I'm a chess player.
I really enjoy the game, and one of the things about it which I enjoy immensely is the huge amount of intellectual fodder there is to ponder and the sheer complexity and near limitless potential of the game.
I'm also a football fan.
And, like chess, I believe football provides the same intellectual fodder, complexity and near limitless potential that the grandfather of games provides, not to mention being a tad more exciting.
When I deal with European friends, sports is always a hot topic - and the age-old question of "Rugby vs. American Football" comes up with regularity. I've gotten so sick of the predictable "it's not football! You barely use your feet" thing that I've started referring to *our* version of football as "Grass-Chess with Running and Violence" or just GrassChess for short.
And tha parallels are unmistakable: both games have specialized pieces/players. Both games seek similar goals in terms of getting and holding territory. Both games have a similar look inasmuch as there are two lines facing each other across the field
For all this similarity, though, there's one thing Football coaches are privy to that the average fan doesn't have, but for which Chess has in huge amounts: theory.
Now, I'm not talking about the "run the ball, stop the run" or "defense win championships" or "run to setup the pass" type strategies.
Those anectdotes are nice and mostly accurate, but not interesting enough to grab the imagination and keep us occupied for 6 months while we await the start of the real part of the year.
They rather lack the core questions of how and why.
So, I'm going to write some stuff I've been pondering for a few months, borrowing from a fair amount of loose sources to try and build a theory (or set of theories) that explain those questions of why and how.
And I hope you all participate and your own ideas and experiences as players, fans and coaches. At worst, it's passing time being football geeks. At best...well, you never know. We might end up developing an unbeatable strategy that will forever go down as the HuskerBoard Offense.
At any rate...and I'll split this into another post....the first part of my emerging theory: Space, Time, Position, and Capability.
IRISH!
I really enjoy the game, and one of the things about it which I enjoy immensely is the huge amount of intellectual fodder there is to ponder and the sheer complexity and near limitless potential of the game.
I'm also a football fan.
And, like chess, I believe football provides the same intellectual fodder, complexity and near limitless potential that the grandfather of games provides, not to mention being a tad more exciting.
When I deal with European friends, sports is always a hot topic - and the age-old question of "Rugby vs. American Football" comes up with regularity. I've gotten so sick of the predictable "it's not football! You barely use your feet" thing that I've started referring to *our* version of football as "Grass-Chess with Running and Violence" or just GrassChess for short.
And tha parallels are unmistakable: both games have specialized pieces/players. Both games seek similar goals in terms of getting and holding territory. Both games have a similar look inasmuch as there are two lines facing each other across the field
For all this similarity, though, there's one thing Football coaches are privy to that the average fan doesn't have, but for which Chess has in huge amounts: theory.
Now, I'm not talking about the "run the ball, stop the run" or "defense win championships" or "run to setup the pass" type strategies.
Those anectdotes are nice and mostly accurate, but not interesting enough to grab the imagination and keep us occupied for 6 months while we await the start of the real part of the year.
They rather lack the core questions of how and why.
So, I'm going to write some stuff I've been pondering for a few months, borrowing from a fair amount of loose sources to try and build a theory (or set of theories) that explain those questions of why and how.
And I hope you all participate and your own ideas and experiences as players, fans and coaches. At worst, it's passing time being football geeks. At best...well, you never know. We might end up developing an unbeatable strategy that will forever go down as the HuskerBoard Offense.

At any rate...and I'll split this into another post....the first part of my emerging theory: Space, Time, Position, and Capability.
IRISH!