And now he is coach at UCF...The boo birds came out during the Central Florida game in 1997. Pretty sure he got pulled for a series or 2 in the first half and London came in but Frost went back in after.
Played basketball against him at the rec...he was better than meHow many of you were contemporaries with Frost in 1995-1997? Seems like a lot of opinions are based off of message board gossip rather than actually being there in those days.
Not sure what this is in response to.How many of you were contemporaries with Frost in 1995-1997? Seems like a lot of opinions are based off of message board gossip rather than actually being there in those days.
I was at NU from fall of 94 thru spring of 98. I saw every home game that Frost played in person. My opinions of his on field play were from my own two eyes.How many of you were contemporaries with Frost in 1995-1997? Seems like a lot of opinions are based off of message board gossip rather than actually being there in those days.
Another thing about the Akron and Central Florida games was that Osborne played those games pretty vanilla on offense. He was saving the designed QB traps and other designed runs for Frost until the Washington game.I remembered wrong. I remember the booing and my teenaged self was excited to see London. I even remember the UCF game, just not that it was the same game. But I believe y'all now.
He didn't pee himself, he actually puked on the field. It was an afternoon game that was on August 30th, and it was so dang hot during that game.Speaking of Akron, I remember hearing on the radio during the Akron game that one of the Akron players peed himself on the field and they had to take a time out to clean it up.
Don't you get it!!! It was just option left, option right, and run the ball up the middle.Tom Osborne's shotgun spread plays he ran for Scott Frost and even his single back under center formations are the basis for today's spread offense. If he would have coached another few years, he would have developed something like the run-spread option that Oregon made famous. It just would have been 10 years earlier than they did it. Combine that with the Blackshirts and we could have seen a run of dominance like never seen in CFB.
He was an offensive genius that had so many formations it was nearly impossible to prepare for when the talent was equal. When he had better talent, forget about it.