Updated throughout the day with quick takes from staff.
by Jason Kirk • Jan 5, 2012 12:26 PM EST
Rich Rodriguez invented much of modern college football while watching a practice accident at minuscule Glenville State College, where his goal for the season was to earn a single first down. Mike Leach and Hal Mumme scratched out the Air Raid offense on coffee shop napkins while trying to find enough "warm bodies" for Iowa Wesleyan to take the field. Auburn's national championship offense? Formulated on high school fields by Gus Malzahn.
And Wednesday night, we learned from West Virginia Mountaineers coach Dana Holgorsen that the next big thing came from another school nobody had ever heard of: an engineer factory named Colorado School of Mines.
Bruce Feldman has the essential story on Bob Stitt, the Orediggers coach who showed Holgorsen that handoff-free jet sweep Tavon Austin tortured the Clemson Tigers with for four touchdowns. Here's a glimpse, in case you've forgotten:
The genius of the play is that there's no need for the quarterback to perfectly time contact with the runner. Nobody has to slow down, meaning Austin's actually cranking at full Austin speed even before he gets the ball. It also means a fumbled delivery counts as a mere incomplete pass, so nothing can go all that wrong. It sets up endless fake opportunities, which WVU has taken advantage of.
(Quarterbacks like it too. Geno Smith noted a good portion of his MVP-winning 401 yards came on one-yard taps to Austin.)
Jon Gruden, a NFL man who clearly likes being surprised by college offenses, described it as something like a volleyball bump. College plays like this continue to bubble up from small-school laboratories, where coaches like Rodriguez and Stitt have the time to halt the entire program just to tell their quarterbacks to do something they've never done before.
Expect it to show up on a NFL field in like nine years and be credited to West Virginia, but it was a joy both to watch the play worked perfectly and to see Holgorsen so happy to nerd out about its virtues while shouting out its creator.
4 comments
Jason Kirk:
Dana Holgorsen, Colorado School Of Mines, And The Play That Broke The Orange Bowl
The 5 biggest sports stories, hand-picked for your inbox. Show more info?
We’ve developed a unique newsletter that delivers the five most interesting sports stories fans are talking about, direct to your email three times a week. Each email is curated by an SB Nation editor who follows sports the way you do: as a fan. One email three times a week, with stories worth your time.
You can unsubscribe at anytime, and we'll never use your address for evil. Not interested? Make this bar go away forever. You can always sign up later.







Comments
Yeah right be credited to WVU
When this play shows up in the NFL it will so befuddle the announcers they will question its legality. After all most NFL coaches are contractually obligated to only innovate by coming up with new systems which are really just the same plays as everybody else in the NFL with different names.
by Tractorr on Jan 5, 2012 1:12 PM EST reply actions
Well, after a couple weeks, they did eventually figure out that the Wildcat came by way of Arkansas.
I am proud to be a Kennesaw State Fighting Owl. -- Vince Dooley
Follow @JasonKirkSBN
by Jason Kirk on Jan 5, 2012 1:56 PM EST up reply actions
NFL is the best of the best
NFL defensive coaches have more time than college coaches to focus on defensive schemes. They have no duties like recruiting, making sure their players are in line, etc. 100% football.
That’s why Tim Tebow has been shut down in Denver the past 3 weeks. That’s why the Wildcat lasted a season and then defenses adjusted. It’s also why Michael Vick isn’t lighting it up every game anymore.
The best of the best.
by jeremyb91 on Jan 5, 2012 9:12 PM EST up reply actions
The boring of the boring
by J0SER on Jan 5, 2012 9:52 PM EST up reply actions
Comments For This Post Are Closed