You've seen the last of that jet sweep play.Iowa swaps running backs every play it seems so nobody can get into a rhythm (or even warmed up) but the OL doesn't look like it run blocks for crap. Which is the problem, or is it both? I'm sure of one thing, #10 should never touch the ball again.
I think it's the HB rotation.
That **** has to stop.
I agree the rotation is crazy. Daniels ran OK but I'm not seeing the gaping holes that we've seen in years past. Pick you're guy and stick with him in my opinion.
I despise the 4 headed RB monster. Sack up and pick 2 at most. If the other 2 are so talented they need to get on the field, then find ways to get them on the field without sacrificing the running game. That's what coaches do.
Also, can anyone tell me why Jonathan Parker was the 2nd back in the game today. As if having 4 wasn't enough, you put a 5th guy in there? This has nothing to do with the later fumbles on the jet sweep and the kickoff...but I was truly baffled by that move.
I despise the 4 headed RB monster. Sack up and pick 2 at most. If the other 2 are so talented they need to get on the field, then find ways to get them on the field without sacrificing the running game. That's what coaches do.
Also, can anyone tell me why Jonathan Parker was the 2nd back in the game today. As if having 4 wasn't enough, you put a 5th guy in there? This has nothing to do with the later fumbles on the jet sweep and the kickoff...but I was truly baffled by that move.
Run blocking has been fine - the holes are there and the line gets a 3 yd push most plays. The backs aren't seeing the lanes, for two reasons as far as I can tell.1. They hit the line too quickly. Outside of three runs vs. UNI they hit the hole just as it opened. A half step later and they'd have more room to keep their legs moving at the initial point of contact. Happened to Weisman a couple.of times today. That's a rhythm thing and it will fix itself with more carries. I do wonder if the rotation is causing that issue at game speed.2. They follow the lead blocker a half second too long on the zone blocking runs - they overrun the block instead of tucking up inside as the block clears to the outside. I'm certain they are taught to do this as they are following an All-American that routinely pushes 4 yards upfield, but sometimes you musn't be afraid to dream a little bigger, darling, and get creative. They see that in film, and I did see that improve on a couple third quarter runs. Vision is kind of like speed though, in that it is hard to teach, and all the Hawkeye backs look to make contact before avoiding it. Making contact is best done while carrying your momentum, and changing direction kills momentum. Might not change. The solution could be to run fewer zone schemes and more quick dives between the tackles. That fits better with the current stable of backs' styles of running. That will change over the course of the season, I expect.One positive that I noted today was that the Hawks abandoned their strategy when it stopped working. Run was not there, so they passed with zeal. It was nice to see an in-game adjustment like that this early in the season.From an outsiders perspective (being I am not allowed at practice) it looks like our pass-blocking is just fine, but the run-blocking is horrible (which you all can see). Did we spend too much time in the spring and in camp on the passing game that the run game suffered? Just a thought, but there seems to be no flow.I would run the ball every play in practice this week and screw the passing game as these guys need reps and if they can't figure it out vs UNI and Ball State, then the Offensive line needs to figure it out vs our Defensive line. I also think that the rb thing needs to be cut in half. Need 2 guys getting 15+ carries, period.