joshvanklomp said:
ragtimejoe1 said:
Bumping this because, well you know.
It will be an interesting off-season. Many on this board are quick with excuses even in defense of stanard. Bohl wasn't. I wonder if he'll view the excuses for vigen as sufficient or if he thinks we should have done better?
Bohl has made the right decisions so far. I trust and support his judgement. I'm not on the "fire vigen" bandwagon, but having a bottom 3 offense against bad defenses with an NFL qb at helm ain't good. It will be interesting to see what he does.
I understand the concern. However, I believe the offensive issues are more personnel related.
I don't envision Bohl making major changes to the offense. We aren't going to suddenly switch to a spread offense. Bohl will build his team on running the ball.
Stanard wasn't Bohl's first choice as DC in 2014. He probably wasn't even his second choice. Those would be Chris Klieman (his DC at the time and current NDSU HC) and probably Scottie Hazelton.
Vigen was Bohl's first choice as OC. We've already seen this offense have success in the Mountain West if you get the right players in the program.
Totally agree with this entire post.
I think the problem for Wyoming, is a great majority of our fan base can't remember past the "Erickson Air Express", when Wyoming's offense changed from a traditional power running game to a pass happy spread affair.
When Erickson did it, no one else in the country was doing it and it worked. When Roach took over for Erickson, we kept passing the ball, although with more balance. Joe Tiller took over for Roach and was cutting edge with the spread(still hadn't taken off around the country yet). It worked for Tiller as well. Dimel's offense was gimmicky. Joe Glenn didn't throw it much and we weren't very good. A lot of the Wyoming fan base thinks you have to run the spread and be aggressive all the time, because the last guys that were successful here did just that. It took Dave Christensen to force Wyoming into going in a different direction, towards power football at altitude.
Spread offense isn't a cultural fit: we don't have a lot of quick shifty athletes to recruit in Wyoming that fit the spread. Finesse isn't a cultural fit. Lunch bucket/blue collar is.
A majority of our fan base has been brought up on spread offense. The older guys that can remember our dominant 1960's run remember what is a cultural Wyoming fit: good defense and power running.
It really isn't a fit at all anymore, because everyone is doing it, so there aren't as many good receivers out there being over-looked. It's harder to recruit spread athletes now, because everyone is recruiting spread athletes.
Now, if we aren't throwing the ball 2/3 of the time, being aggressive ALL the time, and trying to gain yards instead of running the clock, our fan base thinks we're vanilla. If we're playing conservatively to grind out the clock for time of possession, we're playing to lose. If we're up 28 in the second half, and run the ball on first and second down, they don't recognize that we're protecting the ball, time of possesssion, and the lead. They want us to fling the ball around the field and take chances of turning it over, instead of killing the clock for the win.
People were critical of Vigen last year when we averaged 30 + points per game, in a power running offense with great balance.
Wyoming has a lot of fans that believe in spread offense and don't think conservative rushing attacks can win in Laramie. That's reality.
It's not Vigen's fault really. It's Dennis Erickson's fault.