arm.
WCU
looks to drop into cover 4. Every receiver is open (mostly because WCU blitzed their flat defenders). Arguably, Miller is the least open of all 5 receivers. Sisson could have thrown that ball just about anywhere for big yards.
It's a good read by Sisson, I think, even though Miller appears somewhat covered. The post route should be open against four deep coverage (no defender is taking away the middle of the field). Sisson sees the coverage and slings it through a pretty tight window, but one he knows will likely be open. That's a hard throw to defend. I appreciate his confidence - that's a gutsy throw when you've already thrown a few picks.
I also think you see the trust the coaches have in our TBs as receivers. Anderson runs a deep crossing route from the slot, which is a type of route you'd expect from a WR, not a running back.