Sorry but for much of his time here McCall was pretty successful as an OC. As far as Bacher, he had him for one year and that year he threw for about 2400 yds. And Siemien never threw for more than about 2200 yds. The following year after he left,. Kafka threw for over 3400 yds and close to 500 attempts He was very good at working with what he had including and passing attempts were usually between 30-40 per game and often close to 50-50 run pass. When he had good runners he used them and running QBs, Heck we won 10 games with Thorson as a RS Frosh throwing for 1500 yards and also with him throwing for about 3200 yds a couple times. For most of his time here his Os were close to 400 yds/game.
His big problem occurred at the end when our QB recruiting took a hit for several years and guys did not work out and we also had problems with consistency at the RB position not having the solid run game we usually had (OL?) and had critical injuries at the position (Larkin and Bowser are examples) But till then he had done a pretty good job creating a successful O under a lot of different scenarios. He even put together one of the most successful two QB systems most of us have ever seen
Didn't say that that McC didn't have his moments of success, but a lot of that was due to the individual talents of the QBs (Persa turning something out of nothing was all on him) more so than McC's playcalling, much less scheme - which was an albatross.
Don't care so much about Siemian's nos as his basically 2 years of starting were plagued by
injuries.
For example, heading into the 2014 season, the Cats lost their #1 WR and one of their best O-lineman to season ending injury and their starting RB/electric return guy to transfer (the season before, Mark was injured for a large part as well) and things got steadily worse from there (including having the new #1 receiver playing with a broken hand, hence all the
drops).
But the Cats went on to beat
Wisky, Penn State and the Domers all in one season and should have beaten UM for the rare quad-fecta but for the incompetence of McC and Fitz.
Without Siemian, the Cats wouldn't have beaten those teams and we all saw how they fared against the Pumpkinheads after Siemian's injury.
Speaking of which, it took
half a season watching McC and Fitz hand the ball off deep in the backfield on 3rd/4th and 1 (only to see them repeatedly fail to convert) before they finally started to make things easier by using the QB sneak.
But against that sneak attempt against Purdue when Siemian got injured, anyone could see that it was a bad idea as the Boilers had really loaded up the box.
But bad decisions and slow/too late adjustments were the hallmark of the McC/Fitz O.
Just as bad as the
M00N game was the loss to
Army.
Never watched an Army game that season until the Cats faced them, but still knew that their weakness on D was their
secondary.
But what did the McC/Fitz "braintrust" decide?
That running the ball with Colter was the best way to attack their D (which practices against a running QB!).
And it took them
3 quarters of garbage (just like in the M00N game) before they decided to change course.