AstroDin wrote: ↑Sun Aug 12, 2018 8:44 pm
I'm excited to see what a Quarles offense will look like… maybe Bear can elaborate more on what he was doing at Maryville.
Winning...OFTEN
I really don’t have any idea what his offenses looked like at Maryville, but I’ll share this anecdote, that may be of interest and, at least, somewhat elucidating...
A little over 10 years ago, I attended a Coaching Clinic and saw that Coach Quarles was speaking. I don’t remember the exact title of his session but I know it contained the phrase,
“5 Wides.” So, I had to attend in order to see how far this Child of All that is Pure, Good & Right about Football had fallen in league with Satan’s Game.
After protecting myself with a garlic bagel, putting several silver cross(bars) around my neck, and grabbing a ‘stake’ biscuit to-go, I entered the darkened hotel ballroom just after the presentation had begun, positioning myself by the bank of light switches, prepared to flip them all on in an instant and flood the room with artificial sunlight, if necessary. Well, to my great pleasure, I watched as Coach Quarles flashed video after video of his Maryville Teams, using his cowboy clicker to describe, in great detail, what was, essentially, the same Offense we ran at Furman in the 80’s...but he was running out of “5 wides” instead of The I-Formation.
So...I’m assuming he didn’t change things too much since that time. I would expect he was EXTREMELY creative with formations & motions, ensuring his opponents could not ‘stack the box,’ were forced to defend the field from sideline to sideline, and had to remain ever-alert to defending it vertically. Then, I would bet he focused on using these spread formations & motions to execute ‘tried-and-true’ running schemes, including an option attack with a reasonably athletic QB, getting key blocking at the Point of Attack, both from Backs/WR’s & athletic OLmen able to block LB’s & DB’s ‘in space.’
Ancillary anecdote: One year, at the HS where I had been Coaching as a “Community Coach” (but had to, that year, due to a job change, ‘re-classify’ as a ‘Consultant’), which had always, very successfully, run a VERY traditional I-Based Power running game, found ourselves without a true FB and no real TE’s on the roster. But, we did have 7 or 8 Players who were either good WR’s/OK RB’s or good RB’s/OK WR’s. So, using the handouts that I had retained from Coach Quarles’ session that I had attended 3 years prior, as a template, the OC & I created what we called “The Baller Offense,” using those “hybrids” as interchangeable “ballers” in a variety of (mostly) spread formations, but getting them, through complex shifts & motions, back to where we were, for the most part, running our ‘traditional’ Offense with only a few changes to the O-Line schemes to account for no FB & no TE. I believe (not 100% sure - I was only a ‘Consultant,’ remember) the brand new HC there nixed installing our “Baller-O” though and stayed with what had ‘always worked.’ They went 0-10 that year. That Head Coach, who is a great guy, BTW, is now, I believe, out of Coaching. That OC, succeeded that HC, took them to 2 State Championship games, and then took, what is, probably, the highest paying HC gig in GA...all the while using, IMO, his adapted version of the “Baller-O.”
Back to Furman Football: So, to summarize....we might see a little more ‘spread-type’ of formations this year. We may see a bit less of some of the wing-T concepts (fake handoffs to multiple backs, misdirection, etc.), which was hard-wired into Coach Cronic’s DNA...AND for those of us old-timers, if we look REALLY closely, through all of that window dressing, we may be able to see 48 sweep, 28 base, 40 base, 26 rip, 32 veer, and some of the others on the “Oldies Hit Parade!”