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HelenaHandBasket said:
UMGriz75 said:
Mavman said:
I'm confused one minute Stitt is inflexible and the next he is always tinkering with the offense?? Which is it 75????
You are confused. When the coach takes a winning set of circumstances and then keeps trying to change back to his "base strategy" and it doesn't work, that's tinkering, and also inflexible. It is possible to learn from your players by their successes.
Got it?
The winning set of circumstances were a subset of his "base strategy" and he tried to incorporate more of his 'base strategy" and Simis did not adjust so he simplified it once again. Sounds pretty flexible to me. When your QB has success with part of the offense, would it not make sense to give him more?
That's your opinion. The game statistics do not support it. Stitt was flexible enough to simplify his offense and abandon his high play, 4th Q strategy because he thought he had a 3rd string QB that couldn't "do" his strategy. When it turned out to be unbelievably successful, he then tried to turn back to his 4th Q strategy. It didn't work. He attempted to stick to it, however, at ISU where, frankly, it didn't work AGAIN, for the same reasons it didn't work against Cal Poly, Weber, and Portland State. ISU is a win that belongs to the quick-thinking players, not to the coach. For the coach, it is the 4th loss.
Makena currently has a 0.67 percent game success rate. That's equal to Stitt's ten year record at Mines. Brady, playing Stitt's game, has a 0.33 game success rate.
That is the "4th Q" strategy success metric, worse if you add PSU and ISU. If Brady couldn't execute it, and Stitt doesn't think anyone else can execute it, then why the hell keep trying it?
I don't think those stats are particularly meaningful, at this point in time, but they don't support an argument that Brady is a better QB. As I have repeatedly said, the argument "could" be true, there is just no statistical support for it, and it is counter to the statistical argument against it.