kemajic said:
You offer one game (UND) to support this. A horrible pass defense that allowed numerous big plays.
If the pass defense was so horrible, then UM could have pursued the "4th Q strategy" with great ease, had plenty of plays, experimented with lots of fast action, and still won the game right?
It wasn't the "pass defense."
If what you say is true, then
we must have won against Cal Poly, the worst pass defense in the conference, at home, with Brady at the controls, because of 92 plays, a record 15:53 seconds per play, a classic example of the Stitt strategy, using his acknowledged "Basic strategy," and ---- yielding 3 fumbles, 35% conversion of 3rd downs, 0% conversion of 4th downs despite 3 tries, only 8.8 yds passing, 3 interceptions by the worst pass defense team in the conference, Ellis/Jones reduced to an anemic 9.5 yds per carry against the worst pass defense in the conference.
And we only put up 19 points on 353 yds passing
.
Against the worst pass defense in the conference!
Yet, against UND, a better pass defense team than Cal Poly, UM used only 69 plays, using 22:53 seconds per play, with no fumbles, a 46% conversion on third downs, 50% conversion on 4th downs, 19.2 yards per pass completion, no interceptions by the better passing defense team, and Ellis/Jones producing season high 36 yds per carry against the better passing team defense, putting up 42 points on 328 passing yards against a better passing defense team than Cal Poly.
One game used the classic Stitt strategy (he has said so) and the better QB (some say so) against the worst passing defense team.
The other game used the non-Stitt strategy ( a simplified, slowed down offense), the 3rd string QB (some say for a reason), against a passing defense team that was NOT the worst in the conference.
How did Brady get only 62% pass conversion against the worst passing defense team in the conference, whereas Makena converted 71% of passes against the NOT worst passing defense team in the conference?
One game, Cal Poly, required 18.6 yds passing to score a single point, resulting ultimately in 3 fumbles and 3 interceptions against the worst passing defense team in the conference and a loss scoring only 19 points.
The other game, UND, required 7.9 passing yards per point scored, with no fumbles and no interceptions, and produced the outstanding WR performances of the year, and a win with the Griz' highest point score of the season.
Same coach. Different strategies, Different QB. Do you argue that the coach made the difference, the game strategies, or the QB?
Or was it all the "horrible pass defense" that the Griz encountered in one game and not the other? And how does the worst pass defense in the conference get 3 fumbles and 3 interceptions out the Stitt strategy and keep a passing QB to just 19 points?
At some point, it has to make sense. "Magic" isn't a useful analytical tool.