wildcat Stories - Mile High Report
Practice Report From The Asset
Sorry for the belated practice report but I just got home from Milwaukee, which is Algonquin for "The Good Land." Algonquins must have been drunks in my opinion (no racist), because everyone in that goddamn city drinks like a fish. But I regress, and so does my liver. On to Texas Football via...
Reliving the Wishbone: Now and Then
I'm still curious about what else HarsinWhite 2011 has in mind for our Wildcat packages this season. The Jesus was dead on about having 2 different operators for those schemes (Shipley and Fozzy so far) and the scrimmage videos at MackBrown-texasfootball suggest that the zone-read is being utilized...
The Harsin Offense: Making Complexity a Single-edged Sword
We've heard a lot in the practice reports about how Harsin's strategies include installing a large variety of formations and looks that put too much on tape for opposing coordinators to be able to prepare for in a game week. Belichick uses this practice at New England on a regular basis and loves...
OMG Iowa's Totally Running the Wildcat
Ken O'Keefe, you sneaky bastard. Finally, after years of deranged visionary Iowa fans deriding the offensive playcalls for being "too vanilla" and crying out for an offense that displayed outside-the-box thinking along the lines of "snapping the ball to the running back," their pleas have been...
Jets Flight Connections 120809
The New York Jets got a little help from the Packers last night. Rex Ryan was not rooting for his former team. Meanwhile, Mark Sanchez did not practice yesterday. Somebody else was wearing his jersey on the field. The Head Coach on the QB's situation, from NorthJersey.com: I know he expects to...
Snap Shots: The Monroe Series
The Big Picture Pretty much everyone in Longhorn Nation lambasted the coaching staff for the running performance put on against Colorado. It was terrible. During the week leading up to the Oklahoma game, Mack Brown apparently had to bite his tongue to keep from informing the big mean media that he...
MHR University - Smash-Mouth Systems at the NFL Level
In the earliest days of football, football was not a passing game. The passes that were made were closer to rugby passes (two handed, lateral, underhanded throws with some spiral). The game was also brutal, and dictated much more by toughness and strength than finesse or speed. Flash forward...










