SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
II doubt the Shanahans will be sitting around and not adjust, tweak, adapt, etc in the offseason and instead just take a long vaca to Mexico.
I'm sure they will try but the big trick has already been sprung on the rest of the NFL. It's the conundrum that the Pistol causes that defenses have to work on. That isn't going to change over the summer.
SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
Defenses will make adjustments and offenses will counter adjust. As Trent Dilfer said it puts a defense in such "conflict" with its reads and also eliminates the numbers advantage a defense has in the box.
It does, and that is what D coordinators will be working on.
SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
Do you play the run tight? Well then you have a Thanksgiving game where RG3 is throwing wide open TDs to Robinson and Paul.
You have a Thanksgiving game when there are mental breakdowns, DB's slipping and a new kind of offense that you only had 2 days to prepare for.
SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
Do you drop back and cover the middle and prevent the deep play action ball? Sure you can do that, but Alfred Morris will get 200 yards and 3 TDs.
You have that happen when half your defense is brought in off the street and in addition to that, is ill prepared.
Look, I'm not saying that the Pistol is going away... or that it is staying. All I'm saying is that we all know defenses will find ways to better defend against it and that the pistol's period of maximum effectiveness was in year 1, when nobody expected it and when they did, didn't have time to figure out what to do against it.
IMO, the 43 defense is better suited to play against that kind of offense, and Dallas has already made that switch. Defenses are already working on things to slow it down. It is crazy to think all the d coordinators in this league aren't going to find ways to slow it. Note, I said slow it... not stop it.
The Pistol will still work, but not like it did this season. The question is, when its effectiveness goes down, will offenses keep using it instead of more conventional methods?
My guess is that teams with good QB's who are effective throwing the ball probably won't use it except as a change of pace, and teams with running QB's who aren't as good throwing might continue to use it more.
SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
Do you take your chances and just let the Qb run the ball? Ok, but then Colin Kaepernick is gonna get nearly 200 yards rushing and will blow you out.
No you don't, and if Green Bay had played with any kind of discipline on the perimeter of their defense, Kaepernick wouldn't have done anything close to what he did running. He still would have gotten the Pack's defense with his arm however. That isn't in question though. Passing is here to stay, and we know that.
SkinsHokieFan;4965660 said:
I am very interested to see what defenses do to respond. They thus far haven't been able to do much, but this innovation, as well as the response to it, will be very entertaining to watch.
Indeed.