Yeah, I know all that. What I asked was, can you show me a quote from a player or player(s) that you're disputing as it relates to this whole topic. I think context is going to be key to what I'm trying to communicate to you.
X said:Yeah, I know all that. What I asked was, can you show me a quote from a player or player(s) that you're disputing as it relates to this whole topic. I think context is going to be key to what I'm trying to communicate to you.
Schottenheimer defends his system
BY JIM THOMAS
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
http://www.stltoday.com/sports/foot...icle_6955b714-b6a0-594f-8b0e-a595be8ce1fe.html
Schottenheimer grew up in coaching with the "digit" system of play-calling, a staple of the "Air Coryell" offense of former coaching great Don Coryell. In that system, for example, pass routes are called by numbers. Hence the game-winning touchdown pass to Isaac Bruce in Super Bowl XXXIV, against Fisher's Tennessee Titans, was "9-9-9 H balloon." (Mike Martz, Rams offensive coordinator at the time, was a Coryell disciple.)
At the Senior Bowl on Tuesday, one coach familiar with the Jets' offense said Schottenheimer actually altered the way plays were called — using more concepts and fewer digits in the system — to help quarterback Mark Sanchez.
Schottenheimer, who met Bradford on Monday, said Bradford should have no trouble getting the verbiage down.
"Sam and I, as we work through the process and get things going here in a few months, it will not be a problem," Schottenheimer said. "I understand how smart he is and how much he wants to work and is excited about the opportunity."
In reality, Schottenheimer said there are only so many kinds of routes you can run and so many kinds of running plays.
"We all have the same plays," he said.
Over the years, he has been exposed to enough systems that he'll be able to quickly "translate" any differences in terminology while Bradford is learning the playbook.
"I know some of the things that Josh (McDaniels) was doing," Schottenheimer said of the man he is replacing. "I know some of the things that Sam did his first year under (former offensive coordinator) Pat Shurmur, so I can kind of translate a lot of those languages. But it will be certainly different."
Schottenheimer is working his way through tape of Bradford's Rams games; he's about 12 to 14 games through 2010, Bradoford's rookie year. He had yet to delve into 2011.
"Obviously, he's extremely gifted, extremely talented," Schottenheimer siad. "I'm watching the film, getting a sense of how accurate he is with the football and how well he actually moves around and has made plays.
"That was one of the things that jumped off the film at me. But it'll be a fun process going through and looking at all the games and just getting a sense of where he's at. I've been around a lot of young quarterbacks, but I think this guy's got a chance to be real special."
As he studies Bradford, Schottenheimer also is going through the process of finding a quarterbacks coach, something the Rams didn't have last season.
"That was one of the first things Jeff and I talked about," Schottenheimer said. "It's something that I really, truly believe in as well. The quarterback needs to be taught no different than everybody else. There's fundamentals, there's techniques that need to be taught and stressed. ... We will obviously look at a lot of different people and it will be a very, very important hire just like all the staff hirings will be for us."
:grr: Who? Who misspoke?zn said:X said:Yeah, I know all that. What I asked was, can you show me a quote from a player or player(s) that you're disputing as it relates to this whole topic. I think context is going to be key to what I'm trying to communicate to you.
? I know all the quotes you do. I just said they mis-spoke.
X said:Never mind. Here we go. Per your quote in the J.T. article --
"I know some of the things that Josh (McDaniels) was doing," Schottenheimer said of the man he is replacing. "I know some of the things that Sam did his first year under (former offensive coordinator) Pat Shurmur, so I can kind of translate a lot of those languages. But it will be certainly different."
This is what I'm saying. Schottenheimer's plays aren't necessarily that different, but the terminology is. He already has in his playbook, plays from both coordinators that are similar in nature, but the terminology of those plays is different. The terminology is the same as Coryell, but the scheme itself has been bastardized to fit Schott's offensive philosophy. So that's why Bradford (and I assume others) have said it has some WCO wrinkles. That's all I was trying to point out.
That said, I'd still like to see which player or players called it a WCO system.
Yeah, I think we're on the same page here mostly. And no, I don't think it's some big debate.zn said:X said:Never mind. Here we go. Per your quote in the J.T. article --
"I know some of the things that Josh (McDaniels) was doing," Schottenheimer said of the man he is replacing. "I know some of the things that Sam did his first year under (former offensive coordinator) Pat Shurmur, so I can kind of translate a lot of those languages. But it will be certainly different."
This is what I'm saying. Schottenheimer's plays aren't necessarily that different, but the terminology is. He already has in his playbook, plays from both coordinators that are similar in nature, but the terminology of those plays is different. The terminology is the same as Coryell, but the scheme itself has been bastardized to fit Schott's offensive philosophy. So that's why Bradford (and I assume others) have said it has some WCO wrinkles. That's all I was trying to point out.
That said, I'd still like to see which player or players called it a WCO system.
No player called it a WCO system that I know of. That was me just trying to explain something. What he said, basically--translated--was Brian's playbook has WCO plays in it. That's inaccurate of course. There's no such thing as a "WCO Play."
And the reason Bradford says it has WCO wrinkles and roots is because he's putting something true the wrong way.
It's a Coryell system. Yeah, revised and all that, but that's a given. They're all revised. But it's a Coryell system.
"This offense does have some West Coast wrinkles," Bradford said. "So I think at the base level some of the things that this offense does are similar."
What Bradford really meant was that it has some plays in it he recognizes---and he recognizes them from having been in a WCO. To me all that says is that Shottenheimer deliberately and with pragmatism aforethought puts plays in there he saw on film from 2010. Bradford just talks about that as being like a WCO, or having WCO wrinkles, and so on. But then he's just talking that way cause he has no other way to put it. He's not an historian of offensive systems, he's a Rams qb who knows what he knows about the WCO from having played in it.
That's still Shottenheimers offense, but it deliberately includes things he put there because they were in the 2010 film and worked well with Bradford's skill set. That is, this return to the past thing is quite deliberate. It's a return to something familiar that worked. It's obviously not the whole of Brian S's offense but it looks to me like he put core things in there deliberately that he saw on 2010 film. Which is smart.
And frankly I am a little lost now because we seem to be saying similar things yet you seem to think there's some big debate.
My guess is that's what happens when the whole confusing thing about the difference between a system and a playcalling approach (and the plays in that approach) get mixed up.
X said:Yeah, I think we're on the same page here mostly. And no, I don't think it's some big debate.zn said:X said:Never mind. Here we go. Per your quote in the J.T. article --
"I know some of the things that Josh (McDaniels) was doing," Schottenheimer said of the man he is replacing. "I know some of the things that Sam did his first year under (former offensive coordinator) Pat Shurmur, so I can kind of translate a lot of those languages. But it will be certainly different."
This is what I'm saying. Schottenheimer's plays aren't necessarily that different, but the terminology is. He already has in his playbook, plays from both coordinators that are similar in nature, but the terminology of those plays is different. The terminology is the same as Coryell, but the scheme itself has been bastardized to fit Schott's offensive philosophy. So that's why Bradford (and I assume others) have said it has some WCO wrinkles. That's all I was trying to point out.
That said, I'd still like to see which player or players called it a WCO system.
No player called it a WCO system that I know of. That was me just trying to explain something. What he said, basically--translated--was Brian's playbook has WCO plays in it. That's inaccurate of course. There's no such thing as a "WCO Play."
And the reason Bradford says it has WCO wrinkles and roots is because he's putting something true the wrong way.
It's a Coryell system. Yeah, revised and all that, but that's a given. They're all revised. But it's a Coryell system.
"This offense does have some West Coast wrinkles," Bradford said. "So I think at the base level some of the things that this offense does are similar."
What Bradford really meant was that it has some plays in it he recognizes---and he recognizes them from having been in a WCO. To me all that says is that Shottenheimer deliberately and with pragmatism aforethought puts plays in there he saw on film from 2010. Bradford just talks about that as being like a WCO, or having WCO wrinkles, and so on. But then he's just talking that way cause he has no other way to put it. He's not an historian of offensive systems, he's a Rams qb who knows what he knows about the WCO from having played in it.
That's still Shottenheimers offense, but it deliberately includes things he put there because they were in the 2010 film and worked well with Bradford's skill set. That is, this return to the past thing is quite deliberate. It's a return to something familiar that worked. It's obviously not the whole of Brian S's offense but it looks to me like he put core things in there deliberately that he saw on 2010 film. Which is smart.
And frankly I am a little lost now because we seem to be saying similar things yet you seem to think there's some big debate.
My guess is that's what happens when the whole confusing thing about the difference between a system and a playcalling approach (and the plays in that approach) get mixed up.
This is what happens that causes misunderstandings though. Now watch.
Here's you.
And the reason Bradford says it has WCO wrinkles [hil]and roots[/hil] is because he's putting something true the wrong way.
Bradford didn't say it was rooted in the WCO. Not that I know of anyway. He said it had some wrinkles. That's different than what you said. Rooted in the WCO would mean it's a WCO system. He said it had some playcalling from the WCO (by saying it had some wrinkles).
You also said that a couple of players call this offense a WCO (hence your title). So I, naturally, wanted to know who said THAT. See, this isn't contentious for me. Not at all. I'm very focused on the literal and that's mainly because of my profession. You write it, you're contractually bound to it. And believe me, I take that stuff VERY seriously at work. To the tune of costing people tens of thousands of dollars and also as a means of breaking contracts that were in place for years. So, naturally, that translates to this (mah hobby) sometimes.
But yeah, on the whole, I agree with your characterization of Schottenheimer's offense.
Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
X said:Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
But yeah, I agree. It's pragmatic. Maybe you should have made your thread title, "Schotty stew with a pinch of Shurmur." That would have kept me from giving you a hard time for no other reason than to satiate my need for entertainment AND it would have made me crave stew.![]()
Yes, and I accept Paypal.zn said:X said:Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
But yeah, I agree. It's pragmatic. Maybe you should have made your thread title, "Schotty stew with a pinch of Shurmur." That would have kept me from giving you a hard time for no other reason than to satiate my need for entertainment AND it would have made me crave stew.![]()
Is that literal?
X said:Yes, and I accept Paypal.zn said:X said:Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
But yeah, I agree. It's pragmatic. Maybe you should have made your thread title, "Schotty stew with a pinch of Shurmur." That would have kept me from giving you a hard time for no other reason than to satiate my need for entertainment AND it would have made me crave stew.![]()
Is that literal?
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Xparent Blue Tapatalk 2
Yes. Summon the stew steward. Post haste.zn said:X said:Yes, and I accept Paypal.zn said:X said:Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
But yeah, I agree. It's pragmatic. Maybe you should have made your thread title, "Schotty stew with a pinch of Shurmur." That would have kept me from giving you a hard time for no other reason than to satiate my need for entertainment AND it would have made me crave stew.![]()
Is that literal?
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Xparent Blue Tapatalk 2
I meant wanting stew.
I gave the money to charity.
X said:Yes. Summon the stew steward. Post haste.zn said:X said:Yes, and I accept Paypal.zn said:X said:Then you owe me $22,550.00 and your contract is now void. That'll learn ya.zn said:Well, I don't do the literal, I do the rhetorical. Ways of putting things. For me, I was just trying to dash out something and make a point. I count on people following the drift. So...I was probably sloppy, in your eyes. But to me, I wasn't pausing to worry about that. I was getting into the fact that I see all this evidence all over the place that Brian the S actually did something Josh the M was supposed to do and didn't--Brian actually built a whole bunch of what he saw in 2010 film into his offense. Which is smart for SO MANY REASONS I am just not going to bother to list them.
But yeah, I agree. It's pragmatic. Maybe you should have made your thread title, "Schotty stew with a pinch of Shurmur." That would have kept me from giving you a hard time for no other reason than to satiate my need for entertainment AND it would have made me crave stew.![]()
Is that literal?
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Xparent Blue Tapatalk 2
I meant wanting stew.
I gave the money to charity.
libertadrocks said:I agree with your premise. Schotty is bringing in his Coryell style offense but is tailoring it the the talent we have. We had more success with the WCO in 2010 so he is adding a lot of that stuff to the playbook. I also agree with you that our offense will not be as conservative as 2010. We have more talent now.
X said:Can you show me a quote of these players who called it a west coast offense?
It does have some WCO implementations. When offenses branch off from their original architects, different coordinators add things, and subtract things, to mold them to how THEY want to run an offense. As it evolves and changes hands, it becomes something else. The basic principle may be one or the other, but seldom is an offense based on one principle entirely.
In THAT way, some of the players (including the QB) say it has WCO "wrinkles". All I see is players saying it has some similarities to Shurmur's version of the WCO. Which, as it turns out, is true.
Here's Bradford on that.
It also helps that this year's version of the offense, under the auspices of coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, bears a vague resemblance to Shurmur's version. "This offense does have some West Coast wrinkles," Bradford said. "So I think at the base level some of the things that this offense does are similar."
Schottenheimer's plays aren't necessarily that different, but the terminology is. He already has in his playbook, plays from both coordinators that are similar in nature, but the terminology of those plays is different. The terminology is the same as Coryell, but the scheme itself has been bastardized to fit Schott's offensive philosophy. So that's why Bradford (and I assume others) have said it has some WCO wrinkles. That's all I was trying to point out.
libertadrocks
I agree with the premise. Schotty is bringing in his Coryell style offense but is tailoring it the the talent we have. We had more success with the WCO in 2010 so he is adding a lot of that stuff to the playbook. I also agree with you that our offense will not be as conservative as 2010. We have more talent now. I just hope the rookies can carry the burden being place on them
DR RAM said:Don't be confused....Pat Shurmer=GOD.
Josh McDaniels=Douche.
That is all this thread was intended.
If you don't get it, stick around, because it will come around.
Well I wouldn't go that far. Pragmatic vs Dogmatic would be more accurate.DR RAM said:Don't be confused....Pat Shurmer=GOD.
Josh McDaniels=Douche.
That is all this thread was intended.
If you don't get it, stick around, because it will come around.