Yes. But if you hold onto the ball a bit longer, they don't get the chance to put up those yards. Its a symbiotic relationship.
What does the Lion King have to do with any of this?
I think we're putting way too much stock in Malzahn having to have that true read option guy to be successful. And I don't fault him one bit for taking JJ or Sean White. Sean was the Elite 11 winner and JJ is/was 6'5" 240, Mr. Foosballz with sick numbers. Nobody saw that coming with him. And I don't think Gus ever was looking for the next Nick Marshall. He may be now.
In addition, Gus has been doing this at the D1 level long enough now to not be "just a high school coach".
Arkansas: Fugetaboutit. That was all Nuttzo. They didn't run anything that even remotely resembled what Malzahn runs.
Tulsa: Did they have Nick Marshall? Nope. Did they have Cam? Newp. Did he ever have a read option QB? Nada. The QB's at Tulsa ran about 8-9 times a game and barely had 100 yard each on the season. Were they at the top of the heap in virtually every offensive category in...the...nation both years? Ha Ha Ha...yooooouuu betcha'.
Auburn: Chris Todd? Really? Chris Todd? There was no read option. The guy could barely get outside the tackle box to throw one away. But guess what? That bunch set several Auburn offensive records. (At that time. Since broken)
Then comes Cam. Was it more of a read option? I'd say so. Did it look anything like what he had Marshall running? Not to me, it didn't. Cam was special. He could do it all and they eventually did have him doing it all. He'd sit in the pocket and throw. He'd run the read. He did a ton of just skrate up Wildcat. After Cam, Gene said slow it down.
Arkansas State: 9-3. Ryan Aplin ran about 8 times a game. Threw for over 3,300 yards with 24 TD's and 4 Int's. Hardly a true read option QB.
Back To Auburn: For the first time in Malzahn's career, he has a QB whose running skills far exceed his passing ability, and Gus gears the offense to take full advantage. Marshall was an adequate passer to start with but developed into a pretty decent all around QB by the time his career was over.
My point to that useless diatribe was to say first off, this is why all the "experts" and fans on message boards alike said that Gus Malzahn could adjust his offense around his QB's strengths. He's done it plenty of times in the past. Has he had failures? You betcher Kadril he has. But far more successes with a variety of different styles of QB and offenses. That's why this season or more specifically, why things like this past Saturday just bumfuzzle the shit out of me. Saturday wasn't QB development or lack thereof. We could have won with JJ and probably won easily. He and the whole offense were handcuffed by play calling. Why? What has changed?