
Originally Posted by
pczach
IMO, one of the biggest differences between having an offensive minded head coach compared to a defensive minded head coach is that the offense is run unfiltered. You are getting the full capability of the offense with no restrictions from the head coach instructing you to run this many times, play it safe here, don't go up tempo right now, run the ball in this situation, etc.. The offensive coach is going to run the offense exactly how he sees fit, and will be able to make adjustments in style and scheme immediately to respond to what defenses are doing. The other thing is that it is already understood that the head coach has a good offense in place and knows how to run the offense because he has done it before successfully or he wouldn't be a head coach.
There is also so much more detail that goes into the offensive scheme without the approval of someone else. In many cases, the head coach is working directly with his offensive players. They will know exactly what their assignments are and every nuance of the system because he is the one feeding it to them with the help of an OC that is fluent in the same offense. There seem to be less conflicts because the offensive head coach selects people specifically to fit his scheme and run it. The organization hired him and allowed him to bring in his staff. If a defensive coach is running things, he may still be allowed to hire any offensive coach he approves of, but defense is his specialty. He may bring in an offensive mind, yet not get the entire offensive staff that the OC would want to run his system. Also, he is still under the direction of the head coach when it comes to risk assessment, run/pass preferences, down and distance preferences, and personnel. The OC is usually limited in some way by the constraints of the defensive minded head coach.
This may sound a little strange to some, but most offensive head coaches are willing to delegate power to the DC and let him run his defense as he sees fit, with fewer demands from the head coach.
In general, defensive coaches tend to want to control the offenses more because they believe in complimentary football, and they usually wish to run an offense that they think helps the defense by protecting them with time of possession, they hate turnovers and avoid them at all costs, and that they truly believe that a punt isn't a bad thing sometimes. It's just a different way of thinking on the defensive side of the ball. The priority is always to try to put the defense in a good spot. I think that's where the modern game has changed so much that defensive minded head coaches get caught playing like it's still like it was 15 years ago....and it's not.
Just my opinion.