Guy Chamberlin
Active member
The best teams in college football have both good offenses and good defenses.I think the WCO has more upside when it can be run properly. I think limitations at the college level prevent that.I do find it amusing when people attack me on the issue of me not understanding the offenses.
There are plenty of examples, but statements like the one below make hard to believe you understand the game of football at all.
Matt Ryan is considered by many to be a great QB, even elite. Did anyone else see throw he make directly to Lavonte David with less than 2 min to play?
These WCO/pro style passing systems are tough, even for the professionals.
Why do you think most dynamic offenses at the college level have moved away from WCO principles?
Those good offenses run the ball well and pass the ball well, and don't have to rely on a single facet or "one thing they do well" when the opposing defense makes adjustments.
These good offenses will run more if you let them. With less parity in college, a dominant offensive line lets you run the ball more than in the NFL.
Against better defenses, a good college offense will pass a bit more. But they will lower the risk of the passing game with a high percentage short game that spreads the field with RB screens, sideline curls, and quick crossing patterns to the tight end. Every now and then they test the tightening defense with a deep throw. If they get a defense on its heels in the fourth quarter, the between the tackles running game can bust open, too.
40 years ago, a good college quarterback completed 50% of his passes and lived with a 50/50 TD/INT ratio. Today good college quarterbacks regularly complete 65% of their passes and interceptions are way down. It's the same pattern throughout the NFL. And high school football, too. High percentage, ball control offense. What's not to love?
That IS the legacy of WCO principles. It's very much alive. Even with teams that run the ball. You just have to understand the game of football. If you see a team indiscriminately flinging deep passes, they aren't playing WCO.
Saying Matt Ryan threw an interception thus proving that passing is scary is among the stupidest things ever written on this board.