- Joined
- Jun 24, 2010
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- 35,906
- Name
- Stu

I still think that most people confuse Chip's offense with a hurry up. If you watch what his offense does you will see that he doesn't wear defenses down by running more plays. He wears defenses down by not allowing them their substitutions. His offense actually uses most of the play clock on every play. His offenses at Oregon lined up immediately after the play was over which forced the defense to do the same thing. If the defense didn't, Chip's offense was ready to snap the ball. Once the opposing defense was lined up, the QB would generally step back and look to the sideline for the play.
This is why opposing defenses started feigning injuries. The player that was going to come out of the game anyway, simply fell down with a cramp. Often, you could see it being reality because those guys aren't used to having to be set that long throughout a drive.
The rest of Chip's offense was pretty much a run heavy spread and good defensive lines often gave Oregon fits. I think we'll be fine.
This is why opposing defenses started feigning injuries. The player that was going to come out of the game anyway, simply fell down with a cramp. Often, you could see it being reality because those guys aren't used to having to be set that long throughout a drive.
The rest of Chip's offense was pretty much a run heavy spread and good defensive lines often gave Oregon fits. I think we'll be fine.