We don't hang with Michigan State and Minnesota without the threat of the big play. Without putting it on film they won't game plan for it, and then the dink and dunk passing and the running game will be much tougher to execute. Bill Walsh says the big play is paramount in this style of offense. It is one of the founding beliefs.
Can we do it? Nobody knows right now as we haven't shown it, but to say you don't need it to be successful long term shows a lack of understanding of the principles of offensive football and specifically a pro style offense.
Bill Walsh said that?
Walsh was the guru of the dink and dunk. The West Coast Offense was all about using high percentage short and mid-range passes to replace reliance on both the running game and the deep ball. Joe Montana wasn't considered a strong-arm quarterback, so it fit his skills perfectly. The 49ers of Jerry Rice, John Taylor and Roger Craig became famous for running up the YAC - Yards After Catch. That meant screens and short crossing patterns that got them the ball -- in stride -- in the open field. So plays that were designed for 8 - 15 yards always had a chance to become game-breakers. When I saw the plays designed for Brandon Reiley on Saturday, I actually flashed on the old 49ers.
More to the point, you use all your offensive weapons in multiple dink-and-dunk ways to keep the defense off-balance, and throw the periodic bomb to loosen up the secondary. This seems to be what we're doing right now. I don't think there's any question that we'll have more trouble with the Michigan State and Minnesotas than we did So. Alabama, but I think we've already established that Armstrong and his extremely deep stable of competent receivers are a threat to go long. I can't imagine any DC not planning for it just because we didn't complete a long bomb in our first two games.