Good writeup by Keeler on Luke Shiflett:
https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/ ... 101913001/
This is not a dense evaluation on my part, but I think while Wilson and Wynn got a lot of the headlines against Wofford, you really could see the immediate impact Shiflett had on the game in his first extensive time playing at WR. As you watch the Wofford game, he played a ton.
Couple of musings:
1. Shiflett is a big kid (6'2 200+) and is not only a threat in the passing game, but is a sizable run blocker on the outside who is going to outmuscle a lot of defensive backs. Furman used him well in this capacity.
Looking back, Shiflett gives Furman a bit more flexibility in running the ball out of 3 WR sets, something you haven't seen us do a whole lot of under Hendrix. Example:
This formation shows up a few times against Wofford and frequently with great success. Furman shows trips to one side of the field with Deluca (split), Shiflett (slot), and TE (flex). Harris lines up split to the other side. Single running back.
I'm not sure of the exact play call, but I think Furman is putting Wofford in a tight spot here. Off the snap, the TE (Miller) is going to run a bubble screen while Deluca and Shiflett block. Wofford has to deal with the fact that Furman has a lot of size and speed in a trips formation, and they send their safety out there to help deal with it. Presnap, Wilson is probably just "counting hats" - Furman isn't blocking the backside DE/OLB, so there are 5 defenders in the box and 5 men to block them. So, he hands it to Wynn.
I suspect that if Wofford
doesn't pull the safety outside the tackle box to deal with the trips formation, that Wilson would fake the run action and throw it to Miller. At that point, Furman would have the numbers advantage outside. This is one of those plays where the personnel can make Wofford "wrong" whatever they decide to do.
2. Shiflett is also fast. We saw him outrun Wofford DBs on a few pass plays, but I like this play, where he doesn't even touch the ball.
Shifett runs a jet/fly motion across the formation. He did this a few times, and Furman never gave him the ball (but, of course, at some point they could).
Wofford has to respect Shiflett's ability to run the ball, his speed, and his size. Even though he's not getting the ball, the hope is usually to screw up the linebacker's read with "window dressing."
The ILB on the defensive right sees Shiflett and takes a step or two toward him off the snap. Just those quick steps in the wrong direction allows Johanning the opportunity to get on him and seal him off with a good angle. Anderson then explodes through the hole.