TENNFOLD1974
Vol in Madison TN.
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- Jan 24, 2008
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The spread was created to open up passing lanes and run draws.
Agreed..you played ball too...cool...I get bashed a lot talking about X's and O's...everyone who gives me sarcasm seems to think I think I'm a guru and the truth is I played so I know a little bit about how X's and O's work, and try to explain some things and then get bashed for it...kudos for being a playerYeah,and it's also to spread the field and open up running lanes,still the "spread" is a generic word these days.When I played HS football in the mid-80's we "spread" the field with a shot-gun formation,4/5 receivers sets,and no TE. Nobody labeled it a spread offense,but that's what it was by now days standards.
Spread in terms of Shotgun and 3 and 4 wide receiver packages most of the time. I'm definitely not trying to criticize him; I'm just curious as to what we'll run.
Agreed..you played ball too...cool...I get bashed a lot talking about X's and O's...everyone who gives me sarcasm seems to think I think I'm a guru and the truth is I played so I know a little bit about how X's and O's work, and try to explain some things and then get bashed for it...kudos for being a playerk:
Oh please! That is not a slap...if the guy didn't have his helmet on I'd agree but coaches grab face masks and smack players' helmets all the time!
The Spread Cincy and Texas Tech were running are really nothing more than the Run & Shoot. The Wildcat is simply a single wing. It seems everything old is new again. Football is football. Whatever Offense you decide to run, master it.
Disagree here, Texas Tech is 100% air raid which is Norm Chow/Lavell Edwards/Doug Scovil offense on steroids. They run the heck out of y cross, y stick, mesh, shallow, etc. They just spiced it up with Vertical Set blocking, and wide splits, not to mention shotgun every play. Cincy i'm unsure about and I haven't really analyzed them. You are 100% right on wildcat though.
Oh I completely agree that it's Air Raid, no doubt. It just seems to me that the basic concept of the Run & Shoot was expanded upon in today's variants of the "spread' where you see 4 and 5 receiver sets. What you have your receivers doing once the ball is snapped is coaching preference. But the Pass Dominant Offense with short passes and quick reads by the qb to create mismatches really seem quite similar.
Agreed..you played ball too...cool...I get bashed a lot talking about X's and O's...everyone who gives me sarcasm seems to think I think I'm a guru and the truth is I played so I know a little bit about how X's and O's work, and try to explain some things and then get bashed for it...kudos for being a playerk:
Disagree here, Texas Tech is 100% air raid which is Norm Chow/Lavell Edwards/Doug Scovil offense on steroids. They run the heck out of y cross, y stick, mesh, shallow, etc. They just spiced it up with Vertical Set blocking, and wide splits, not to mention shotgun every play. Cincy i'm unsure about and I haven't really analyzed them. You are 100% right on wildcat though.
True, Tiger Ellison, and Mouse Davis truely revolutionized the game with extensive 4 WR sets and no TEs, and you even see teams extensively using choice. But I don't see many teams running switch, slide, go, choice, and streak and especially not TT. I don't see the half-roll protection either. If I were to really classify the RNS teams though, I'd say Hawaii, Portland State, and SMU are the only true shoot teams, and that is thanks to Bob Davie and the Houston Oilers. GA Tech throws in some shoot principles. June Jones has sorta evolved though, he runs the heck outta levels, and has threw in some WCO stuff, he is also extensively BOB protection, and Shotgun, totally different then Mouse. I can see your point though and similarities can be seen with the Colts and Pats with the shoot. I would love to see it in the SEC.
True, Tiger Ellison, and Mouse Davis truely revolutionized the game with extensive 4 WR sets and no TEs, and you even see teams extensively using choice. But I don't see many teams running switch, slide, go, choice, and streak and especially not TT. I don't see the half-roll protection either. If I were to really classify the RNS teams though, I'd say Hawaii, Portland State, and SMU are the only true shoot teams, and that is thanks to Bob Davie and the Houston Oilers. GA Tech throws in some shoot principles. June Jones has sorta evolved though, he runs the heck outta levels, and has threw in some WCO stuff, he is also extensively BOB protection, and Shotgun, totally different then Mouse. I can see your point though and similarities can be seen with the Colts and Pats with the shoot. I would love to see it in the SEC.
Yes, Texas Tech is pretty much a modern take on what Brigham Young ran with McMahon, Bosco and Detmer back in their days of 46-45 and 52-52 games.
You're right about the blocking and splits. Leach spread out his linemen more than just about any other team I can think of.
And I hate the generic term "spread" as much as anybody. The first time I heard the term used was in the late 1980s when Hawaii ran a spread-option offense and had a lot of success with it. But their version (which they just called a "spread") almost always had the quarterback under center, not in a shotgun.
Urban Meyer was an assistant at Colorado State, one of Hawaii's conference rivals, during the time Hawaii ran that offense. I've always wondered if that is where he got the idea.