Then, according to your thinking, the B12 should start to surpass (or already should have) the other conferences any year now in the number of recruits going to the NFL, whereas virtually every B12 team runs the spread. The Chiefs could be an outlier or a harbinger of things to come.
We'll see. We can revisit this thread idea again in a couple of years to see if it happened or if the B12 is still hovering near the bottom in the number of recruits, which IS the main idea of this thread.
I'm trying to adhere to that - the main idea - instead of going off on tangents and ad hominem attacks. The ones who do that have already started and will continue until this is another carnival side show.
If I'm wrong, I'm not afraid to admit it. Yet, I'm sure they'll still be those who post ad nauseum there posting with glee over it.
It's not my thinking it's fact. LSU is now a pro-spread team and the Texas team they outscored is also a pro-spread, believe it or not.
Using the spread to run the ball and then score with play-action is the preferred style in the Big 12. Oklahoma State uses it, Oklahoma leans heavily in this direction, Baylor prefers this approach, Iowa State tends to rely on this, and West Virginia will probably aim for this style.
The stereotypical SEC slug fests, the ones with the brutal array of jarring hits, barely any open field to breathe and barely any points on the scoreboard, well, they’ve taken quite a hit themselves recently.
Those 9-6 final scores so familiar with proud SEC fans are becoming a thing of the past. While some of the most ferocious defenses with some of the best pro prospects still reside in the Southeastern Conference, offense steadily has been on the uptick.
One big reason for the sudden shift, spread offenses. What can’t be debated are the staggering offensive totals of today. The numbers are the numbers. Which means those 9-6 SEC specials might become football dinosaurs sooner than you think.
Yes we're are going to see it all come back around one day. All things sports wise usually does. Maybe it won’t look the same as it did back in the ’80s, but it will come back around in some form or fashion. It's all about type athlete a team has and what fits best for your current team.
Types of offensive schemes have nothing to do with the draft. It's all about talent and will that talent best fit our needs as a team.