Every once in awhile I’m asked what my favorite offense is.
My license plates read “WC OFNSE”, so that could be a clue but in reality, the
answer is simple: the one that works for that team, that season.
I’ve worked for 11 different offensive coordinators, and
have been one myself five different seasons. In that time, as a coordinator
I’ve employed the following offenses: Wishbone, Power I, West Coast, Shotgun
Spread and Fly.
I’ve got to say that right now, if the personnel is right, I
really like the possibilities with the shotgun spread. You can do almost any
variant you want out of it – you can have a varied passing game, you can run
option, you can run any type of perimeter run game and you can have a
power-based run game.
The key is recognizing and adjusting to what your players
can do. Let me invoke one of Homer Smith’s quotes, which has stuck with me for
years: “It’s not what you know, it’s
what your players know.”
My first venture into the world of coordinating was with a
men’s semi-pro team. I’d just finished a five-year stint at Fountain Valley
High, under the watchful eyes of Hank Cochrane, who continues to be one of my
heroes, although he would slap me silly for saying that. I figured that these
players were grown-ass men and could handle a “high school” offense. Boy was I
wrong…. At FVHS, we used four different pass protection concepts, with two
variants in two of them, for a total of six protections. I simplified that down
to one for these guys, and they still couldn’t comprehend it (a half slide
protection). In Week One, we gave up eight sacks. I’d gone entire seasons at FV
without giving up eight sacks! In Week Two, we beat up on a horribly
overmatched team. Then we had a bye week, and our QB disappeared – just left.
No one knew where he was. Anyway, the combination of an offensive line that
apparently had very little experience in pass pro and having to break in a new
QB pretty much eliminated a standard drop-back passing game.
So – what to do in a bye week? I had a speedy receiver that
had played QB in Jenks, Oklahoma. He’d had experience in running the Wishbone.
So I talked with him, found out what he was comfortable with, then set about
figuring out ways to get the OL on the same page. Long story short, out of an
eight team league, we ended up being the #2 scoring offense.
The following year, same team, completely different
personnel. That was the Power I team. I
had a tailback that played at Alabama, and a huge offensive line. My QB had a
little mobility and a strong arm for play action passes. At the end of the
year, we were again the #2 scoring team, and beat the #1 team 35-14.
Each year of my coaching career, my outlook and preferences
have changed. I’d evolved into a shotgun spread guy ever since about 2010. Last
year, I went into the season thinking that was what we were going to run.
However, when a combination of inexperienced receivers and quarterbacks raised
its head, we were forced to adjust once again. This time, looking at our OL
(extremely mobile, but a bit undersized) and our running backs (nice blend of
speed and power) and what the receivers could do (they could block their asses
off!) we settled on running the Fly offense, out of shotgun. I visited with
Mark McElroy from Saddleback College (and who coincidentally followed me at my
first coaching gig, at San Clemente High) and got his concepts down for the run
game. We kept as much of our current terminology as possible, including the
entire passing game, to keep the transition down. So then, all it became was a
different play call mix, not a whole new offense.
The results were mixed – we averaged right around 40 points
a game on offense, but we went 9-2, which was our worst finish in a couple of
years. My feeling is that we were too dependent on the outside run game, and
when we weren’t physically able to block defenders at the point of attack, we
suffered. So if it was scheme or ability, either way we didn’t get the results
we wanted.
This season, we have an experienced QB coming back. My
vision would be to keep what we ran last year, but instead of running the Fly
motion 80% of the time, run it about 25% of the time, and then re-incorporate
the rest of the shotgun spread run and pass game we had before. But again, as a
coaching staff we have to look at what we can and can’t do, and be willing to
adjust from there.
In closing, as a coordinator you can’t be so tied to your
preferred plays or system that you lose sight of the fact that it is still
about the team’s success. Remember, it’s not what you know, but what your
players know.
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