so exactly what are these strengths of Jalen's that we should have built the offense around?
This is basically a rhetorical question, since your posts are essentially an attempt to say he has none. Yet, Kiffin took a true freshman quarterback, and put up more yards, more PPG, while playing a tougher schedule, with Cooper Bateman (one TD pass) as the backup for most the season,
and he went AWOL at the end there. There's no way on earth I can conclude that Daboll used Hurts better than Kiffin did (his issue was he didn't necessarily develop QBs, he used them). When Kiffin was present and accounted for, Hurts had a lousy game against LSU, but otherwise he and/or the offense was actually quite productive, that productivity did not end until Kiffin's focus ended.
That latter part speaks to a major aspect of dealing with college kids, which is something you seem to be omitting. The job of a college coach is not merely to draw up plays a hypothetical player can execute, it is to draw up plays a college kid can execute. You have to cover for their weaknesses, you have to understand most of these guys won't be professionals, so it is about far more than drawing up a play that has an open man. Alabama has a guy who can't kick extra points, a punter who averages 35 yards, I saw one team that had a different QB for third downs. Welcome to college football, where your job is to get the most out of these kids.
Kiffin, after the LSU debacle dominated the competition. Blew out Miss. State, Auburn, and Florida, and if he'd showed up to the Washington game there would have been more of the same. Still a blowout, but less offense than there would have been if he'd just been calling, you know, real plays. So you can fixate on missed reads all you want, but I have hard evidence that one guy got more out of the offense than the other did with the same QB.
Now, this leads us to what one of the problems was. Daboll had no idea what to do with Hurts. Now your counter will be but but but but Hurts has deficiencies. I know. He also has 44 passing touchdowns and over 5,000 passing yards, to go along with the W/L record we all know about, which is a fairly impressive job of falling up the stairs if you ask me. So, Daboll a pro style guy who ran from the college game like he was on fire, couldn't manage the option elements of the offense. He couldn't really manage Hurts at all, so what happened is Locksley brought in the option stuff and planned for Hurts, he has to hand this over to Daboll and then Daboll has to try to execute it. There's bound to be things lost in translation. That's far from an ideal scenario, and it showed on the field. Daboll didn't know how to hold a college guy's hand, he didn't understand or master the intricacies of those things, one could argue he has the least control over the offensive group of any offensive coordinator Nick Saban has had. It wasn't his play calling that was the issue so much as he simply didn't know how to deal with these kids and keep them in the right place mentally. That's part of the job.
So, we have solid proof Kiffin's offense was more productive. We have solid proof that Daboll either didn't know how to deal with Hurts or just didn't care. And you'll counter with missed reads, and my contention remains, as it did early last season, you have to do more hand holding. You force Hurts hands, like I said then, to throw more and run less. You also do things like build his confidence up, draw up plays for that sake, etc... I'm not going to sit here and diagram plays, that's not my job, but Daboll from the mid-season on didn't show any real signs of bringing Hurts along, which once again makes sense considering he also didn't even know how to manage Hurts or option stuff. It was as I said before round hole square peg.
That brings us to present day. I was happy with the idea of Daboll staying for one reason and one reason only. Daboll knows the pro style offense with a downfield passing attack, and if there's ever been an Alabama QB proficient at that, it's Tua. So, despite being a bad fit for the QB situation most of the year, he was a good fit for Tua's skillset. Locksley, someone who was more competent in dealing with Hurts (that's fact, not debatable given that Daboll couldn't do that job) doesn't have the experience with a Patriots level offense. However, as I'm witnessing now, I believe Locksley's overall competence in the college game is proving to be more than enough to make up for that. He's a college guy, he knows the game, and as of right now he has both quarterbacks looking more productive. Of course we could see regression or weaknesses in Locksley's playcalling, but things are on track right now. Seems like a good situation to me, and of course Enos deserves some credit, but if Locksley keeps this up there won't be anything to discuss in regards to Daboll and Locksley later in the year.
We can go back and forth but the season will tell the story...