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Can Mountain Football improve by modernizing offense?
Alright, I have tried to keep from saying this and let you all figure it out for yourselves. Offensive football is about using your sets to exploit a weakness in the defense. Whether by ground or by air your set dictates what you are able to do and where you want to attack. Different sets create different challenges and what you have the capability of doing out of that set determines how well that set will work for you. You talk about the wishbone or Highlands gun set. Everyone assumes that the bone is so predictable, well so are gun sets.

Football1, you are trying hard to say that everyone just needs to spread to win. But you need to read your own words. You said, "That is what great leaders do - they position their team to win by employing strategy that protects weaknesses and advances strength." If my QB is a weak link in my attack but I have 2 1,000 yard rushers in my backfield then I am not going to let my QB get me beat. Not to say he never gets to throw, but any pass he does throw will be safe and very calculated.

There is no rule that says you have to throw to win, or a rule that says you have to run to win. Championships have been won both ways. The key is to do what you do best.

Would Johnson Central have the same record over the last 4 years if they were a primarily shotgun team? Would Highlands have the same record if they were primarily a wishbone team?
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Can Mountain Football improve by modernizing offense? - by bob green - 11-26-2011, 01:33 AM

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