Bring Back the Option!

Many forget that Tom Osborne's offense had many elements of the Wing-T in his system.

The Wing-T is built on:
  • Misdirection
  • Similar looking plays to confuse the defense - Make Different runs appear the same
  • Deception with Motion & Fakes
  • Multiple options to distribute the football
His numbering system for numbering the holes/gaps was exactly like the Wing-T. Holes/gaps were numbered from right-to-left #1-9.
He numbered his backs as follows:
QB = Back
WB = 2 Back
FB = 3 Back
IB = 4 back

For Example: If Nebraska called "41 PITCH" that would mean the I-Back would carry the ball to the far right side of the field to the #1-hole where the receiver wide to the right is also the "1 receiver."


Osborne's offense also had elements of the Wishbone including:
  • Option plays. Most wishbone teams relied on the Triple Option. (Most of Nebraska options plays under Osborne were Double-Option that looked like triple option.)
  • Trap Blocking
  • Misdirection
Finally, the rest of Osborne's offense was built off:
  • Inside & Outside Zone
  • Counter Sweep & Counter Trap (which Osborne & Milt Tenopir created)
  • Pitch plays
  • Draws
  • ISO (isolating a Fullback or other blocker on a linebacker)
*One interesting note about how Nebraska ran their ISO play. The QB used a reverse-pivot when taking the ball from under-center, similar to how a Power-O play looks. It was almost like an A-gap power play. The ISO plays you see in video games is just a straight-handoff, but that is NOT how Nebraska ran their ISO play.

**Many plays were built off of Nebraska's ISO play with the QB's reverse-pivot including their 32-38 option which was a reverse-pivot option by the QB. 32-38 Trap came off this option. 41-49 Pitch also has the same backfield action, but now gets the ball to the outside but without optioning a player. And then we're back to the ISO play where now it's the same backfield action but the I-back plows right into the middle of the line with the fullback leading the way.

Tom Osborne then had play-action passing plays off of all of these backfield actions. He also had a whole set of screen-passes as well.


Nebraska's Offense under Tom Osborne was NOT an Option-Offense.
Nebraska's Offense under Tom Osborne in the 1990's was a Multiple Power Rushing Offense with the option used only 15-20% of the time.

Nebraska never ran the full-on option offense like what you see the service academies run. They had similar plays, but Osborne's offense was never fully an option offense.

So when many say; "Let's go back to the option!"
What they really mean is: Let's go back to being a team that commits to running the football with a physical & powerful intention and do it in a variety of of ways.



And the option is absolutely NOT a "solved problem." To say that "it's never coming back" like what was mentioned earlier in this thread is frankly...and I respectfully say...just wrong. :rolleyes:

The option is very much still around in all parts of college football. See Oregon and Ohio State just to name two! *Side note: Urban Meyer's offenses at Utah, Florida, & Ohio State also had elements of Wing-T and old-school Nebraska, he just did it from the shotgun.


Teams are running: read-options, mid-line, dart, bash, speed-option, etc.

The option again is not a "solved problem" - It can be an equalizer for certain teams and a game changer for others.


For Nebraska moving forward I would love to see them bring back the Speed Option more into the offense. It's a simple play that can be added to most formations and would fit well with the shotgun formations that Nebraska has liked to utilize.

I would also be intrigued to see Nebraska bring back elements of a power running game with a lead blocker like our old ISO & pitch plays from the I-formation.


IN CLOSING:
There is a reason Tom Osborne believed in using a heavy rushing attack with option elements. For one example see the heavy wind from this past weekend. In today's modern football you also need to be able to throw the ball too. Nebraska under Matt Rhule now has to adjust their approach starting now going into bowl-prep, the offseason and next season. It needs to become a tougher and much more physical offense where we are delivering the blows to the opponent at-will with a multiple rushing attack. It doesn't need to be a full on option offense, but having a few more of those option plays in the playbook that are used on a basis around 10-20% would be nice.
 
And the option is absolutely NOT a "solved problem." To say that "it's never coming back" like what was mentioned earlier in this thread is frankly...and I respectfully say...just wrong. :rolleyes:

Sorry, but the way people are colloquially talking about "bringing the option back" who are envisioning the 80's-90's or the service academies; it is not coming back. Defenses have figured out how to stop it over the past 30 years, high schools don't run it, and players don't wanna come to a school that run it.

I would not call Ohio State an option team, and especially not in anywhere near the way some Nebraska fans are imagining an option offense. It's honestly boorish at this point listening to these takes like it's some easy way to success here.
 
And the option is absolutely NOT a "solved problem." To say that "it's never coming back" like what was mentioned earlier in this thread is frankly...and I respectfully say...just wrong. :rolleyes:
Sorry, but the way people are colloquially talking about "bringing the option back" who are envisioning the 80's-90's or the service academies; it is not coming back. Defenses have figured out how to stop it over the past 30 years, high schools don't run it, and players don't wanna come to a school that run it.

I would not call Ohio State an option team, and especially not in anywhere near the way some Nebraska fans are imagining an option offense. It's honestly boorish at this point listening to these takes like it's some easy way to success here.
No need to be sorry. I actually apologize in the way I phrased my response.

You are right that teams are not running the option like Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Nebraska or the service academies did in the 80's & 90's. Those systems being used at the highest levels of college football are probably not coming back.

I disagreed in your comment that the option was a solved problem.
To be more accurate I would say just like the rest of offensive football - the option has evolved.

  • Utah & Florida under Urban Meyer were Spread-Option offenses.
  • Oregon under Chip Kelly was absolutely a Spread-Option offense.
  • Ohio State under Urban Meyer I agree was not an option offense, but it definitely used a variety of of read-options. Those teams also relied heavily on Counter as well.
I honestly think what would help Nebraska going forward is to focus on the trenches first. Look how often the offense failed on short-yardage and red zone and goal line situations this season. The program needs to get back to being a ground-and-pound offense first. You can still have a ground-based offense and tailor it's passing attack for a 5-star QB whether he has a more talented arm like Raiola or has more of a running skill-set like Lateef.

Nebraska should get back to a multiple rushing scheme, ground-and-pound physical offense and say: THIS. IS. WHO. WE. ARE.

Nebraska can find their way back. Rhule and the coaches just need to be willing to make the philsophical switch. We are currently 80th in the country in Total Offense so a change needs to happen. There are a few teams they should study in the off-season to help look for answers:
  • 1990's Nebraka running game (skip the option plays and just study Inside/Outside Zone, Counters, ISO, Traps, & Pitch plays)
  • Kyle Shanahan 49ers running game.
  • North Dakota State from the past 15 years.
  • 2025 Utah (2nd in the nation rushing offense)
  • Dan Lanning's Oregon (10th in the nation rushing offense)

To be fair to Nebraska the offensive scheme was not our only problem this year. Emmett Johnson currently leads the country with 1,451 total yards rushing. He just had a 200+ rushing game...and we still got blown out at home.

Again - look to the trenches - the defense needs an overhaul as well. The sooner Nebraska ditches the 3-3-5 defense the better off it will be, but that discussion is for a different thread at a different time.

Again, my apologies to you if my reply back to your comment seemed harsh. It was not my intention.
 
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Many forget that Tom Osborne's offense had many elements of the Wing-T in his system.

The Wing-T is built on:
  • Misdirection
  • Similar looking plays to confuse the defense - Make Different runs appear the same
  • Deception with Motion & Fakes
  • Multiple options to distribute the football
His numbering system for numbering the holes/gaps was exactly like the Wing-T. Holes/gaps were numbered from right-to-left #1-9.
He numbered his backs as follows:
QB = Back
WB = 2 Back
FB = 3 Back
IB = 4 back

For Example: If Nebraska called "41 PITCH" that would mean the I-Back would carry the ball to the far right side of the field to the #1-hole where the receiver wide to the right is also the "1 receiver."


Osborne's offense also had elements of the Wishbone including:
  • Option plays. Most wishbone teams relied on the Triple Option. (Most of Nebraska options plays under Osborne were Double-Option that looked like triple option.)
  • Trap Blocking
  • Misdirection
Finally, the rest of Osborne's offense was built off:
  • Inside & Outside Zone
  • Counter Sweep & Counter Trap (which Osborne & Milt Tenopir created)
  • Pitch plays
  • Draws
  • ISO (isolating a Fullback or other blocker on a linebacker)
*One interesting note about how Nebraska ran their ISO play. The QB used a reverse-pivot when taking the ball from under-center, similar to how a Power-O play looks. It was almost like an A-gap power play. The ISO plays you see in video games is just a straight-handoff, but that is NOT how Nebraska ran their ISO play.

**Many plays were built off of Nebraska's ISO play with the QB's reverse-pivot including their 32-38 option which was a reverse-pivot option by the QB. 32-38 Trap came off this option. 41-49 Pitch also has the same backfield action, but now gets the ball to the outside but without optioning a player. And then we're back to the ISO play where now it's the same backfield action but the I-back plows right into the middle of the line with the fullback leading the way.

Tom Osborne then had play-action passing plays off of all of these backfield actions. He also had a whole set of screen-passes as well.


Nebraska's Offense under Tom Osborne was NOT an Option-Offense.
Nebraska's Offense under Tom Osborne in the 1990's was a Multiple Power Rushing Offense with the option used only 15-20% of the time.

Nebraska never ran the full-on option offense like what you see the service academies run. They had similar plays, but Osborne's offense was never fully an option offense.

So when many say; "Let's go back to the option!"
What they really mean is: Let's go back to being a team that commits to running the football with a physical & powerful intention and do it in a variety of of ways.



And the option is absolutely NOT a "solved problem." To say that "it's never coming back" like what was mentioned earlier in this thread is frankly...and I respectfully say...just wrong. :rolleyes:

The option is very much still around in all parts of college football. See Oregon and Ohio State just to name two! *Side note: Urban Meyer's offenses at Utah, Florida, & Ohio State also had elements of Wing-T and old-school Nebraska, he just did it from the shotgun.


Teams are running: read-options, mid-line, dart, bash, speed-option, etc.

The option again is not a "solved problem" - It can be an equalizer for certain teams and a game changer for others.


For Nebraska moving forward I would love to see them bring back the Speed Option more into the offense. It's a simple play that can be added to most formations and would fit well with the shotgun formations that Nebraska has liked to utilize.

I would also be intrigued to see Nebraska bring back elements of a power running game with a lead blocker like our old ISO & pitch plays from the I-formation.


IN CLOSING:
There is a reason Tom Osborne believed in using a heavy rushing attack with option elements. For one example see the heavy wind from this past weekend. In today's modern football you also need to be able to throw the ball too. Nebraska under Matt Rhule now has to adjust their approach starting now going into bowl-prep, the offseason and next season. It needs to become a tougher and much more physical offense where we are delivering the blows to the opponent at-will with a multiple rushing attack. It doesn't need to be a full on option offense, but having a few more of those option plays in the playbook that are used on a basis around 10-20% would be nice.
Good stuff. IMHO, TO's offense continually evolved. It was truly an "option offense" in that he had, as you described so well, multiple ways to run the ball. IIRC, he said he only had about 20-25 plays, but was able to run them from multiple formations and motions, but the end result was a "low" number of plays that the team could run in their sleep, day or night and in any conditions. The complexity was in the simplicity. The old "hiding in plain sight". Jamey Chadwell has evolved the RPO into more of a triple option RPO, run, pass, qb keeper.

I have no idea why we do not do more counters or draws in an attempt to beat the blitz. Maybe OL not quick enough? Or use a FB/HB as a lead blocker. IMHO, our run game is pretty vanilla. EJ did a hell of a great job getting the yards he got. I also think the run blocking might be "easier" to block well than pass pro.

I love what NDSU runs. Think some of their staff would be great to come here. Proven winners (think Cignetti), solid system that they have kept for years, very physical, grinders, fundamentally sound. In fewer words, they win. Wonder if Entz would come here from Fresno (their HC) to be DC....
 
I watched a bunch of 2 stars carve up a defense with some version of option football yesterday. It was a thing of beauty.

I see no reason why it can’t be done.

It’s got to be far better than watching a 5 star cosplayer get sacked every other play.

We don’t have anything to lose at this point.
 
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