Why We
Run The Wing-T
By Bryan L. Schaumloffel
Mc Gann - Mercy High School, Riverhead, New York
I very often get asked the
question, "Coach why run the Wing-T? Why not something
else?" I have also seen the comment on the Internet on one
of those message boards, "Teach what they play." This
is meant to say that Wing-T coaches are doing their players a
disservice by not running a pro style offense. Opponents would
say we are not preparing players for the offenses that are
running in college. This statement alone is an entirely different
article, But I think that it is an excellent question to ask.
With all the offenses being used in football today, why not use
one of them. I feel very strongly about the Wing-T. A lot coaches
will tell you that the Wing-T an outdated system. In fact while I
was coaching an all-star game this past season one of the players
asked me why we run the Wing-T he asked, "Coach isn't the
Wing-T dead?" I asked him what he meant and told me that his
coaches had told the team that the Wing-T was dead system that
coaches have figured out how to stop it. I was a little taken
back by this statement about my beloved Wing-T. When I got home I
asked myself the question, "Is the Wing-T dead?" After
thinking about it for awhile I came up with the conclusion that
the Wing-T is anything but dead. The Wing-T has changed a great
deal from the original offense designed by Dave Nelson at the
University of Maine. The University of Delaware developed their
version of the Wing-T system by taking Nelson's system and
adapting it over the years to change with defensive trends. The
University of Delaware's Wing-T today is a far cry from the days
of the 1950's, but it still incorporates the basic Wing-T
principles developed over fifty years ago. Below are two comments
I hear a lot about the Wing-T.
1. "To the
stop the Wing-T all you have to do is stop the Buck Sweep."
Many Wing-T coaches might disagree with this statement but I feel
that the Buck Sweep is the most important play in the Wing-T
package and if you can run it effectively you can pretty much run
what ever you what off of it. But I do not feel that if a team is
stopping the Sweep your whole offense goes in the toilet. If a
team is stopping the Sweep it is usually for two reasons. Number
one the team is superior to yours and if that is the case it does
not matter what you are running. If you can not block them they
will beat you. Number two the team probably is making an
adjustment to you wingback. If this is the case then it is
probable that the defense is making leaving themselves open to
something else. It is your job to find that weakness and exploit
it.
2. "In the
Wing-T you need three good backs to run the system, where in the
I formation all I need to do is find one good back." I feel
this comment is far from true. In the I formation I believe you
need a very good back, plus a very good offensive line to be an
effective I Formation team. Where in the Wing-T the offense
shares the ball with four ball carriers; the Quarterback,
Halfback, Wingback, and the Fullback. We do not need a super back
that we depend on 90% of the time who defensives can key on. I
feel in the Wing-T it is possible to stop one aspect of our
system but it would be very hard to stop all of them. Do not get
me wrong there is no substitute for talent, but I feel that with
the Wing-T we can utilize what we have better than any other
offense. I will get into what I mean later on in the article. I
also have heard that the Wing-T does that star back a disservice
by not getting him the ball 25-30 times a game. My response to
that is that the team's success is more important than an
individuals success. This is not to say that when we have an
excellent back we do not feature him more than the others. For
example last year we had an excellent Halfback how carried the
ball 20 times a game. Last year we where predominately a Sweep
and off tackle Wing-T team. This year we feel we have an
excellent Fullback and this year he will carry the ball 20 times
a game. That is one of the strengths of the Wing-T it is very
flexible.
Below are a list
of reason why we run the Wing-T:
1. SOUND SYSTEM-
We feel that the Wing-T is the most sound system being run in
football today. As offenses such as the Run and Shoot are slowly
being replaced, the Wing-T has with stood the test of time from
1950's when the offense was developed. The Wing-T is more then a
formation but rather a system of plays that work off each other
and set each other up. While many coaches just run plays, we run
an offensive system.
2. SERIES- With
the Wing-T all of our plays are put in series. Within each series
all the plays look the same for the first two or three steps. As
mentioned above all of our plays set up each other, so that the
defense can not load up for one play without leaving themselves
venerable for one of our companion plays.
3. FORMATION- With
our package in the Wing-T we can run all of our plays out of
almost any formation we have in our playbook. Of course we like
to run certain plays out of certain formations, but we feel we
get teams out of what they like to do by throwing different
formations at them and having them adjust to it. By doing so we
are getting the defense out of what they want to do but still
running the plays we want to run.
4. BALL CONTROL-
Even when we are in our oneback set, we are still a power running
attack team. Almost all of our plays go North and South where the
back squares his shoulders to the line of scrimmage and goes
strong through the line. We feel in order to be a consistent
winner in football you must run the football effectively. When we
do pass the ball it is playaction in nature and again is set up
by our running attack and therefore sets up our running game.
Even when we pass the ball the Quarterback almost always has a
run/pass option (Example: Waggle/Keep Pass). What we also like
about the Wing-T is that we do not worry about the weather, when
it rains we can still run 100% of our package.
5. DECEPTION- With
the Wing-T we have a four back running attack (QB, FB, WB, and
HB). With each play we will have threat of an attack at each area
of the defense. Example: Sweep Series
As a defense you
can not have your players flow to the ball because you will leave
your self open for a counter, bootleg, or reverse.
6. FLEXIBILITY-
One of the strengths of the Wing-T is its flexibility from year
to year. With the Wing-T you are not dependent on one dominate
person to be the center point of your offense. (Example: I
Formation- Halfback or Pro and Run and Shoot- QB). With the
Wing-T you have four backs to spread the ball around to. The
defense can not gear up to stop one aspect of your attack, and
must prepare and respect all aspects of your attack.
7. ANGLES- We feel
that the blocking schemes of the Wing-T give us an advantage over
the defense. We do not have the men up front to drive people off
the ball. Most of our opponents will be bigger then us up front,
but with the down blocks we can take advantage of the angles the
defense gives us.
8. HARD TO PREPARE
FOR- We spend hours teaching our players the proper techniques of
the Wing-T. The Wing-T is unlike any offense run in football. As
a team preparing to play us, they have to duplicate everything
that we do and we feel that this is impossible to do in one week
of preparation.
9. IDENTITY- The
Wing-T gives our kids a sense of identify. They know they are a
Wing-T team and different from everyone else. The kids take pride
in knowing that.
10. FUN- The most
important reason we run the Wing-T is that it is a fun offense to
coach and a fun offense to learn and play in.
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