The Coastal, Clemson, and UGA stand to gain a lot from this

beej67

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Here's an unpopular but true thing.

All our regular opponents were forced by CPJ to spend at least one week of the spring, and often one day a week of the regular season, practicing against option stuff in order to not look completely foolish. And because coaches dreaded having to deal with a press conference in which they were flatly accused of being out-coached, they would disproportionately spend time practicing against GT specifically. The evidence for this is everywhere in media interviews, with all our regular opponents coaches and players.

That system specific practice time is time that each of these schools could have spent elsewhere. The fact that they had to spend all that time may in fact have led to some degree of the Coastal Chaos we've grown used to seeing. Duke, for instance, started scheduling option opponents not only to practice against GT, but also so that the GT specific practices they were doing were useful against other opponents. So they could leverage the time they spent trying to avoid losing to Tech into other areas of their overall record. Many of the recent coaching hires in the Coastal were also predicated around option prep - Bronco Mendenhall being a prime example.

So CPJ departing will have several effects in the overall landscape.

One - it will mean that opponents aren't going to be spending their spring practicing against Tech. This might actually be good for us in a way.

Two - it will mean that opponents will spend more time practicing against their other opponents. This will generally tend to increase their own W/L records. Which will be good for the ACC Coastal, but bad for us in that UGA will catch the same kind of boon.
 
One - it will mean that opponents aren't going to be spending their spring practicing against Tech. This might actually be good for us in a way.

Two - it will mean that opponents will spend more time practicing against their other opponents. This will generally tend to increase their own W/L records. Which will be good for the ACC Coastal, but bad for us in that UGA will catch the same kind of boon.

1 - If we run what everyone else is running, they'll be spending even more time practicing against what we run

2 - I'll agree with this point
 
There will be nothing that I miss more than the Curse of Playing Tech when teams would go out and lose the next weekend, regardless of how they did against us. It was one of our insurances that UGA would have a tough time winning the SEC.
 
Yes but then we're also not practicing against our own offense and can recruit better players.

Am I doing this right
 
Here's an unpopular but true thing.

All our regular opponents were forced by CPJ to spend at least one week of the spring, and often one day a week of the regular season, practicing against option stuff in order to not look completely foolish. And because coaches dreaded having to deal with a press conference in which they were flatly accused of being out-coached, they would disproportionately spend time practicing against GT specifically. The evidence for this is everywhere in media interviews, with all our regular opponents coaches and players.

That system specific practice time is time that each of these schools could have spent elsewhere. The fact that they had to spend all that time may in fact have led to some degree of the Coastal Chaos we've grown used to seeing. Duke, for instance, started scheduling option opponents not only to practice against GT, but also so that the GT specific practices they were doing were useful against other opponents. So they could leverage the time they spent trying to avoid losing to Tech into other areas of their overall record. Many of the recent coaching hires in the Coastal were also predicated around option prep - Bronco Mendenhall being a prime example.

So CPJ departing will have several effects in the overall landscape.

One - it will mean that opponents aren't going to be spending their spring practicing against Tech. This might actually be good for us in a way.

Two - it will mean that opponents will spend more time practicing against their other opponents. This will generally tend to increase their own W/L records. Which will be good for the ACC Coastal, but bad for us in that UGA will catch the same kind of boon.
It is a loss for other option programs, as our opponents will stop scheduling Army and Navy prior to playing Tech.
 
Maybe I'm being naive, but I don't think it was nearly as big a deal as this thread is making it out to be.

You are spot on. OP is one of those guys who think they know everything about everything.
 
You guys that know more than Isaac Nauta are very impressive.

I'm not saying they didn't spend extra time preparing. I'm just saying playing CPJ didn't hamper their seasons. They're both in the hunt for the CFP going into championship weekend back-to-back seasons. Hard to say how he's hampered them in any way.
 
A lot of factors went into "Coastal chaos." Virginia Tech declined in Beamer's old age, Miami has never been able to do in the ACC what they did in the Big East, Duke hired Cutcliffe and stopped becoming an automatic win for everyone else, UNC goes in out and of cycles of suck, etc.

Other than maybe Duke, no one was predicating their entire season around beating us.
 
Little Known Fact. Georgia plays Texas A&M the week before GT next season.

Auburn, TA&M, Tech.

Knees will already be in bad shape, no cut blocking needed.
 
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