Looks like random blue dots in a white square to me. |
How long has this been going on?
Hurry Up, No Huddle Offenses did not just appear last year. In 1997, Gus Malzahn was the head coach at Shiloh Christian in Arkansas when he decided to run his offense at a 2-minute drill pace for the entire game."We started running two- and three-play drives at the first of games the year before," Malzahn said. "We'd get great momentum, and then we have to go back to huddling and we'd lose it. So we decided in 1997 that summer to revamp everything and see what happens."Malzahn was hired as the offensive coordinator at Arkansas for the 2006 season after running his offense at the high school level for nearly a decade. He then held the same position at Tulsa and Auburn, where he continued to use pace as a weapon against defenses.
Chip Kelly became the offensive coordinator at Oregon in 2007, bringing his fast paced offense from the University of New Hampshire. Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, West Virginia, Baylor, Texas A&M, Ole Miss, and Clemson (not to mention several non-BCS schools like Houston and Marshall) are examples of teams that have run their offenses at a hurried pace within the past few years.