The offense trying to force long throws to Odunze in the 3rd/4th quarter instead of running the ball and/or taking what ASU was giving them helped keep Oregon State in the game, too. Not sure if that was on Grubb or Penix or whatever, but either way I didn't like it. It's happened in several games this year. There's some hindsight bias, sure, but I feel like taking advantage of the run game and shorter passes is a lot less risky while still yielding a good chance of sustaining drives and scoring points. Plus, committing to that more often should help open up those long throws, because the "short" stuff is working. Not only is the offensive line opening things up in the run game, but when it's not there, Dillon has shown that he can make a guy miss, break tackles, and lean forward for positive yards. That's huge. Keep those defenses working, and keep them guessing.