cheekygeek
New member
Much has been said about Scott Frost picking up offensive concepts from Bill Walsh (Stanford), Tom Osborne (some school on the Plains), and Chip Kelly (Oregon) and I believe that all of that is true. Playing QB made him look at all of those things from a play calling/scheme perspective. But honestly, the thing that I think makes Scott Frost an extraordinary football mind is the fact that he played safety in the NFL (which he then translated to successful defensive coaching work at Northern Iowa).
So many times a coach is thought of as being an "offensive mind" or a "defensive mind" but I believe that Frost is both. I think it is no coincidence that his offense is famous for "taking safeties out of the game" or "frustrating safeties".
Not to take anything away from Frost's offensive and defensive coordinators, but I don't feel like we will be losing our offensive (or defensive) scheme if our OC or DC gets poached to be a head coach somewhere in the future. I feel like Scott can plug in a capable coach and teach them HIS philosophy (and maybe learn something new from that guy's ideas, too).
Frost's offensive mind gets a ton of credit, but I think his days playing "defensive QB" were incredibly valuable in turning him into the coach he is today. The fact that a college QB could get drafted and play in the NFL on the other side of the ball also gives him a lot of "freeness of speech" in telling recruits (or members of the team) to trust him if he feels that their athleticism or body type fits at a different position than the one they played in High School.
So many times a coach is thought of as being an "offensive mind" or a "defensive mind" but I believe that Frost is both. I think it is no coincidence that his offense is famous for "taking safeties out of the game" or "frustrating safeties".
Not to take anything away from Frost's offensive and defensive coordinators, but I don't feel like we will be losing our offensive (or defensive) scheme if our OC or DC gets poached to be a head coach somewhere in the future. I feel like Scott can plug in a capable coach and teach them HIS philosophy (and maybe learn something new from that guy's ideas, too).
Frost's offensive mind gets a ton of credit, but I think his days playing "defensive QB" were incredibly valuable in turning him into the coach he is today. The fact that a college QB could get drafted and play in the NFL on the other side of the ball also gives him a lot of "freeness of speech" in telling recruits (or members of the team) to trust him if he feels that their athleticism or body type fits at a different position than the one they played in High School.