P.J. Fleck is being secretive about the Gophers offense. Secretive even by the standard coaching book.
Football coaches tend to treat training camp as if they are guarding nuclear launch codes. They don't want outsiders (opponents) knowing what they are working on, how they are using personnel, whether they have new wrinkles in scheme or what flavor of sports drinks they serve at dinner.
Fleck installed co-offensive coordinators, Matt Simon and Greg Harbaugh, this season after Kirk Ciarrocca departed for Rutgers. Fleck has declined to reveal which coach will call plays in games because, well, he would like to keep Nebraska guessing before the opener, though it's unclear what competitive advantage the Cornhuskers would gain by knowing that information.
Maybe this is just an example of coaching subterfuge, but the guess here is that something else is at play. My theory is that Fleck's offense is undergoing a fundamental change and he prefers not to share it yet.
Fleck's coaching philosophy is new age in every way except offense. In that area, he's as old school as linebacker neck rolls. If he could win a game running the ball 60 consecutive times, Fleck would do it and then treat himself to a steak dinner and nice bottle of wine.
In his first six seasons in Dinkytown, Fleck's offense never averaged more than 26 passes per game for the season. The Gophers finished two seasons averaging fewer than 20 passes per game. Their national ranking by season in average pass attempts under Fleck: 124, 106, 111, 105, 127 and 126.
As much as he loves a good old-fashioned ground-and-pound ball-control offense, Fleck knows that every offense should play to its strengths. And until this point in his tenure, Year 7, the quarterback has not been the strength of his offense.