deanvogs
Well-Known Member
Exactly.
The clock and downs were managed CORRECTLY by the coaching staff yesterday. For a change. You can make a case for the spike option but it's a push at best, due to the tradeoff: losing a down, and giving the defense time to react. As PC says, worth debating but not criticizing.
Meyer, by contrast, blew a full 38 seconds in the closing seconds. More egregious than anything I've seen from KF - and there are plenty to choose from.
This is not a clock management mistake, it is a clock management strategy. I totally acknowledge there are many advantaged to clocking the ball. In this situation I don't find a single advantage in doing so. Those who claim it is a mistake won't even acknowledge the several advantages that NOT clocking the ball on that drive.
1) We practice this all the time like CJB said and have plays ready for the situation.
2) The defense can't substitute, and it is much harder and riskier to dial up a blitz when the ball isn't clocked
3) We didn't have to score a TD, we only needed 5-10 more yards to get into FG range.
4) We ran 4 plays without clocking the ball.
Not one naysayer yet has even tried to make the claim that we would have had time to run MORE THAN 4 PLAYS had we clocked that ball. There is a 0.0001% chance that by clocking that ball that the O then could have run 5 plays instead of 4 to get a game winning kick in. So I ask, what is the advantage of clocking the ball if you get 0 more plays run in that time????