"Systemic" ... "Ferentzic""toMAto" ... "tomMAHto"As long as KirkFer roams the sidelines, "offense" is for ball control, giving the defense as much of a rest as possible, field position and, lastly, scoring. The Ferentz-liter philosophy puts such a stranglehold on the offense that he's traded the reward-risk for perfect execution. Of course, execution is crucial and expected by every coach at every level, however, Corp takes it to a level that all but eliminates the margin for error. When you you intentionally minimize the margin for error, you relinquish some control over the outcome and turn it over (no pun intended) to chance -- the inches and the bounces that are so crucial to whether Iowa wins or loses -- because you simply are not concerned as much about scoring as you should be.This is the #1 reason whey I don't like KirkFer as a coach -- much like I didn't like Lickliter as a coach -- his style is boring and, worse, intentionally minimizes his strengths. When he doesn't have explosive play-makers, it's all about the system and rarely about maximizing strengths through strategy and play-calling. When he does have some playmakers (and he's had a lot more over the years than have been given credit), it's all about the system and, more so, the philosophy, as he rarely lets them out of the barn to run and rarely tries to exploit their strengths through creative strategy.My contempt for his philosophy and style grows stronger every season, not only because I watch the same movie, year after year, but I recall hearing from guys like Kill, Mason, Fitz and others that have come and gone, pointing to Iowa as the team / program to emulate, then they have great success beating Iowa, even when they're the "inferior" team (and program) on paper. Then you have Dantonio, another admirer, who has easily surpassed KirkFer, doing all the things KirkFer wants to do, with 1 crucial enhancement -- actually attacking your opponent with the intent to outscore them.Offense is more than just a nuisance. It needs to be used to expand the margin for error that "perfect execution" imposes.