Utah Utes football: Offense still searching for rhythm
The U. offense has been pretty good, ranking 43rd in rushing offense, 35th in passing offense and 28th in total offense and 16th in scoring offense. But anyone who has watched the Utes this year has noticed it always hasn't been a smooth ride.
There have been too many turnovers, too many sacks and too many stalled drives against inferior competition. In easy wins over Utah State and Weber State, the Utes had to settle for three field goals in each game.
Offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig declined to be interviewed Monday after practice, so head coach Kyle Whittingham talked about the offense so far this year and gave it a tentative thumbs up.
"Throughout a game, there are times when we are efficient and times when we are not efficient," he said. "But overall when you judge the games as a whole, our numbers are decent. The things that have been out of line are the turnovers and the sacks allowed."
The Utes rank near the bottom in the national stats in sacks allowed at No. 103, are tied for 93rd in turnovers lost and are tied for 69th in turnover margin.
"Sometimes we hold the ball too long, sometimes our protection's broken down and sometimes the route structure has been very poor and we're not getting open," he said. "So it's not any one of those three areas, just a combination."
Senior quarterback Brian Johnson, who has thrown five interceptions, fumbled four times and been sacked 12 times, hasn't been pleased with his own performance in several instances this year.
"The thing about offensive football is that you have to have 11 guys playing together on every snap," he said. "We have to be on the same page offensively and find that rhythm and play consistently for an entire game. There's no better week to do it than this week."
GETTING TRICKY: The Utes have always utilized a variety of trick plays under Whittingham and Ludwig. But some fans question why they "wasted" a double-reverse pass from receiver Jereme Brooks to quarterback Corbin Louks against Weber State last week.
Whittingham explained that it benefits his offense to run more trick plays whenever possible.
"Trick plays have long-term benefits," he said. "It's not just the play at the moment. You run a couple of fake punts and the rest of the year, people slow down on the punt rush.
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