In a league where college football's approach is dictating what a majority of teams are allowed to do now compared to the past, why college coaches and coordinators are not being considered in these hires. There has to be some innovative OCs out there in the college ranks which are not as extreme as Chip Kelly was which could prosper
100% agree.
It is why I would like to see John DeFlippio as the OC, or Darell Bevell as the OC. They run more of a college type offense.
The other advantage to changing your offense to a more college type offense is that players will not have to be "re-taught" the game of football like many seem to have to do. Positions like offensive line, and quarterback seem to have an easier transition since that is all they have known up to this point.
I was 100% Chip Kelly because I believed his offense could not stand up in the NFL and the NFL game. Which I actually still believe.
That being said, what has changed, is that I do not believe the NFL gives teams enough time to develop their players to run a pro offense. Thus teams will lose games, especially earlier in the season because one team can run an offense better as a unit, than the other. Because it doesn't matter if you run a pro style offense if your players do not know what they are doing. Thus a well run college type offense will beat a poorly run pro style offense.
The league over the last year or so is proving this to be somewhat true.
It has been an interesting sub-discussion for a couple years now. Unfortunately, sports reporting in the media talks more about tabloid stories than topics like you bring up, so it is never discussed.
I would like to know what a Bill Parcells, or Bruce Arians, or Bill Belichek, or Mike McCarthy would say about this type of topic.