Outside of the Tony Franklin debacle, which we all assume was simply sabotaged from the beginning, what teams out there running the spread offense have actually failed to have relative success? Michigan is a wait-and-see for me.
Most of the spread teams I know off the top of my head have been really good.
Utah
Hawaii
T-Tech
Kansas
Missou
WV
South Florida
Florida
Oklahoma
Oregon
Tulsa
G-Tech
Purdue
Bowling Green
Cincy
USM
Sure, defenses will catch up. They always do. The West Coast is starting to lose favor even in the NFL. You can only hope Mullen does well and then has the skills to adapt when defenses adapt.
My point is, I realize some teams may run it poorly (or "just" go 6-6), but who is really failing with it? I mean like Croom failing? Michigan, ok - but give them at least another year or two. Meyer has proven the offense can win at big programs.
Seriously though, if we would be cool with consistent 7-8 win seasons and the occasional (like every 5-7 years) shot at Atlanta - what spread offenses out there are doing worse than 7 wins? This much I have figured out. Mullen knows the offense and knows it well. He gives seminars on it, even has a DVD, etc. We will be running the spread as it was meant to be run. That being said, does evidence not suggest that we are destined to succeed? All of this is off the top of my head, but I can't think of a terrible spread team. Someone help me out - but of all the teams I have listed you are talking about a +90% success rate.
Most of the spread teams I know off the top of my head have been really good.
Utah
Hawaii
T-Tech
Kansas
Missou
WV
South Florida
Florida
Oklahoma
Oregon
Tulsa
G-Tech
Purdue
Bowling Green
Cincy
USM
Sure, defenses will catch up. They always do. The West Coast is starting to lose favor even in the NFL. You can only hope Mullen does well and then has the skills to adapt when defenses adapt.
My point is, I realize some teams may run it poorly (or "just" go 6-6), but who is really failing with it? I mean like Croom failing? Michigan, ok - but give them at least another year or two. Meyer has proven the offense can win at big programs.
Seriously though, if we would be cool with consistent 7-8 win seasons and the occasional (like every 5-7 years) shot at Atlanta - what spread offenses out there are doing worse than 7 wins? This much I have figured out. Mullen knows the offense and knows it well. He gives seminars on it, even has a DVD, etc. We will be running the spread as it was meant to be run. That being said, does evidence not suggest that we are destined to succeed? All of this is off the top of my head, but I can't think of a terrible spread team. Someone help me out - but of all the teams I have listed you are talking about a +90% success rate.