However unintentional, this (the bolded part) is a very misleading stat. There was a significant difference in games played between SEC programs this season. Alabama was 8th in the SEC (bottom of the upper half of the conference) this year. It’s even more meaningful to calculate “sacks per pass attempt” where Alabama was 5th or possibly 4th (at least after the AU game) in the truer measure of that stat.
So, the reality is that Alabama’s OL was one of the better pass blocking OLs in the SEC this year. It’s probably a little better than that when we factor in the RB responsibilities. E.g., in the first OU game 2 of the 4 sacks were the RBs (1 each for Miller and Hill) responsibility. That is the only game whose stats re: the RBs I know. But I know there were other RB pass blocking failures.
Another observation from just watching on TV, is that most SEC QBs are often under siege by the SEC pass rushers. And that is with the vast majority of the teams having very mobile QBs. Mendoza was sacked twice by Alabama, Ty was not sacked, though Mack was.
Finally, the vast majority of serious football fans think their OLs are terrible and hate their OL coach.
In summary: Alabama’s OL was an above average pass blocking OL, at least related to the rest of the SEC.
Let's make this clear. Alabama's pass blocking wasn't good enough for what they were trying to do. If you're going to be pass happy like DeBoer's scheme tries to do, you need to keep your quarterback's jersey clean. If you're going to focus on pass protection at the expensive of run blocking (this was noted earlier in the season, that pass protection was the emphasis) you need to be very good at it. Not a bit above average, one of the best.
That was not the case. I have outlined why I think Alabama has to be more committed to the run, I've said that this would be a problem prior to the start of the season and this offense was the 49th ranked scoring offense. I have to go all the way back to 2007 to find an Alabama offense this bad. So clearly, there's a problem. Especially since they hired DeBoer as an offensive guy and this is the worst offense Alabama has had since Major Applewhite was the OC.
Having said that, I haven't screamed for them to get rid of the OC or fire the OL coach into the sun or something. But clearly, there needs to be changes and looking at the roster, they decided running backs were not the problem. So, coaching it is then!
I've already described why you basically need to try to keep Kap and Grubb though, so what do you do? If you do nothing, this could put DeBoer on the hot seat. One possibility, I guess could be let Kap stay with the exterior, as you noted it wasn't
that bad. Then because Grubb doesn't recruit
or coach another position group, he could work with the interior on run blocking. That's in theory in his wheelhouse, their run blocking certainly couldn't get much worse.
Then, to keep it from being a demotion, you could make Kap run game coordinator. No idea if he's good or not, but it's a thing he's done in the past. Certainly not teaching good run blocking, but doesn't mean he can't be a solid run game coordinator. The key here though would just be the emphasis. If Kap is spending time doing that, and basically having a two heads are better than one approach with Grubb (not like people loved Grubb's run play calling anyway), then may be they can develop a run game.
Mind you, I get why some people are saying just do a clean slate. But, something has to change... it's clearly not working.