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Thoughts?
Link<h1 class="storyhdl">Spread the word: Defenses evolving to take away option</h1><font face="Arial, Helvetica" size="2">
What was once an offensive revolution is now slowly and assuredly falling prey to evolution. The formation that has largely been responsible for every major NCAA offensive record set this decade is on the clock. It's time is limited. The modern gurus of the spread -- Mike Leach, Urban Meyer, etc. -- might not admit it but defenses and their coordinators do not stand still.
</font> <font face="Arial, Helvetica" size="2">Mississippi State coach Sylvester Croom: "The defenses will catch up to all that. In your defensive front, the only big guys are your two interior guys. Once you get past those two defensive tackles, it's all about speed and even they have to be able to run."
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<font face="Arial, Helvetica" size="2">The spread will die because all offenses have their day: Remember the wishbone? It was de rigueur in the late 1960s and 1970s. Then d-coordinators started developing quicker, lighter defensive ends who could get to the perimeter quicker than the quarterback. That eliminated one of the three triple options, making it easier for defenses to break the bone.</font></p>
<font face="Arial, Helvetica" size="2">"The defenses will catch up to all that," Croom said of today's spread. "It's just like the wishbone. It's just like a passing wishbone. It all starts, like everything else, with the quarterback. The quarterback is most difficult person to account for."</font></p>
Thoughts?