[Husker] Redemption
Mike Jaixen
mikejaixen at yahoo.com
Thu Aug 14 10:03:26 CDT 2008
Not necessarily. If you are playing an old-time Big Ten type of offense, with big offensive linemen and big running backs and a limited passing game, speed might get flattened. (Think 1994 Nebraska against Kansas State, for example.) Or wore down. (Think fourth quarter against Miami in the 1995 Orange Bowl.)
Mike Jaixen
Blog: http://huskermike.blogspot.com
--- On Thu, 8/14/08, Mark Landin <marklandin at gmail.com> wrote:
> From: Mark Landin <marklandin at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [Husker] Redemption
> To: mikejaixen at yahoo.com
> Cc: husker at tssi.com
> Date: Thursday, August 14, 2008, 9:52 AM
> On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 6:57 AM, Mike Jaixen
> <mikejaixen at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > Last week's Sports Illustrated had a feature about
> the spread offense, and specifically how to stop it. While
> there is no "silver bullet", there were three
> things you need to focus on: speed, fundamentals, and being
> disruptive.
>
> Isn't that the recipe against any offensive scheme?
>
> --
> "If hard work were such a wonderful thing, you'd
> think rich people
> would have kept it all for themselves" - Lane Kirkland
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