2016: Willie's Bullies

Bulls Pick Briles, Baylor Offensive Brain

SoFloBulls.com | Willie Taggart and his offensive staff reportedly met with Baylor coach Art Briles this week to learn new offensive schemes this season. The two coaches, and programs, share similarities that may indicate good signs for the Bulls in the near future.

Bulls Pick Briles, Baylor Offensive Brain by Matthew Manuri SoFloBulls.com

This past Monday, it was reported by Josh Newberg of 247 Sports and Joey Johnston of the Tampa Tribune that South Florida head coach Willie Taggart, along with new QB coach Shaun King, and new WR coach T.J. Weist were traveling to Baylor this week to study and learn spread concepts that they can bring back to Tampa.

And why not? As has been mentioned several times before, Taggart and staff saw great success last year by completely overhauling their scheme to an up-tempo, spread style that led to the Bulls offense exploding down the stretch of the season. It’s logical to switch to a style like the Gulf Coast when you have a quarterback in Quinton Flowers who can make quick decisions in zone-read, a stable of play-making running backs, and receivers who can burn defenders in space. It makes all the sense in the world to fine tune said system through taking notes directly from a guy who’s innovated the Big 12 and college football over the past five seasons like Art Briles.

Look at the similarities Baylor and South Florida shared in rush offense in 2015:

2015 Rushing Stats Yards Per Play Rushing Play Pct. Yards Per Rush Rushes Per Game Rushing Yds / Game
Baylor 7.1
(3rd)
64.45%
(12th)
5.8
(4th)
54.8
(4th)
319.6
(3rd)
South Florida 6.2
(25th)
65.24%
(9th)
5.4
(11th)
45.7
(19th)
245
(9th)

While coaches learning concepts from their contemporaries is something that has been done numerous times before, it got me thinking that South Florida shares similarities to Baylor not only in terms of schematics, but also in terms of access to a plethora of talented in-state recruits, and state/region wide perceptions. A key stated goal during Willie Taggart’s run in Tampa has been to not only win on the field but to establish an identity for the program and following what Briles has done at Baylor since 2008 could be the right approach.

Green and Gold Similarities

Similar to Taggart, the Texas born Briles arrived to Waco in 2008 to turn around a dead in the water Baylor program that hadn’t seen a winning season since 1995. The only success the Bears saw on the field was in NCAA Football on PS3 when I played with them in Dynasty Mode one summer (we crushed the Big 12).

Also similar to Taggart is recruiting philosophy. Keying in on mostly three and four star kids within the talent-laden state of Texas, Briles, a Mike Leach disciple at Texas Tech, identified the players needed to run an offense that a few short seasons later would boat race Big 12 opponents and produce a Heisman trophy winner.

Year-by-Year Comparisons

The pattern of both coaches follows similarly in their first three seasons in terms of results, caliber of players being brought in, and emphasis on key local recruits being convinced to stay home.

Three Year
Results

Record

S&P+ 
247
Rankings
Avg. Recruit Rating % In-State Recruits
Briles Year 1 4-8 42 52 81.44 96%
Taggart
Year 1
2-10 103 41 84.22 85%
Briles Year 2 4-8 55 40 82.81 83%
Taggart
Year 2
4-8 115 69 83.07 95%
Briles Year 3 7-6 52 46 80.43 92%
Taggart Year 3 8-5 50 63 84.07 81%

In his first three seasons at the helm, Briles was able to elevate Baylor from near the bottom of college football S&P+ wise to the top 50’s while maintaining a consistent pace for recruiting mostly three-star players from Texas. Like, South Florida under Taggart, the Bears found themselves in the cellar of the Big 12 for the first two seasons under a new regime. However, fortunes finally started to pay off in 2010 when Baylor went 7-6, beat Texas for the first time in the Mack Brown era, and achieved their first bowl season since 1994.

What may excite Bulls fans is that things really start to escalate in year four, as was the case with Briles and then offensive coordinator Phillip Montgomery in 2011. With the triple-threat attack of Robert Griffin III,Terrance Ganaway, and Kendall Wright, the Bears zoomed to a 10-3 record, averaging 45.3 points per game and sealing the Heisman trophy for Griffin. This season set the stage for Baylor’s identity as for what I like to call the “video game numbers” offense and to be in the yearly conversation of College Football Playoff contenders. (SB Nation’s Ian Boyd did a great job of breaking down the “Art” of this offense a few years back.) This establishment of an identity for a previously dormant program created a higher national profile, a new $250 million stadium, access to recruits like Corey Coleman and Shawn Oakman and the rest as they say is history. If you are Willie Taggart, you should be using that as the benchmark for what could be accomplished in Tampa. Continue Reading by Clicking Here

by Nick Simon | SB Nation’s UnderdogDynasty.com | @NickSimon832


SoFloBulls Blog by Matthew Manuri


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