kemajic said:
uofmman1122 said:
If we didn't belong, then what does that say about SDSU?
We were outscored 54-6 in our last 6 quarters to close out the season. Those numbers are "Ron Ash-like."
It was similar to the four quarters of the Cal Poly and Liberty games in which we were outscored 23-5, even though Brady had one good game under his belt and then just went flat against Cal Poly, a team which did not have much of a season overall.
Notably, Stitt would not change his QB, even as four quarters of play were producing no results. Only when Brady's injury forced Stitt to change QBs, did the Griz open up, and then outscored Liberty 21-17, but not enough to overcome the lack of scoring while Brady was in the game.
Similarly, as Chad Chalich sputtered somewhat in subsequent games, Stitt would not change QBs until forced to do so, again, by Chad's injury. That led to a 42-16 drubbing of a team with an arguably good defense, a passing record set, and overall, the best combined offense and defense efforts of the season, which Stitt admitted resulted from deviating away from his "playbook." And you could tell, he resented that.
In each case, Montana was able to overcome the lagging offensive efforts by changing QBs. But in no instance would Stitt attempt to change negative inertia and direction by doing so on his own coaching volition. He was forced to do so by circumstance, and in each instance, the results were positive. Game momentums changed, team success changed.
Ash attempted to explain his own unwillingness to change QBs in the 2014 Griz Cat game over the six interceptions committed by Jake Bleskin. And Bleskin is a good, intelligent QB, but every coach has seen these "runs" and you don't break a bad streak by just doing the same thing over and over. And that is really when the "Ash" era began to end. It was simply damn poor judgment exercised by a coach who could not objectively assess his QB. It doesn't require gainsaying the individual QB, it just requires overcoming self-esteem and self-regard and playing football to win rather than prove a point.