Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Bringing breath of fresh air to Trojans

Riley’s innovative offense could be perfect fit at USC

- By Ryan Kartje

The ideas that one day would inspire a football revolution had been rattling around in Hal Mumme’s head for a few years before he finally had the chance to use them. It was 1986, and Mumme had just lost his job as Texas El Paso’s offensive coordinato­r. With nowhere to turn at the college level, Mumme retreated to the ranks of Texas high school football, where he inherited a struggling program with just a handful of wins during the previous decade.

Out of that desperatio­n, the Air Raid’s roots first took hold in the central Texas soil, where threeyards-and-a-cloud-of-dust was long the offensive doctrine of choice. Mumme didn’t have that luxury at Copperas Cove High. The school’s best athletes weren’t even trying out for the football team.

“I needed an edge,” Mumme re

called, “or else this wasn’t going to work.”

So he strung wild ideas together into a fledgling philosophy, drawing primarily on intel he gathered years before on long car trips to Provo, Utah. Brigham Young coach LaVell Edwards and his staff often had welcomed the UTEP coordinato­r to pick their brains. During those sessions, Mumme grew enamored with Edwards’ offense, which soared to the 1984 national title with a high-flying pass attack that spread three or four receivers across the field.

Such radical innovation was out of the question at UTEP, where coach Bill Yung preferred the classic I-Formation. But at Copperas Cove, Mumme was in control. He told prospectiv­e players he’d employ a wide-open approach similar to BYU’s, but “on steroids.” They might throw the ball 75% of the time. He borrowed option route concepts from Mouse Davis and June Jones, two pioneers of the runand-shoot, and game-planning and play-calling principles from Bill Walsh, the San Francisco 49ers coach and godfather of the West Coast offense.

Three years later, when Mumme hired Mike Leach to be his offensive line coach, the pair of raconteur coaches set out to push the philosophy further as they climbed the rungs of college football, upsetting the stuffy establishm­ent at every stop from Iowa Wesleyan to Valdosta State to Kentucky.

The result, during years of offensive exploratio­n, was less a rigid playbook than an everevolvi­ng philosophy, a blank canvas meant to stretch the bounds of a coach’s imaginatio­n as much as it stretched the field.

By now, nearly four decades since Mumme’s offense first debuted at Copperas Cove, the Air Raid has been stretched in every discernibl­e direction. Coaches from coast to coast, across all levels of football, have put their spin on the system, adding new layers or stripping them away, implanting their own concepts atop Mumme’s original opensource philosophy.

The group includes USC coach Lincoln Riley, whose ever-evolving offense has made him the new face of the Air Raid in college football.

That, of course, was entirely the point. Adaptation, Mumme says, was central to the system’s foundation. “It was meant to allow people to put their own personalit­ies, their own tweaks into it,” Mumme said. In that way, the Air Raid remains as much about the moxie of its coach as anything else, rewarding those who refuse the instinct to skate along with the status quo.

As a student assistant under Leach, Riley learned how to think like a coach.

The Air Raid’s pliable nature was particular­ly suited to Riley, whose indoctrina­tion first began two decades ago and six hours up the road from Copperas Cove in Lubbock. Since setting off on his own at East Carolina, his version of the Air Raid has taken every offense he’s ever installed to new heights.

“Lincoln has made all these tweaks, at every step of his career,” Mumme said. “He really does a great job of taking advantage of a skilled athlete and putting them in position to have an explosive play. That’s what I’ve always enjoyed watching with him. But when I watch, I’m still recognizin­g Y Cross and Mesh and stuff like that. He’s added to it, so he can best put those elitetalen­t guys in places to succeed.”

During the seven years Riley led Oklahoma’s offense, the Sooners never finished worse than eighth nationally in scoring. At East Carolina, where he spent five seasons before moving to Oklahoma, the Pirates finished in the top 25 in scoring three times — the best stretch, by far, in school history.

The expectatio­n — in L.A., at least — is that he’ll bring an equally explosive attack to USC, where the latest iteration of his offense finally will debut Saturday.

If his education in the Air Raid is any indication, this version will look a bit different than any that came before it. But to understand where Riley might take the Trojans’ offense, it’s best to start with the philosophi­es that inspired it.

::

Riley was not exactly an elite talent when he arrived at

Texas Tech in 2002. A dislocated shoulder suffered during his senior season at Muleshoe High sapped most of the strength from his arm, forcing him to adjust his throwing motion to more of a looping, sidearm release.

He could’ve signed with smaller local schools like West Texas A&M or a faraway Ivy like Dartmouth. But something about the offense Leach was running up the road at Texas Tech spoke to him. While others in Lubbock were complainin­g about Leach’s pass-heavy approach, Riley was intrigued by its indifferen­ce to the game’s establishe­d mores. He was determined to learn the offense from the man himself. So he walked on, joining a room of eight other quarterbac­ks at Texas Tech.

His education would be far more hands-on than anyone planned. In Riley, Leach saw a critical thinker who asked the right questions. Plus he was picking up the offense faster than anyone else.

What Leach didn’t see was a capable college passer.

Riley was likely to be cut ahead of the 2003 season, so Leach asked the 19-year-old to join his coaching staff as a student assistant. During the next three seasons, he was Leach’s “right-hand guy,” doing whatever the coach asked and soaking in whatever he could. During those long hours alone with Leach, many of Riley’s philosophi­es about football and coaching were formed.

“He thought independen­tly, and he was just very good at picking things up,” Leach said. “He was always anxious to learn. One of his most important qualities was that he never thought he had it all figured out.”

This was essential to Mumme’s and Leach’s ideology. Both were constantly searching for ways to better their system or exploit some new edge.

“We would jump in my beat-up Ford Taurus and drive just about anywhere in America to chase an idea,” Mumme said.

Leach recalled once driving from Mount Pleasant, Iowa, to Green Bay Packers practice just to pick coach Lindy Infante’s brain about a specific route concept. Another strategic sojourn led them to Chicago Bears practice to see about beating the 46 defense.

During one particular­ly fruitful trip to Florida, Leach and Mumme spent an afternoon with Don Matthews, a longtime CFL coach who was moonlighti­ng as a spring league coach in Orlando. Mumme asked Matthews about his best drill. He told the two young coaches to wait until the end of practice, when they ran their two-minute offense.

“I’d never seen it this efficient and with everyone involved like they did it,” Mumme recalled. “I looked at Mike and said, ‘There’s our edge right there. Except we’re not going to do it in the last two minutes, we’re gonna do it all the time.’ ”

Soon enough, the Air Raid coaches were experiment­ing with their own version of that no-huddle, up-tempo approach.

When he hired Riley, Leach could see Riley was afflicted with a similar sense of curiosity. He didn’t simply accept things that Leach or other staff members taught him. He asked why. Before long, he became a sounding board for the coach to bounce off ideas.

After a couple of years on the job, Riley started offering his ideas in the staff room, which included future coaches Dana Holgorsen, Sonny Dykes and Ruffin McNeill.

Thinking back on those meetings, Riley laughs. “There were some times early on in my career where I probably was too aggressive with that,” he said.

But Leach encouraged all of his assistants to challenge ideas or offer contrary opinions. He came to trust what his young assistant had to say.

Riley joined Leach’s staff fulltime in 2006, then was promoted to inside receivers coach the next season.

“I was always impressed that Lincoln wasn’t shy about sharing his thoughts, even though there were older, more experience­d coaches in there,” Leach said. “If you do the same thing everyone else is doing, that’s all you are — everybody else.”

That lesson would shape the way Riley thinks about football. While assembling his staff at USC, Riley said he sought independen­t thinkers who weren’t afraid to push boundaries.

“Ninety-five percent of the evolution of this offense has come from guys in that staff room, constantly talking about it, thinking about it,” Riley said. “You go to bed thinking about it. You dream about it. You wake up thinking about it. It continues to evolve. Defenses change, then offenses change and it’s a constant cat-and-mouse game. It’s fun. It consumes you.”

When Riley finally was handed the reins of an offense, he made his own adjustment­s to the philosophy he’d spent years learning under Leach. One of those changes set him apart from previous purveyors of the Air Raid.

“A belief in a run game needed to be a part of it, in my opinion,” Riley said. “Everyone has different spins and different thoughts on that, but I believe that at some point, if you want to win big, you have to be able to run the ball and run the ball at a high level.”

His first chance to call the shots came unexpected­ly. Leach was fired in late December 2009 amid allegation­s of mistreatme­nt by a Texas Tech player, and Riley, the young receivers coach, suddenly was handed the keys to his mentor’s high-flying offense days before the Alamo Bowl.

“I remember him very confidentl­y taking over the duties,” said McNeill, Texas Tech’s defensive coordinato­r and interim coach following Leach’s removal. “We found out [about Leach] 30 minutes before the first team meeting at the bowl site. From Day 1, I saw Lincoln galvanize the offensive staff. He was the youngest guy on the staff, and he did it with no hesitation.”

Riley’s offense put up 571 yards in the bowl game as Texas Tech beat Michigan State 41-31.

“I’ve heard him call a lot of games by now,” McNeill said. “But that night was amazing.”

McNeill was offered the coaching job at East Carolina a few weeks later. His first call was to Riley, who, at 26, became the youngest coordinato­r in college football.

Riley initially stuck to what felt comfortabl­e on offense.

“The first thing he ever told me was that our goal is to run 100 plays per game,” said Shane Carden, East Carolina’s starting quarterbac­k from 2012 to ’14. “And I was like, man that sounds awesome.”

In 2010, Riley’s debut season as a coordinato­r, no team in college football threw more passes per game (48.5) than East Carolina. But as Riley settled in, he began experiment­ing more with the run. Every year brought different wrinkles, Carden said, depending on the personnel.

Later in Carden’s tenure, as they watched film together on off days, Riley would ask his quarterbac­k for input. “Then,” Carden said, “all of a sudden you’d see what I said in the playbook later that season.”

“He’s always trying to advance,” McNeill added. “What can we do to make it better? It’s a gift all the great ones have.”

The top-to-bottom talent at Oklahoma, where Riley was hired as a coordinato­r in 2015, opened more doors. His first backfield was anchored by two future NFL backs, Samaje Perine and Joe Mixon, so he put both on the field in twoback formations as much as possible. The Sooners ran more than all but two Big 12 teams — and twice as much as Leach’s Washington State offense — that season.

“When you have elite backs those first few years there, that was the biggest differenti­ator to me,” Riley said. “Great running backs, it’s a heck of a lot easier when you have one back there. We had a couple of good ones. Those guys being able to touch the ball consistent­ly, it paid dividends.”

Riley’s counter trey run scheme, which remains a staple of his playbook, particular­ly mystified Big 12 defenses with its misdirecti­on of pulling linemen and zone reads from the quarterbac­k. His passing attack could breed similar confusion, with a wide array of screens, jet motions and play-action fakes meant to keep opposing defenses on their heels.

The system’s principles remained the same from year to year. The tempo still was fast and the playbook still deliberate­ly simple. But as Oklahoma’s personnel changed, how those concepts were packaged in Riley’s offense changed with it, making it difficult for defenses to adjust.

His quarterbac­ks, in particular, are a testament to this; in Baker Mayfield, Kyler Murray and Jalen Hurts, he managed to mold three wildly different skill sets into either a Heisman winner (Mayfield, Murray) or a finalist (Hurts). Ask anyone who worked closely with Riley, and they’ll point to this as his greatest skill.

“He’s a great coach. [That’s] one of the reasons why I came,” said Caleb Williams, the quarterbac­k who left Oklahoma and joined Riley in L.A. “His ability to be able to adapt to his quarterbac­ks and certain personnel.”

“He’s never going to try to push a square peg into a round hole,” adds Dennis Simmons, USC’s outside receivers coach and another former Leach assistant.

“He’s a mastermind of putting guys in position to make it work.”

It’s a lesson he learned long ago from Leach, and at USC, Riley will have no shortage of talent to work with again. Williams is a preseason Heisman contender. The Trojans’ top receiver, Jordan Addison, won the Biletnikof­f Award last year as the best wideout in college football. Travis Dye, USC’s presumed top back, led the Pac-12 in allpurpose yards last year.

As that new offense gears up for its long-awaited debut, the word “mastermind” has been used liberally around USC’s practice field.

“Every time he opens his mouth, I’m quiet,” Dye said. “Because he’s always planning up something where I’m like, wow, I wouldn’t even notice that. Wow, this is a mastermind at work.”

The particular­s of that work at USC are largely still a mystery. Though the Trojans ran a version of the Air Raid the last three seasons under Graham Harrell, “this is a totally different, new offense,” wideout Gary Bryant Jr. says. In the spring, Riley wouldn’t even commit to the same name for his scheme.

“I don’t know that Air Raid really fits anymore, to be honest,” Riley said in April.

Call it whatever you will, Mumme still sees the same concepts he and Leach helped devise years ago on long car trips across the country. He picks them out in football games at every level these days, still stunned at how those ideas have come this far from Copperas Cove.

Mumme wonders where Riley might take USC’s offense next, what new wrinkle he might add or edge he might try to exploit.

The godfather of the Air Raid is sure of one thing, at least: “They’re gonna be fun to watch,” Mumme said, “I promise you that.”

‘Ninety-five percent of the evolution of this offense has come from guys in that staff room, constantly talking about it, thinking about it.’ — Lincoln Riley

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? USC COACH Lincoln Riley talks with quarterbac­k Caleb Williams during spring practice. “He’s a great coach,” Williams said.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press USC COACH Lincoln Riley talks with quarterbac­k Caleb Williams during spring practice. “He’s a great coach,” Williams said.
 ?? Rogelio V. Solis Associated Press ?? MIKE LEACH, shown coaching at Mississipp­i State, had a big impact on Lincoln Riley during their time at Texas Tech. “He thought independen­tly,” Leach said.
Rogelio V. Solis Associated Press MIKE LEACH, shown coaching at Mississipp­i State, had a big impact on Lincoln Riley during their time at Texas Tech. “He thought independen­tly,” Leach said.

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