Watching the Lofa podcast and he mentions too often fans think coaching is the problem (and obviously sometimes it is). But he said as a player, he rarely thought it was on the coaches. To him, it's not about being outcoached as much as it is often being outplayed.
Thoughts?
I think that would be the right mindset for Lofa to have as a player who was pretty ruthlessly competent.
All players should have a mindset that they are responsible for their own performance and outcomes. Same for students, same for workers, etc. The most effective people are self-reliant and self-motivated.
With that being said - I don't think Lofa's viewpoint is an objective truth so much as it is a mindset that works within an ecosystem.
If the coaches feel the same way ("It's on me to put them in better spots to succeed" "It's on me to solve schematic issues" "It's on me to develop the talent on my roster") then they'll say the same thing - that they can always do better and any loss is ultimately on them.
No one in this scenario is completely objectively correct, but that is the type of individual mindset that leads to success.
When I'm looking for root causes of issues, I look at each tranche of the organization and see what they're responsible for and how it fits with the issue. This almost always results in a finding of shared responsibility for issues but generally with one part of the org contributing more strongly to the problems.
For me, that's coaching right now. We're underperforming for our talent level and, even worse, we're regressing as the season goes on. Almost all of the issues can be traced back to sloppy execution across entire units rather than individual players, which is a telltale sign that something is being ineffectively installed by the coaching staff.
If DK flubs a route, K9 reads a block wrong, Geno throws an errant pass, or Laken Tomlinson double-teams the wrong guy - I'd say "dang it, we gotta fix that" to that specific player in my head. When it's the entire offense making mistakes and then making it even worse by being tremendously unbalanced, and then we see the same exact thing on defense (the problem being that players aren't fitting the run correctly and there's always 2 guys fighting for 1 gap regardless of the personnel on the field)...
I mean, I just can't keep seeing that over and over and over and say "yeah, the players just have to stop collectively being 53 massive idiots who have suddenly been struck by mental deficiencies" instead of just looking at the guys who install the scheme, install the playbook, craft the gameplan, run the practices, and call the plays. I just can't.
I don't want players blaming coaches, though. I'd want them thinking like Lofa, even if I don't think that they'd be objectively correct.
PS: Example to illustrate my thinking process: In 2022 and 2023, it was totally Hurtt's fault we sucked on defense. Sure, you can say Pete was culpable for hiring him (he was, terrible hire), and he did pay for it. But Hurtt was the actual party shitting up the defense because his scheme hybrid that he brought into the building sucked multiple asses, and his playcalls sucked.
I think the offense is being Clint Hurtt'd, frankly. Defense I think just needs time.