AstroDin wrote: ↑Tue Feb 23, 2021 12:55 pm
thank you, Jackal and Bear for the insights and breakdowns… my dumb question/thought.
It's been along time since we've seen the consistent ability in any game to pound the rock like the Dins did Saturday.
I'm excited to see this offense go against other defenses. With some of the SoCon's best defenses not being as big upfront as in years past (Wofford), I'm curious to see what we see from opponents this season? I feel like Furman has built some pieces that cause some issues for defenses. We have power backs and speedy slot-types…
It's tough on a defense.
As a general proposition, a defense cannot let Furman (1) establish the run AND (2) open up chunk plays in the passing game. That's what Furman
wants to do. The defense is going to try to take away one or the other of those things.
WCU attempted to take away the latter. They appeared, to me, to drop the CBs into a deeper zone. They looked to be pushing one of their safeties into the box on the snap towards the run action (i.e. attacking where the run looked like or was actually going). The other safety was trying to take away the deep third.
This is, I think, the standard way of attacking Furman (at least in 2019). To that point, we really couldn't make consistent throws to the edge - the weak spot against deeper zone coverage. We struggled to make those passes in 2019, and so teams would consistently try and force us to make them. I think you saw on Saturday that a lot of our completed passes, with the exception of the long toss to Miller, were to the edge. That is what the defense is going to give us in the passing game.
Some teams will probably do the opposite. They will try to throw as many bodies as they can into the box. I'd look for that sort of approach from teams with better defensive backs (UTC, ETSU). WCU couldn't afford to play much man coverage - they didn't have the personnel and could not afford to let their CBs turn their back to Furman's run game.
At the same time, some teams aren't going to have enough "lead in their pants" to withstand four quarters of what Furman did on Saturday. Sometimes you just have to roll up your sleeves and see who the better man is. If the defense shows they can't stop it, why do anything else?