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Defense Often Has the Early Edge Sept 3rd 2004 -
Big Al
McMordie
While watching the first college football game of the season, USC
vs. Virginia Tech, I recognized something that sports bettors are
all too familiar with: In early season games, the defenses have an
edge on the offenses.
USC, a double-digit favorite, trailed the Hokies 10-7 at the half.
That number was well below the 24.5 total for the first half. While
many key components were returning for USC’s devastating offense
from a year ago, the Trojans were not quite in mid-season form in
that first half. This isn’t surprising, either. Although QB Matt
Leinart is off a terrific sophomore campaign, he was working with
new wide receivers. So it wouldn’t make sense to expect the Trojans'
offense to pick up right where it left off last year. Recall that in
2003, USC went far under the total, as well, in its opener; a 23-0
win at Auburn.
Part of the reason is just what I mentioned: it’s not the same
offense, and Leinart had to get used to several new wide outs. A
successful offense takes hours of practice and game-time to get in
sync. Patterns need to be run, and quarterbacks need time to get in
step with the receivers to whom they’re throwing the ball. It took
many games together for great NFL pass-catching duos like Joe
Montana and Jerry Rice, or Dan Marino and Mark Clayton to reach
their full potential. So, even though Leinart has been practicing
hard with his new WRs, practice can’t duplicate game conditions,
which are uniquely different.
Offense takes far more time to develop and reach its full potential
than defense and this is something to be aware of so early in the
season. It’s not that defense is easier to play; it’s just that
there are far fewer plays and schemes defensively for coordinators
to teach and for players to absorb. Many college and pro football
teams have offensive playbooks with hundreds of pages that take
hours to memorize and practice. Did you notice what happened to
rookie QB Philip Rivers this past weekend? After holding out for
weeks, he finally signed with the Chargers and a few days later and
was thrown into action against Seattle. Not surprisingly, Rivers was
terrible, and looked like a young man who hadn’t practiced with his
new teammates much, which he hadn’t.
But many NFL teams are struggling offensively and it’s much more
difficult for the offensive coaching staff to try and fix things.
Baltimore is a great example. The Ravens' defense has been hobbled
by injuries this preseason, yet the defense is still playing well.
But the young Baltimore offense has struggled this August much like
they have for the past two seasons. Think about this as you watch
the lines on sides and totals over the next few weeks. If you see a
number that looks suspiciously low, examine the two teams involved
carefully and ask, "Is this a situation where oddsmakers have made a
mistake?" Or is it a situation where the defenses are slightly ahead
of the offenses.
Good luck, as always...Al McMordie -
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