Keep in mind this was a "once in a lifetime" type of comeback. They did everything they needed to in the fourth..not realistic each game.
Keep in mind this was a "once in a lifetime" type of comeback. They did everything they needed to in the fourth..not realistic each game.
Don't agree. Take the chains off of our QB. Let the kid throw his darts.
I'm not speaking in regard to the comeback itself, but the method for achieving results which is to run a wide open no huddle offense and keep the defense on their toes. This was far more effective than the slow predicable pro-style offense we were running out of the huddle for 3 qtrs.
How did the wide-open, hurry-up offense work for Pitt when they needed to protect a 21-point lead in the 4th quarter?
They were also in a much more prevent defense for most of the drives. Once they switched back, it was too late. It isn't always that easy.
Would that keep us from false starts, personal fouls, holding, and putting kickoffs out of bounds?
Exactly. I'd like to see Iowa throw more but Pitt wasn't as aggressive on D in the 4th quarter as they were in first 3.
No, but it sure worked for completing passes, getting first downs scoring td's. Let's not be ignorant of reality. It sure works for Green Bay, New England and New Orleans. It works for Oklahoma and Oregon.
It's harder to be aggressive against teams working out of a no huddle when you can't change personnel. It's also easier to be aggressive and have multiple blitz packages and 8-9 in the box against 2 TE sets with a FB in the backfield.