You mean the NU Power-I option, and not the Louisville, Boise St, Utah spread option, right?
Just checkin'
IRISH!
If you run the option 1-5 times a game does not make you an option team.
Well, for some reason completing a pass 4 or 5 times a game made NU a WCO team and Callahan a budding offensive genius, so it only seems a fair comparison.
Seriously though, when I saw those teams play, the option was an integral part of the offensive plan. And I think the stats back me up on this. Just looking at the QB rushing numbers makes it obvious called QB runs and keepers were regularly used:
Smith (Utah): 135 carries, 631 yards, 4.7 yrd/rush..
Zabransky (Boise St.): 130 carries, 326 yards. 2.5 yrd/rush.
LeFors (Louisville): 71 carries, 333 yards. 4.7 yrd/rush.
A QB running down the line with a trailing back who decides to chuck it down field to a dragging TE might rack up passing yards faster than rushing, but without the threat of the keep or the pitch, plays like that aren't as successful.
Keep in mind, the option is just that...an *option*. It's an offense based on misdirection. For good or ill, NU ran option the majority of the time from the Power I and telegraphed most of their plays for the last few years and didn't really take full advantage of the misdirection capabilities of the scheme. That's why I made the distinction between power and spread options.
They usually had the big horses that could blast through whatever the defense put up against them so it didn't matter if it was a dive, pitch or keep - they were running over the poor sots who got in the way.
My contention here is that lacking that pure physical mismatch, a 4th option should be (or for NU should have been) incorporated into the mix - the pass. Also, other formations are viable for use with the option than the I or Wing or Wishbone.
In the case of these three teams, they ran option from the spread and shotgun with great effect and had true offensive balance.
Having a balanced offense doesn't mean your play calling is 50/50 run/pass, or that you rack up 250 yards of each every game. It's having the ability and willingness to either pass or run.
For most teams, this means if they line up in a passing formation, they can and will pass. If they line up to run, they can and will run.
But what does a defense do when the opposing team has the ability to either run or pass not just within an offensive series, but within any given offensive play?
I mean, it's 3rd and 4 - what would you call as a defensive coordinator against a team that puts 4 WRs on the field (or weak-side trips with a TE), the QB in the gun with a quick scat-back, and has shown they will run anything from any formation?
If you blitz, they throw hot. If you drop back into coverage, the QB sprints for an outside option (of the pass option variety no less - safeties have to stay honest). If you spread the LOS to cover the outside, they shuttle pass inside. If you crowd the LOS and play 8 in the box, they go vertical.
It's a nightmare.
And there's no better way to describe an offense that can optionally do whatever they feel like whenever they feel like it than...well, the option.
IRISH!