Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SEC teams join in on air-based offense

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — The Southeaste­rn Conference built its reputation for punishing ground games with onename tailback megastars like Herschel, Bo and Emmitt — all larger-than-life performers who pounded the rock, piled up the yards and gave the SEC a down-in-the-dirt toughness no other league could match.

These days, the SEC action is not in the trenches but on the outside — where lightning-quick wideouts catch passes from quarterbac­ks making split decisions on the fly, often from empty backfields.

“It runs counter-intuitive to what (SEC) coaches will tell you about wanting to be balanced,” CBS Sports college football analyst Gary Danielson said. “But things have changed.”

That’s an understate­ment for the SEC.

An eye-opening 12 of the league’s 14 teams are gaining more yards this season in the air than on the ground:

• No. 4 LSU leads the way with quarterbac­k Joe Burrow controllin­g an offense that’s thrown for 1,727 yards, more than three times as many as its run for.

• No. 2 Alabama, quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa has had consecutiv­e games with five TD passes to his talented, fast group of receivers like Jerry Jeudy and Henry Ruggs III. • And No. 3 Georgia, where its legacy of backs like Herschel Walker, Todd Gurley and Terrell Davis is cherished Between the Hedges, has spread things out a bit to gain most of its yard by the pass.

Vanderbilt coach Derek Mason said it’s not complicate­d, he believes it’s simple math: Why make someone in the backfield burst through six or seven defenders when you can let a skill player slip one tackler and break off a big play?

The shift is based on the talented quarterbac­ks at the helm, said ex-Arkansas and Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt.

During his 14 years as a head coach, Nutt worked to defend I-formation runners and win the battle in the trenches. Now, with playmakers like Tagovailoa, Burrow and Fromm, there’s always a threat on the outside that can’t be matched by handing off 40 or 50 times a game, Nutt said.

“Right now, they’re spreading them out and you’ve got to defend them,” said Nutt, speaking after an appearance at the Knoxville QB Club.

South Carolina coach Will Muschamp, who coordinate­d a national title defense at LSU, believes the playing field has changed because of enhanced techniques of preparing high school players like seven-on-seven tournament­s and individual training.

“I think that quarterbac­ks, skill players and defensive backs when you get them now, they’re so much further along,” he said.

Alabama coach Nick Saban has gone all in on the spread after winning five national titles with the likes of Heisman Trophy winners Mark Ingram and Derrick Henry at tailback.

Behind Tagovailoa and its talented receiving corps, the Tide have thrown for twice as many yards (1,485 to 715) and touchdowns (18 to nine) as they’ve run for.

But not everyone has given up on featuring the run.

No. 7 Auburn leads the SEC in rushing at 259.9 yards a game and tailback JaTarvious “Boobee” Whitlow is second in the league with 102 yards per game.

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