I scratched my head about that as well. Is there a reason other than etiquette? 
I say, if they're not lined up, too bad.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Sandy Alonso
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2013 10:44 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] My manifesto/rant/state of the team address

I wonder if anyone else observed this and was annoyed as me?  Several times the 
Gator offense was at the line and set, but the Miami D was still looking to the 
sidelines for their call.  Why didn't any of the coaches tell Driskel to just 
quckly call for the ball and catch Miami unprepared?  That drove me crazy.   
Perhaps there's a reason they didn't?

On Mon, Sep 9, 2013 at 12:41 AM, Rob Alexander 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hah! <LOL> And Lord knows he had that thought reinforced over and over on 
Saturday.

Rob


Sent from my iPad

On Sep 8, 2013, at 11:58 PM, Scott Lucas 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Only three things can happen when you throw the ball and two of them are bad. 
-CWM's offensive philosophy.

LOL!


________________________________
From: Rob Alexander <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] My manifesto/rant/state of the team address
Sent: Mon, Sep 9, 2013 12:46:22 AM

I've been having the same kind of thoughts. On the positive side, we really do 
finally have a passing game this year. On the negative side, we're still not 
very polished with it. During the last quarter of the Toledo game, I was 
frustrated that they just started running out the clock shortly after the 
quarter began. I was complaining to my dog that we're way ahead and not 
vulnerable to any serious consequences from errors, and I said we should be 
using that quarter to practice our passing game against a real opponent.

It struck me then that this is the real flaw in Muschamp's philosophy. If all 
you ever do is try to get ahead and run out the clock, then you are not 
prepared for the day when a team stuffs your running game and you really need 
your passing game. Whatever they do in practice, it is clear by now that a CWM 
team will throw as little as possible to win the game. That simply means that 
when we really need to pass, we aren't practiced at it and so we aren't very 
good at it. CWM keeps,saying that his job is to win today's game, but that's 
not all. His players' job is to,win today's game. His job is also to develop 
his team so that they'll be prepared to win future games as well.

There's nothing wrong with Driskel that wouldn't be solved by a year of playing 
for a team with a balanced offense. He's making freshman errors in the passing 
game because he's had so little practice at it. We have some real players this 
year who can run and catch, but if all we ever do in game that we're winning is 
rush, then we'll never get any better. If we open up the passing game week 
after week, then we have the personnel to improve significantly over the year. 
Whether we will actually do that remains to be seen.

For all that I am dissatisfied with the state of our offense in Muschamp's 
third year, I still like him a lot for all the reasons you mentioned. I just 
hope that he comes to realize that a strong offense that can actually put 
points on the board is as important as a strong defense, just as SOS realized 
from the other side when he hired Stoops before our first MNC season.

Rob



Sent from my iPad

On Sep 8, 2013, at 11:01 AM, Steve McKibben 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
In case you care (or need a cure for insomnia)...

I thought about this a lot yesterday afternoon and into the night (not alone 
there I'm sure).

I like to enter every game/season/play hopeful. Obviously we all want our team 
to do well. The way in which we each approach that varies widely (you think?).

Mathematically, all of our goals, save for going undefeated, are still in front 
of us. I wouldn't bet the house against us going to Atlanta, but I wouldn't bet 
the doghouse that we will.

Given our current personnel, and I'm mainly talking about the offense here, 
what did yesterday's game really tell us? Leading up to this game we heard over 
and over again just how bad this Miami defense is. Our rushing and passing 
numbers tend to validate this and/or some combination of their defense not 
being as bad/our offense not being as bad as advertised. Of course the 
turnovers and the attendant lack of red zone production killed us.

It will be spun (if it hasn't already) that those turnovers were an aberration, 
and that by merely eliminating them we will be on course to pick up where we 
left off (in November) last year. But it has to be asked - if we are to play 
offense anything beyond the ultra conservative style we saw most of last year, 
will turnovers be an expected byproduct of "opening it up"?

If Miami's defense is as inferior to most of what we still have ahead of us, 
what do we have to look forward to? Better defenses mean more pressure on the 
QB, better coverage/tighter "windows" to throw into, and fewer/smaller holes to 
run through.

Sounds dismal. What is there to give us hope? More health? Getting Halapio back 
may make a big difference, I guess we'll see. We might get lucky, but recent 
history doesn't suggest that we'll advance through the SEC gauntlet unscathed - 
in fact the recurring injury to Humphries already has an ominous feel to it.

Maybe things will "gel" with more reps. Possibly, but is there any rational 
reason that at this time of the year we should expect to improve any more than 
our opponents will?

A return to form by Matt Jones? There may actually be a glimmer of sunshine 
here since he clearly looked rusty yesterday. But to be fair, despite some 
outstanding performances late last year he does not yet have a track record as 
a full time, every down, number one back. He could end up having a breakout 
season, being a disappointment, or anything in between.

New, dynamic receivers? This is probably the most improved unit on the whole 
squad, likely due a great deal to Joker's influence. Patton and Dunbar seem to 
be playing at a higher level. The new guys have yet to make a big impression 
but rarely do true freshmen, especially so early in the year. Despite the noted 
marked improvement here, they are still not a group that will keep DCs from 
good teams up at night. And that's at least in part to...

The elephant in the room. We could have Ike, Reidel, and Jacquez suited up and 
it wouldn't matter if our QB couldn't get them the ball at the right place and 
on time. Driskel has some extraordinary physical gifts and he's ours, so we 
(should, anyway) love him. If you look at them in isolation he mas made some 
incredible plays - with his feet, with his arm, and yes, even with his head. 
And it's true, he doesn't always have a clean pocket, doesn't always have his 
primary receiver getting early separation, but guess what? Neither do any other 
quarterback, at any level.

In another thread Halley opined that there were only a handful of [B]star[/B] 
QBs sprinkled throughout CFB and that all of the good teams have one of them. 
That may or may not be true, but I watch a lot of games and I see a lot of QBs 
that aren't on All American watch lists, or even necessarily even top 25 teams 
that do things like make back shoulder throws, hit slants and other timing 
routes, and throw to the spot before the intended receiver makes his break. 
Perhaps, in the name of ball security, JD has either been instructed directly 
not to do these, or is too gun shy to try.

That being said, a junior QB can not throw the ball over the middle late in the 
red zone when getting rid of it gives you a chance to put points on the board.

And... the coaches. The lynch mobs are forming (or maybe are just now stepping 
out of the shadows). Is firewillmuschamp.com<http://firewillmuschamp.com> up 
yet (good gawd, I hope not)? After yesterday's debacle, what would you do? If 
there were a better option at QB, don't you think we'd have seen it by now? As 
much as Tyler Murphy has said to have improved, all reports said that the gulf 
between he and Driskel in production (gulp!) is huge.

I like a lot of things about CWM. The discipline and toughness he demands is 
reaping dividends. I know that there are still some bonehead penalties but I 
think they are trending the right way. Is anyone else amazed that we have not 
had a single flag thrown on a kickoff or punt return yet? I like that CWM 
demands accountability.

But given what he has to work with right now I wouldn't want to have to decide 
what instructions to give our OC. If it were me I [B]think[/B] I would go with 
a "we've got a killer defense so let's let the offense take more chances and 
we'll bail them out if we have to" approach. That [B]might[/B] be more fun to 
watch, although watching your QB throw pick after pick might be more 
frustrating than watching your tailback gain three yards on 3rd-and-6 time 
after time.

Optimist's viewpoint: JD will look at game tape from yesterday and learn 
something. The opening up of the playbook will allow him to grow and flourish, 
our receivers will become a bigger part of the offense and the running game 
will benefit, all combining to make our O not only not a liability, but a 
potent weapon. We'll run the table, crush our opponents in the SEC and NC 
championship games and all will be right in the world again. All of the best 
high school players will want to come play here and we will have a dynasty that 
all others will pale to in comparison.

Pessimist's view: JD and the offense showed yesterday, against one of the 
weaker defenses on our schedule, that even if they can move the ball at times 
they can't score points. Against our remaining middle to poor defenses we will 
see a repeat of yesterday. Against the better ones we'll revert to "playing it 
safe" Burton will get 80% of the receptions, averaging 6 ypc, and our defense 
will have to pitch shutouts for us to win. We lose to everyone except Georgia 
Southern (and possibly Kentucky), the whole coaching staff is fired recruits 
avoid us like the plague and our roster for the foreseeable future is loaded 
with legacy walk ons.

What do I really think?: Who knows? I suppose we'll find out what our coaching 
staff and our roster are made of. The sharpest steel is honed in fire (I think 
I saw something to that effect in a razor blade commercial once) and the heat 
won't be in short supply. I think we will end up being somewhere between a 3 
and 5 loss team this year. Five losses sounds pretty dramatic, but with key 
losses due to injuries, and a few balls bouncing the wrong way I'm afraid it 
could happen.

Bottom line: This is a "show me what you've done lately and entertain me while 
you're doing it" world now. The sun will rise. The sun will set. Gator fans 
will complain. Gator fans will complain about other Gator fans complaining. 
We'll all be distracted by our jobs, families, and other interests, but will 
all return to enjoy/suffer through our favorite passion.

I'm getting ready to move to a place that will likely mean my days of going to 
see the Gators play in person may be over (don't feel to sorry for me - it's a 
place a whole lot of folks think they would like to live). Last week at the 
Toledo game I was glad I had my sunglasses on - I got teary eyed at "Here come 
the Gators", during the singing of "We Are The Boys", during the fight song 
after the game, etc. It's my youngest son's last semester at UF, and it seems 
like only yesterday that I couldn't wait for him to be "big enough" to take to 
the games.

At this point I don't know where I fall on the Sunshine pumper/naysayer scale. 
But I do know that every Saturday in the fall I'll have my hopes riding on the 
boys in Orange and Blue, and will spend way too much of my other time obsessing 
about them. And I wouldn't have it any other way. Thanks for being a part of it 
with me.
--
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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
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2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us<http://www.gatornet.us>
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2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
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1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us<http://www.gatornet.us>
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1996 National Football Champions   |   2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions   |   
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
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