HooahVol
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Interesting article on CBS Sports: Is college football's offensive revolution over? It certainly slowed down in 2017 - CBSSports.com
The main point of the article is since 2007 total offense has been going nuts in college football. Since then, the national scoring record was set three times, peaking last season. A lot of this is attributed to so many fast pace changes on offense. The Spread morphed into RPO which is often times no huddle. This season it all slowed down. Average total offense was down to 403.6 yards per game. That's the lowest nationally since 2011 (392.4). Average touchdowns per team declined to 3.65, the lowest since a 2011 average of 3.59. Several coaching sources said defenses are beginning to catch up. More teams are recruiting more versatile secondary players. Today's defensive backs have to be big enough to stop the run, physical enough to tackle in space and fast enough to track receivers. Not surprisingly, three of the top 10 and four of the top 14 prospects in the a recent CBS Sports mock draft are defensive backs.
What say you? Do you think DC's have finally figured out how to stop RPO? It does seem like I saw less hurry up this season. Are we about to enter a stretch where defense is king?
The main point of the article is since 2007 total offense has been going nuts in college football. Since then, the national scoring record was set three times, peaking last season. A lot of this is attributed to so many fast pace changes on offense. The Spread morphed into RPO which is often times no huddle. This season it all slowed down. Average total offense was down to 403.6 yards per game. That's the lowest nationally since 2011 (392.4). Average touchdowns per team declined to 3.65, the lowest since a 2011 average of 3.59. Several coaching sources said defenses are beginning to catch up. More teams are recruiting more versatile secondary players. Today's defensive backs have to be big enough to stop the run, physical enough to tackle in space and fast enough to track receivers. Not surprisingly, three of the top 10 and four of the top 14 prospects in the a recent CBS Sports mock draft are defensive backs.
What say you? Do you think DC's have finally figured out how to stop RPO? It does seem like I saw less hurry up this season. Are we about to enter a stretch where defense is king?