I'm seeing it effectively argued that what you saw Saturday v. USC IS the Orji offense that was installed and repped in spring preseason and fall camp. It is very likely to be the offense you see from here on out. There's a bit of a mystery of why, after the tea-leaves suggested Orji would be the starter v. Fresno State, that Davis Warren trotted out on the field to take the first snap as starter. At this point, it's irrelevant. Orji is the starter now. M's offense isn't a spread and shred offense. It isn't a pro-style offense. In fact it very much looks like it is an offense designed and suited for Alex Orji who is going to grow into it potentially expanding the tool box game by game and in that process becoming diverse enough to beat Oregon and OSU.
In the Orji offense, M's base running play is Split Zone. Seth makes that play design easy to understand. It's not new. Moore is intimately familiar with it so it should be no surprise to anyone that it was used to excellent effect - to the tune of 300 yards rushing - against a legitimate P5 defense. And then there are the three explosive plays,2 by Mullings, 1 by Edwards that sealed it for M. There were a few ROs thrown in there and if there was a Read-Pass-Option in there, it was pre-ordained to be run a certain way with one receiver as the go to guy. The goal is to expand the RPO and that will come with live game reps.
It's also being pointed out that Orji is not dumb. He is an avid student of the game and has invested the necessary time to know the play-book. What he and the coaching staff are realizing in live action is that Orji is dealing with a common, first year starter's issue that live games games are moving faster than Orji is comfortable with. It's not like practice where the QB is wearing a red shirt. The cure for that is more live reps. As the game slows down for him and he has more perceived time to process the reads, he'll get better at passing. M has a decent interval right now (v. Gopher's and Huskies) to make that kind of practice happen facing opponents that should be at a lower level than Texas and USC. Orji does not need to be a 300 ypg passer. 125 would be a nice number to hit to compliment what it appears Moore wants his offense to be - a Power- Read-Option, with enough Read-Pass-Option and Play-Action thrown in there to keep opponents from bringing their Ss into the box.
In the Orji offense, M's base running play is Split Zone. Seth makes that play design easy to understand. It's not new. Moore is intimately familiar with it so it should be no surprise to anyone that it was used to excellent effect - to the tune of 300 yards rushing - against a legitimate P5 defense. And then there are the three explosive plays,2 by Mullings, 1 by Edwards that sealed it for M. There were a few ROs thrown in there and if there was a Read-Pass-Option in there, it was pre-ordained to be run a certain way with one receiver as the go to guy. The goal is to expand the RPO and that will come with live game reps.
It's also being pointed out that Orji is not dumb. He is an avid student of the game and has invested the necessary time to know the play-book. What he and the coaching staff are realizing in live action is that Orji is dealing with a common, first year starter's issue that live games games are moving faster than Orji is comfortable with. It's not like practice where the QB is wearing a red shirt. The cure for that is more live reps. As the game slows down for him and he has more perceived time to process the reads, he'll get better at passing. M has a decent interval right now (v. Gopher's and Huskies) to make that kind of practice happen facing opponents that should be at a lower level than Texas and USC. Orji does not need to be a 300 ypg passer. 125 would be a nice number to hit to compliment what it appears Moore wants his offense to be - a Power- Read-Option, with enough Read-Pass-Option and Play-Action thrown in there to keep opponents from bringing their Ss into the box.
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