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Post by bluecat on May 8, 2024 13:55:02 GMT -6
I will be interesting what Offense Coach Eric Sosa Runs, If it is the Wing-T, you may see some Wingnuts move over there from GP. I’m sure Beeville has plenty of their own Wing Nuts.
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Post by gpballer4life on May 8, 2024 14:18:14 GMT -6
I will be interesting what Offense Coach Eric Sosa Runs, If it is the Wing-T, you may see some Wingnuts move over there from GP. I’m sure Beeville has plenty of their own Wing Nuts. Please take all the Wing Nuts Rockport.
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Post by SouthTexasBloodsport on May 8, 2024 15:18:28 GMT -6
I will be interesting what Offense Coach Eric Sosa Runs, If it is the Wing-T, you may see some Wingnuts move over there from GP. Good grief man how many times are you gonna refer to the slot-t as the wing-t. You do it for literally every team that runs the slot-t.
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Post by sotex on May 8, 2024 17:45:52 GMT -6
Wouldn’t surprise me if dad joins him in a year or so. Perfect way to retire. That is a real possibility. I think Chris will retire after this year, but still has the desire to coach.
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gp37
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Post by gp37 on May 8, 2024 18:28:37 GMT -6
I will be interesting what Offense Coach Eric Sosa Runs, If it is the Wing-T, you may see some Wingnuts move over there from GP. Good grief man how many times are you gonna refer to the slot-t as the wing-t. You do it for literally every team that runs the slot-t. Ah Semantics? What do you call the one back offense where the QB has a RB beside him? The Spread? Actually it is the Single Wing. I have the Brownwood playbook and they called it the modified Delaware Wing-T. They ran it back in the 60's long before anyone mentioned the Slot-T. I see a lot of plays where the Tight End moves out to the side creating a slot. Sometimes they move the Wing Back over right behind the slot creating a slot back. If you take that same formation with the Full Back directly behind the QB under center, you have the I Formation. The Slot-T is the modified Wing-T. You need a good ball handling QB to create Misdirection. How many remember QB Kyle Fishbeck.
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gp37
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Post by gp37 on May 8, 2024 18:48:44 GMT -6
I wish I could Remember what offense Beaumont Hebert ran in 1976 when they beat GP 40 to 20. It was the last year Hebert was a school or team. They had speed to burn and man did they burn GP. Coach Gordon Wood coached the Oil Bowl Allstar game in Wichita Falls. I ate dinner with him and told him he should have picked players from Beaumont Hebert. He said he could have he just did not think of them. He told me a story about this QB had picked from Odessa and he had heard some negative story's about this QB from other coaches and I think his name was Darrell Shepard. Coach Gordon Wood said he was a dream to coach. He did everything you asked him to do. He went on to play college ball at Oklahoma. He had a younger brother that was a Wishbone QB at Odessa. I made all the Oil Bowl games growing up and went back to see them in the summer after I moved away. Those Texas Allstars had talent and were well coached.
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Post by SouthTexasBloodsport on May 8, 2024 19:23:58 GMT -6
Good grief man how many times are you gonna refer to the slot-t as the wing-t. You do it for literally every team that runs the slot-t. Ah Semantics? What do you call the one back offense where the QB has a RB beside him? The Spread? Actually it is the Single Wing. I have the Brownwood playbook and they called it the modified Delaware Wing-T. They ran it back in the 60's long before anyone mentioned the Slot-T. I see a lot of plays where the Tight End moves out to the side creating a slot. Sometimes they move the Wing Back over right behind the slot creating a slot back. If you take that same formation with the Full Back directly behind the QB under center, you have the I Formation. The Slot-T is the modified Wing-T. You need a good ball handling QB to create Misdirection. How many remember QB Kyle Fishbeck. All of that nonsense just to still not answer the question. Liberty Hill and Calallen do not run the same exact offense and that's what you're saying when you say the slot-t and wing-t are the same thing.
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Post by calcatgirl on May 8, 2024 20:02:26 GMT -6
I wish I could Remember what offense Beaumont Hebert ran in 1976 when they beat GP 40 to 20. It was the last year Hebert was a school or team. They had speed to burn and man did they burn GP. Coach Gordon Wood coached the Oil Bowl Allstar game in Wichita Falls. I ate dinner with him and told him he should have picked players from Beaumont Hebert. He said he could have he just did not think of them. He told me a story about this QB had picked from Odessa and he had heard some negative story's about this QB from other coaches and I think his name was Darrell Shepard. Coach Gordon Wood said he was a dream to coach. He did everything you asked him to do. He went on to play college ball at Oklahoma. He had a younger brother that was a Wishbone QB at Odessa. I made all the Oil Bowl games growing up and went back to see them in the summer after I moved away. Those Texas Allstars had talent and were well coached. Hebert's last season was fall of 81 before they merged with Forest Park to become Beaumont Westbrook.
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Post by sotex on May 8, 2024 21:19:33 GMT -6
Ah Semantics? What do you call the one back offense where the QB has a RB beside him? The Spread? Actually it is the Single Wing. I have the Brownwood playbook and they called it the modified Delaware Wing-T. They ran it back in the 60's long before anyone mentioned the Slot-T. I see a lot of plays where the Tight End moves out to the side creating a slot. Sometimes they move the Wing Back over right behind the slot creating a slot back. If you take that same formation with the Full Back directly behind the QB under center, you have the I Formation. The Slot-T is the modified Wing-T. You need a good ball handling QB to create Misdirection. How many remember QB Kyle Fishbeck. All of that nonsense just to still not answer the question. Liberty Hill and Calallen do not run the same exact offense and that's what you're saying when you say the slot-t and wing-t are the same thing. So many variations, but in the slot-t the wide receiver is split out and the 2 back is lined up in between. Wing-T has two TE's with the 2 back on the quick side. Some coaches put the backs 3 yards from the Los, especially in the slot-t, and the more traditional wing-t they're 5 yards back. Some run up tempo (Hill), mid tempo (Soza) slow tempo (Danaher). I'm not an offensive guru, it's just my view.
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Post by wfcoyote on May 8, 2024 21:20:26 GMT -6
Chino, when Coach Warren Woodson invented the Wing-T, the T formation was popular. Coach Warren Woodson used it to win a lot of college football. The Wing-T helped to keep the defense from stopping the run by adding passing option. You can slide your end over a notch and create a slot and modify the Wing-T however you want to but the basics starts from the Wing-T invented by the Coach Warren Woodson. Coach Tubby Raymond modified it and called it the Delaware Wing-T. It helps to have a Coach like Coach Morris Southall to call the plays. I remember when GP had Connell Davis for a Wing back. Connell Davis was actually a I-Back running as Wing back in the Wing-T. He was an Eric Dickerson type and not a Devin Bisby type RB.
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