toffee
Well-known member
Luke:
1. Geno isn't the issue
2. Grubb has work to do
3. The season is over.
1. Geno isn't the issue
2. Grubb has work to do
3. The season is over.
I like your take. But I would drop the "back in college" and give the guy another chance, hopefully with an O Line more conducive to his scheme. And I especially like that even though our playoffs hopes are dim the season is not over until we have played our last game.1) Geno is part of the issue
2) Grubb has work to do...back in college
3) The hopes for a deep playoff run are over
If we bite the bullet and switch to a new play caller 4 - 5 games ago, we just might be getting ready for the playoff and not dreaming of the playoff.I like your take. But I would drop the "back in college" and give the guy another chance, hopefully with an O Line more conducive to his scheme. And I especially like that even though our playoffs hopes are dim the season is not over until we have played our last game.
If we bite the bullet and switch to a new play caller 4 - 5 games ago, we just might be getting ready for the playoff and not dreaming of the playoff.
This. I tend to give coaches and coordinators the benefit of the doubt since I figure they are professionals and I'm watching on my couch. However, the way he goes away from the run and just lets the defense pass rush and destroy Geno is mind blowing. I can't come to any other conclusion that he is in way over his head and probably has a severe case of Dunning-Kruger.I don't see how Grubb can get a second chance. He instinctually runs away from the run game and it doesn't look like he's made any progress. I was pumped up after the Cardinals game. I thought he figured it out. I was wrong.
Excellent analogy.Luke is 100% right.
If this were auto racing and OC is the designer and engineer for the car, you'd never be able to measure the ability or true ability of the driver in wins and losses (QB, RB, WR) until the car is in an optimal state to be driven.
Grubb has handed over the keys to a car that has to be driven on the edge to win. And if you are always driving on the edge, you are bound to make mistakes.
You have to set aside standard metrics and look at the skill being wielded by the driver to keep the car even competitive... thats the only was to find the truth of the situation.
A great driver can finish 7th every race in a sub-par machine but if in a better car, be top 2 or 3.
In this case, we have our top players at key positions under performing.
All the circular debate around Geno is entirely missing the point because its like ragging on a driver for going off track repeatedly in turns because he is driving hard, trying to win with a car that, if it was driven normally, would never win.
Grubb's offense is ineffective and often backwards by NFL standards. If he was just another college OC and hadnt done freat things at Washington, i dont think he woukd be getting the forgiveness he's been getting here. The fact that he is 'Grubb' has clouded judgement around what he's doing because of the 'genius lable' he's been tagged with (ironically the opposite scenario for Geno).
Luke is 100% right.
If this were auto racing and OC is the designer and engineer for the car, you'd never be able to measure the ability or true ability of the driver in wins and losses (QB, RB, WR) until the car is in an optimal state to be driven.
Grubb has handed over the keys to a car that has to be driven on the edge to win. And if you are always driving on the edge, you are bound to make mistakes.
You have to set aside standard metrics and look at the skill being wielded by the driver to keep the car even competitive... thats the only was to find the truth of the situation.
A great driver can finish 7th every race in a sub-par machine but if in a better car, be top 2 or 3.
In this case, we have our top players at key positions under performing.
All the circular debate around Geno is entirely missing the point because its like ragging on a driver for going off track repeatedly in turns because he is driving hard, trying to win with a car that, if it was driven normally, would never win.
Grubb's offense is ineffective and often backwards by NFL standards. If he was just another college OC and hadnt done freat things at Washington, i dont think he woukd be getting the forgiveness he's been getting here. The fact that he is 'Grubb' has clouded judgement around what he's doing because of the 'genius lable' he's been tagged with (ironically the opposite scenario for Geno).
Luke:
1. Geno isn't the issue
2. Grubb has work to do
3. The season is over.
You may have a different opinion if we have 'just another player' QB for this season.Geno is not the issue, but he is not the solution neither