dwmyers
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ABQCOWBOY;4967482 said:Really? Your going to drag the conversation down to this? Tell me you even had a clue who he was prior to that post.
You know, I have a football blog, and on it I wrote about Don Faurot and the spread option..
http://codeandfootball.wordpress.com/2011/10/28/is-the-spread-option-merely-a-single-wing/
To quote:
Consider the running game, from single wing to now. The single wing excelled in power off tackle running, perhaps exemplified by the cutback. Blocking was sustained, double teams by the wingback and tackle forming a crucial part of the game. Once the Shaughnessy T was introduced, blocks weren’t nearly as enduring. Away from the play, brush back blocks were enough. Because the blocks were fast, and the play started earlier (blind hikes), the game became faster.
The single wing cutback later formed the archetype for the Green Bay sweep. But nuances introduced around this time span include area or do-dad blocking, and the whole notion of running to daylight.
The option itself dates back as far as Don Faurot and the Split T offense he developed for Missouri. With Don’s notion of keying off unblocked defenders, and getting the ball to the man the opposition can’t defend, football now had a running game that resembled a 2 on 1 fast break in basketball. This was only reinforced when the wishbone triple option, created by Emory Bellard, became a dominant offense in the late 1960s – early 1970s. Adding zone run concepts a la Alex Gibbs (check out, for example, John T Reed’s zone run entry in his dictionary) to unblocked keys leads to the zone read
Another good article is this one, by Chris Brown:
http://smartfootball.com/spread/did-the-spread-really-evolve-from-the-single-wing
Run and Shoot, IMO, is important in the development of the spread, but the zone read is a horse of a different color.
This link I've just found, seems pretty interesting. I had heard Northwestern was in on the beginning of the spread, and in Chris Brown's opin, this was the "shot heard round the world", so far as the spread was concerned.
http://smartfootball.com/spread/the-legacy-of-the-most-important-game-in-spread-offense-history
crucial point here is this:
The gateway for the ubiquity of the spread — by definition, a system with multiple receivers — was not by appealing to every coach’s impulse to be Mike Leach and throw it 50 times a game; believe it or not, most coaches do not want to be Mike Leach. Instead if you could show them how to run the ball for 300 yards and score 54 points against an historically great rushing defense, that is something people will sign up for.
D-
