This KU football season is winding to a close in much the same fashion as the previous four - losses piling up, blame doled out, no answers in sight.
I touched on this a bit in a comment last week, but I wanted to come back to the point here - KU football needs an identity.
KU football's identity right now is being mediocre. Even then, that's not really the full identity, because KU football isn't mediocre in the way that many teams are - KU has had more success than many mediocre teams. It's not like K-State when Snyder took over, a program devoid of any high points at any time in their history. KU has been to the Orange Bowl, won a BCS bowl, had some double digit win seasons, etc. KU's identity can't even be that they are mediocre because they haven't even gotten that right.
I don't think KU can go full out Baylor or Oregon and say their identity is going to be score a zillion points in less than 90 seconds. KU is not positioned to recruit the type of athletes that Baylor can in Texas, or draw athletes like Oregon can (a combination of Nike money and proximity to a huge population in California). I just don't foresee KU being able to change the level of their program while getting second and third tier players from the major recruiting grounds (Texas, California, Florida, the South).
So where can the identity come from? Well, I honestly think KU has to latch onto an identity rooted in an up tempo running attack. KU has shown an ability to get some talent at the RB position. That has been the strongest position on the depth chart the last four years, even while some other spots on the roster imploded.
I think an uptempo game plan is a must. Players now are attracted to systems that push the pace. Granted, most push the pace through the air, but you can push the pace on the ground as well. However, pushing the pace on the ground will also keep the clock moving, which will be a huge benefit to a team that may not have the depth of its opponents.
I also think this uptempo scheme should employ zone blocking techniques. If we don't have linemen that can just maul guys, zone blocking can go a long way to level the playing field.
Defensively, I think it's time to shift away from the traditional schemes. KU has not been able to recruit the dominant interior linemen to play a 3-4 (requires a tremendous amount of the nose tackle) or 4-3 (at least 1 end must command a double team). KU should instead move to a hybrid defense of some type, either fewer down linemen, shifting LBs, a Monster, a 4-2-5, Gap or something else.
Can Charlie Weis do this? Sadly, I don't think so. Weis is just too established as a coach to basically throw out all of his schemes and rewrite his entire football personality. KU needs someone new, someone young, someone that isn't established so that they can establish an identity for KU football.