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    MATT MILLER/THE WORLD-HERALD


    Nebraska guard Ricky Henry said he was “drooling at the mouth” for the Huskers to be more physical on offense. “Pretty much all of us were,” Henry said.




    FOOTBALL

    Sherman: Short gains for offense, but long-term success?

    LINCOLN — Say this about the progress of the beleaguered Nebraska offense: The Huskers, in a turnabout from this time last month, no longer need an offensive identity.

    In fact, they've got two.

    Short term, this part-power, part-finesse formula gives NU its best opportunity to win 10 games this season — a phenomenal accomplishment considering the turmoil of October. It may also pose problems for the opposition, puzzled by how to defend these Huskers, who switch often between power sets and the finesse alignments of the spread and West Coast.

    Long term, though, it's not the answer.

    The Huskers need a stable system. The two-headed offense puts too much stress on NU coaches to identify players with a diverse set of skills. While the multi-system approach may work for six games as a stopgap, future offensive success for Nebraska demands the Huskers pick one.

    Two tight ends and a fullback? Or four wide receivers and a pro-style quarterback?

    “The big thing is that the style of play is very different,” tight ends coach Ron Brown said. “The mentality is very different.”

    To change midstream, Brown said, the Huskers had to “transition players' minds.”

    “But that's what good coaches do,” said Brown, who was instrumental in helping the Huskers introduce the power mindset after losses last month to Texas Tech and Iowa State. “You find a way.”

    The Huskers found a way, all right, winning the Big 12 North with victories against Baylor, Oklahoma, Kansas and Kansas State in which NU threw 75 passes in 243 offensive plays. That's a 70-30 split in favor of running calls.

    Coach Bo Pelini again on Monday praised the Huskers' run-pass balance.

    Brown, who coached the Nebraska receivers during the school's glory days of power football, talked last week as if he'd been reunited with a lost love.

    “You're beating people up,” Brown said. “You're getting to the next level. It's like a swarm moving down. People are getting chopped and knocked down on the back side. That's the style of play that it is.”

    Then late in games, Brown said, defenders walk slowly back to their positions and run without any bounce. Soon, safeties can't recover in time to defend the play-action pass.

    “It's just about convincing our players, not only the upfront guys, but the wide receivers that they've got to do heavy-duty, physical damage,” Brown said. “At some point, that's going to turn into some big plays for you.”

    It has for Nebraska. Five completions of 35 yards or longer in the past two victories came via the play action.

    Put Brown in a room of Nebraska fans — he'll speak this morning at the Big Red Breakfast in Omaha — and the veteran coach will whip them into a frenzy with his talk about the power game.

    And many of the Huskers are right there with Brown.

    Guard Ricky Henry said he was “drooling at the mouth” to get physical when Nebraska struggled last month to operate the zone-read running game and finesse-oriented, lateral pass plays.

    “Pretty much all of us were,” he said.

    And now?

    “I think we've definitely got a new mojo on the offensive side of the ball,” Henry said.

    So what does Shawn Watson think?

    Well, Watson said he likes the Huskers' progress and production out of the power sets.

    “There's no secret to what we're trying to do,” said Watson, the third-year offensive coordinator. “I think the kids have embraced that. They've taken pride in the physical aspect of it.”

    These past few physical games, Watson said Monday, will help allow Nebraska to “get back to the kind of football that we'd like to envision ourselves being.”

    What does he envision?

    “It would be a team like we were last year,” Watson said. “But we're going to have to grow into that at quarterback. To be honest with you, we're going to have to grow into that at receiver.”

    Basically, Watson indicated, he wants to shelve some of the power approach.

    “I think there's elements of it that we want to keep,” he said.

    In particular, he likes the big sets to bolster the run game in the red zone.

    This debate figures to rage through the offseason alongside a sure-to-be-heated quarterback discussion.

    The Huskers don't appear close to settling on the future style of their offense. From the outside looking in, a philosophical divide appears to persist.

    More important than even the system, though, remains one simple truth about the power vs. finesse talk: Nebraska cannot prosper at both.

    Contact the writer:

    402-444-1031, mitch.sherman@owh.com




    Copyright ©2010 Omaha World-Herald®. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, displayed or redistributed for any purpose without permission from the Omaha World-Herald.

    12 Comments

    Posted by: grf67 on 11/25/09 @ 4:14 am:

    If identifying and teaching our players to be exceptional in both systems is too hard for the coaches, then we need to get better coaches. Our players can do whatever is taught and asked of them. Physical football players can also play the finesse game, but finesse players will never make the mental adjustment to smash mouth football.

    Posted by: Sonoran on 11/25/09 @ 6:00 am:

    Watson just doesn't get it. He loses with his wimp game against wimp teams and wins with the power-option-finese (yes the oz bone had some finese to it too). He just cant wait to go back to what does not work game in and game out just so he can say "I told you so" when he scores 70 points on K State every 5 years

    Posted by: SONORAN on 11/25/09 @ 6:10 am:

    Watson's so called great offense started declining last year, remember the final games where he couldn't score to finish games? Now he wants to go back to that?
    He gets the ball first and goal on the 5 and goes backwards becuase of sacks and other cutesy stuff.
    Then in duress, his QB throws an interception to end the drive with zero to show for it.
    Nothing worse for a team than to march all the way down the fiel only to get nothing out of it.
    He has no clue on the philosophy of the game or how to smash your opponent into dust
    He is a canser and needs to go before he sprerads to other coaches
    God bless Ron Brown, TO, BP, CP and Turner Gill

    Posted by: Christian S on 11/25/09 @ 6:20 am:

    Really enjoyed the article. I remember being around the Navy team in 2001 when it was using 4- and 5-wide receiver sets on some plays and power option on others. It sounded like a great idea. Yet it's far, far too much to ask a team to be competent at two such diverse schemes. That year, Navy went 0-10.

    Posted by: Gary on 11/25/09 @ 9:41 am:

    I'm an NU fan in Texas and if the run is the primary approach against Texas , it will be a long afternoon. We must have a strong pass oriented approach to beat Texas. And I don't mean passes in the flats. We must stretch the field some to be effective. It appears our receives hava hard time getting open and Lee's passe are not timely.
    Go NU
    Gary

    Posted by: Chris Phillips on 11/25/09 @ 10:56 am:

    I think what all of this has shown us is that it's easier to win with an offense that doesn't have as much experience when our offense is more of a power running style vs. spread. I vote to completely return to the power running and option offense. We would be competing with just a couple of teams (i.e. Georgia Tech) for athletes that don't fit the model for 90% of college football, so we could have excellent athletes in a system that obviously still works (see Georgia Tech), and we can bring back a unique identity to Husker football. Although we've been winning, I don't really like having to switch offensive gears in the middle of every season. Let's find one and stick with it. GBR!!!

    Posted by: Harry on 11/25/09 @ 3:30 pm:

    I watched the Kansas State game last Saturday and was struck by the unhappy faces of Mr and Mrs Bob Lee. It seems that even after a successful play by their son they showed absolutely no emotion. They were shown on the screen several times and showed no signs of cheering or happiness. Also shown was the family of Ndy Suh's family. They were happy and cheering. I know that Zac gets a lot of chriticism for his slow thinking and slow operation of the offense. I'm sure the Lee's see Zac as the perfect quarterback that occasionally messes up but is so often criticised unfairly. We see Zac as a talented quarterback that can't close the deal because he just is too slow to execute. He can't make an automatic decision. He seems as though he has to think twice about everything before he can act. He will get better as time goes on. I think he lacks natural instinct but experience will eventually give him the confidence he needs to be a great quarterback.

    Posted by: carrera_turbo on 11/25/09 @ 5:10 pm:

    Seems to me that Watson has had his time and been allowed adequate time to prove himself to Bo. Time to move on and bring back smash-mouth football to Nebraska.

    Posted by: Sonoran on 11/26/09 @ 7:51 am:

    Look at how many different defensive players have started or played (AND DID GREAT) in games this year compared to how few offensive players.

    Ol Watts thinks the power-option game is a waste of time and can't wait to show you the light with the WCO even though he lost 3 games with it this year and more games will be lost with it next year.

    He probably doesn't want the other QB's minds polluted with an offense that works, thats why they don't play. We would have been a very dominant team this year with a good power I & option offense.

    Posted by: Sonoran on 11/26/09 @ 8:08 am:

    Another angle: At first I was excited and open minded about Callahan and the WCO and all the talk about being able to get better atheletes than FS could. But I found out, I JUST DON'T ENJOY WATCHING THE WCO. I'm sorry, its just not exciting, its boring. Its stressfull to watch drive after drive get stuffed. The WCO is one dimensionable and too easy to stop with a good D.

    On the other hand, watching 11 players execute the perfect option play to the short side of the field, or the fullback squirt thru the line for 30 when the other team's D has taken away the outside, or lining up in a running formation and passing, or the 2 minute drill for a TD or the 23 yd TD pass to the tight end after 11 running plays in a row in a drive that started on the 7, now that is a work of art.

    Posted by: 1911 on 11/26/09 @ 11:33 pm:

    Yep, all it takes is home-bred Nebraska kids from towns playing 8-man and willing to run through brick walls. To heck with recruiting the best talent from all across the nation! More legacy scholarships to Nebraska kids without a sniff of interest from other top notch schools. Jake Cotton, with offers from NW MO State and UNO, gets a Husker scholarship when his dad can well afford the tuition. But hey, he's an instate kid and will return NU to the glory days of power football, right? To heck with Watson and his fancy-schmancy passing ideas.

    Posted by: Dave on 11/27/09 @ 9:45 am:

    @Chris Phillips The problem with that is most of the top notch skill position players want to go to the league. We could go after 100% of the kids now, but we are too busy offering token scholarships to make people feel good. I thought that is what the walk on program was supposed to be for. We are handcuffing our entire team by not going after the top talent early. Also, in defense of Watson (who isnt without fault here), its very hard to run an offense when your line cant block consistantly, and when they do, they get flagged. The dink and dunk is what we are left with. Linemen only have to block for a few seconds.

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