P.J. Fleck coached the first half of a blowout loss at Ohio State as if he had no faith in his players. A day later, Kevin O'Connell played it safe at the wrong times, creating an opportunity for Denver to pounce.
Any coach's game management is always ripe for second-guessing — or first-guessing — and the head coaches of the state's two most prominent football teams left themselves open to criticism this past weekend. The focus of Football Across Minnesota this week is on their decision-making as the teams head into high-profile games: Fleck's Gophers vs. the Badgers on Saturday, O'Connell's Vikings vs. the Bears on Monday Night Football.
O'Connell's strategic decisions were far less egregious and annoying than Fleck's, and he took a big gamble with a well-executed fake punt in the fourth quarter. Let's start with what we saw Sunday night in Denver.
A six-point (at least) swing: With 1 minute, 19 seconds left until halftime and his team holding a 10-6 lead, O'Connell opted to punt on fourth-and-1 at the Denver 48-yard line. The Vikings were punishing the Broncos with the running game the entire half, and Denver had the lowest-ranked defense in the NFL. The odds of converting in that situation were high. A field goal, at least, was there for the taking. Instead, Russell Wilson took advantage, hit on four completions and the Broncos kicked a field goal to cut the lead to one.
Instead: O'Connell often notes that he likes to coach aggressively and that was a situation to show it instead of punting. The running game was humming. Keep your foot on the gas.
Need a knockout: Leading 17-15 late in the fourth quarter, the Vikings were driving for what could have been a knockout touchdown. The fake punt to keep the drive alive was a thing of beauty. Once his offense reached the Denver 12, O'Connell called back-to-back running plays that gained no yards and after a third-down incompletion, the Vikings settled for a field goal. O'Connell was too cautious in that moment. Yes, the field goal required Denver to score a touchdown, and there's reason to have confidence in his defense, which had bottled up Wilson. But we've seen Wilson do what he did too many times, and his late-game magic predictably led to another game-winning drive.
Instead: Go for the killshot, KOC. A coach needs to be thinking six points there, not three. That field goal turned Wilson into a touchdown-seeking QB and that's playing to his strength.
No faith: Unlike O'Connell, Fleck didn't face pressure decisions in a tight game that went down to the wire. He coached timidly from Saturday's start with game management that looked alarmingly defeatist. Twice he punted on fourth-and-5 from inside the Ohio State 45. He also either called for or signed off on running plays on third-and-long with his fifth-string tailback against a stout defense. Fleck's explanation for his ultra-conservative approach showed no awareness that his team needed to pull out all the stops to have any chance as four-touchdown underdogs.