Two paths to positionless football for college offenses
How can college offenses embrace fully hybridized offense beyond just utilizing two tight end formations?
In my last column I talked about how “positionless football” is emerging as a big topic and buzzword in the game as teams get more creative with how they use hybrids in the college game, particularly tight ends.
Toward the end was a cryptic mention of how there are two particularly nasty brands of positionless offense if you follow down their paths which are different from the very basic, “we play 12 personnel and recruit tight ends who can do multiple things.”
The first path I described as a run game by committee and the second as “the LSU method.” Today I’ll explain what exactly these two approaches mean.
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