The Denver Post

Defensive backs at CU can vouch for the impact of explosive spread offenses.

- By John Henderson John Henderson: jhenderson @denverpost.com or twitter.com/johnhender­sondp Staff writer Tom Kensler contribute­d to this report.

boulder » In recent years, the high-octane spread offense has spread across the college football landscape like typhoid. The men absorbing the worst symptoms — the hang-dog tongue, the bloodshot eyes, the frazzled nerves— are defensive backs.

Ayear ago, 10 teams averaged at least 500 yards per game. Eight averaged at least 40 points. This year, offense has gone viral. Seventeen teams are averaging over 500 yards, topped by Baylor at 714.4 per game, and 18 teams are averaging at least 40 points. TheBears are averaging 63.4 points.

In 2000, only Florida State averaged 500 yards. That year, only five teams averaged 40 points.

“It is difficult,” said Colorado senior safety ParkerOrms. “Sometimes youwish you were on the other side of the ball.”

The spread has forced college football teams to change the way they play defense and how they recruit. Vaunted spread teams such as Baylor, Oregon and TexasA&Muse up to five players lined up wide, feature quarterbac­kswho run faster than safeties and run plays at a pace that requires the fitness of a Navy SEAL to cope in the secondary.

A common theory in football is that offenses innovate and defenses catch up. Don’t look now, but the spread offense has about lapped the modern defense.

“I had a great head coach that called me the other day,” said Colorado coach Mike MacIntyre. “I mean, he’s phenomenal and he goes, ‘No way in the world, if anybody asked me to be a defensive coordinato­r, would I be a defensive coordinato­r today. No way.’ ”

Whocould blamehim? The spread is not like the old run-and-shoot offense when coaches called a running play to give receivers a rest. Baylor is averaging 302.2 yards per game on the ground, fourth-best nationally. Oregon, with Heisman Trophy contender Marcus Mariota at quarterbac­k, is second with 324.0 yards rushing a game.

“You’ve got to make sure you don’t come up too much if you think it’s a run and they throw behind you, so you’ve got to make sure you play flat-footed,” Orms said. “Don’t cross your feet. Make sure you get a good read.”

Because of the proliferat­ion of the spread, the nickel back has become a prized recruit. Ask a CU defensive back howmuch the Buffs playedwith­out a fifth defensive back against Arizona State, or Oregon, and he will scratch his head.

“When I first started coaching (in 1991), we never played a snap of nickel,” MacIntyre said. “Then people started spreading you out and then you started using more nickel or youplayeda linebacker that could maybe do both because you weren’t worried aboutplayi­ng asmuchman(coverage).

“Now, you’ve got to play man quite often or you don’t have a chance.”

Because coaches use five or six defen- sive backs on almost every down against spread teams, they stockpile them like cordwood. Jon Embree, MacIntyre’s predecesso­r atCU, signed 10 defensive backs in 2011 and 2012, primarily tomake up for a dearth of secondary players signed by his predecesso­r, Dan Hawkins.

MacIntyre said rosternumb­ers incollege have gone from12 to 14 defensive backs and 12 linebacker­s in the old days to 10 or 11 linebacker­s and 15 or 16 defensive backs.

What can secondarie­s do? Hope they get help, such as a ball-control offense, a great pass rush, anything to keep them from chasing five receivers, plus a quarterbac­k, all over the field.

“Don’t getmewrong, those (spread) offenses aremade to kill DBs,” said Colorado State safety Trent Matthews. “But the good thing about it is, it’s a good opportunit­y. We like challenges like that.”

But a pass rush is nearly impossible because the spread requires quick passes from a pistol or shotgun formation. Mariota and Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel have both been sacked only five times.

“It’s tough,” Orms said, “but that’swhat we signed up for, playing defensive back in the Pac-12 Conference.”

 ??  ?? CU safety Parker Orms, left, breaking up a pass against CSU in the teams’ season opener Sept. 1 in Denver, says the explosive offenses in college football tempt him to consider playing anywhere but on defense. Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post
CU safety Parker Orms, left, breaking up a pass against CSU in the teams’ season opener Sept. 1 in Denver, says the explosive offenses in college football tempt him to consider playing anywhere but on defense. Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post

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