spudhawk
Well-Known Member
It is hard to understand what is going on with the Coker situation. But this is going to have dire results on the field. Will Iowa adjust the offense to become more pass heavy with at least two spots being manned from new offensive lineman? Will this offense resemble 2004 or 2007? Coker's loss cannot be overstated statistically. You expect young players to grow from season to season and assuming that Coker would have improved only slightly the Iowa offense should have projected to take a step forward next season despite replacing three starting offensive lineman. That won't be the case next year unless KOK and company are willing to design a more aggressive offense.
Coker's stats for 2011:
Rush Yards YPC TD Rec. Yards TD
281 1,384 4.9 15 21 157 0
Coker rushed for 77.3% of Iowa's rushing Total (1,790), only QB James Vandenberg is left on the roster with a rushing TD (3 last season), and then next highest rusher was Jordan Canzeri who rushed for 114 yards on 31 carries. Coker accounted for 66% of Iowa's carries last season (sacks subtracted from rushing attempts) and likely closer to 70% subtracting scrambles.
Iowa has the following options at Tailback for next season- Jordan Canzeri, Damon Bullock, Brad Rogers, DeAndre Johnson, Jason White and incoming freshman Greg Garmon. It was already disturbing this season that no back up emerged to spell Coker this season and the loss of Coker has an effect on the passing game as well- obviously the staff didn't have confidence in the other backs to protect on obvious passing downs. Bullock has bounced between receiver and tailback, but will likely have to remain at tailback. Canzer doesn't seem to have the size to be and every down back, and Johnson basically was passed by both in the weeks leading up to the bowl.
Iowa's rushing attack wasn't even that potent this year- Iowa ranked 12 in rushing offense, 7 in total offense, 6 in ppg, T. 9 in rushing TDs, T. 9 in ypc. This was with an offensive line that consisted of basically four returning starters and a top ten NFL draft quality left tackle.
Iowa is going to have to score more points next season, not less and this is a huge blow to the offense. Iowa scored 45 TDs last season and Coker and McNutt accounted for 27 of them.
What is the solution?
Coker's stats for 2011:
Rush Yards YPC TD Rec. Yards TD
281 1,384 4.9 15 21 157 0
Coker rushed for 77.3% of Iowa's rushing Total (1,790), only QB James Vandenberg is left on the roster with a rushing TD (3 last season), and then next highest rusher was Jordan Canzeri who rushed for 114 yards on 31 carries. Coker accounted for 66% of Iowa's carries last season (sacks subtracted from rushing attempts) and likely closer to 70% subtracting scrambles.
Iowa has the following options at Tailback for next season- Jordan Canzeri, Damon Bullock, Brad Rogers, DeAndre Johnson, Jason White and incoming freshman Greg Garmon. It was already disturbing this season that no back up emerged to spell Coker this season and the loss of Coker has an effect on the passing game as well- obviously the staff didn't have confidence in the other backs to protect on obvious passing downs. Bullock has bounced between receiver and tailback, but will likely have to remain at tailback. Canzer doesn't seem to have the size to be and every down back, and Johnson basically was passed by both in the weeks leading up to the bowl.
Iowa's rushing attack wasn't even that potent this year- Iowa ranked 12 in rushing offense, 7 in total offense, 6 in ppg, T. 9 in rushing TDs, T. 9 in ypc. This was with an offensive line that consisted of basically four returning starters and a top ten NFL draft quality left tackle.
Iowa is going to have to score more points next season, not less and this is a huge blow to the offense. Iowa scored 45 TDs last season and Coker and McNutt accounted for 27 of them.
What is the solution?