Showing posts with label Buddy Ryan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddy Ryan. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

The time Buddy Ryan conjured up a defense that nearly beat mighty Nebraska


RIP BUDDY RYAN

Football lost one of its most innovative minds in the history of the game when Buddy Ryan passed away Tuesday at the age of 82.

Ryan was the architect behind the Chicago Bears vaunted "46" defense that will go down as the most dominant in NFL history. Many probably dont know, however, about that time back in 1998 a few years after Ryan left the sidelines that he conjured up a scheme that would shut down the mighty Nebraska offense when the Huskers were the defending national champs.

Brian Yauger a disciple of Buddys son, Rob, who I wrote about in April as the former football coach who became the most connected man in the Washington marijuana industry had an amazing story about Buddy.

Once during spring football when Yauger and Rob were still at Oklahoma State, Buddy was visiting whilethey were game-planning about how to slow down Nebraskas option attack in the fall. The year before, the Huskers led the nation in scoring and beat its four ranked opponents by an average of four touchdowns apiece.

Buddy: Why dont you run "Jet"?

Rob: "What the (bleep) is "Jet"?"

Buddy: Its what TCU used to beat Oklahoma with in the 40s.

Huh?

The elder Ryan popped up from his chair and went to the board to draw it up. The two defensive tackles were lined up so wide that all three linebackers were set inside of them.

"We all looked at each other cross-eyed," Yauger said. "It was like this old man has flipped his lid. It was so unconventional. It didnt look like anything anybody else was doing."

The next day, the Cowboys ran the scheme during practice just as Buddy has drawn it up.

"I"m thinking, "Oh my gosh, this actually might work,"" Yauger said.

Rob Ryan eventually tweaked it some, so the SAM and WIL linebackers were hugged up on the tackles" heels in the B-gaps and the MIK linebacker was moved back to seven yards deep (they were normally at four yards deep). The OSU coaches also had their defensive tackles adjust their footwork a bit, so they took one step towards the offensive tackles before they pinched inside.

When OSU finally faced Nebraska in that season, the Huskers were No. 2 in the nation. Jet gave mighty Nebraska fits. The Huskers managed just 215 total yards with only 73 on the ground the teams lowest regular-season output in 23 years. Nebraska only scored one field goal in the first half. This was just a week after Nebraska ran for 434 yards against the No. 9 team in the country, defeating the Washington Huskies, 55-7.

"It looked like there was this giant hole, but what screwed everybody up was the two outside linebackers were keying off the fullback and we were ending up with five guys in four gaps and one of those guys always came free," Yauger explained. "It changed the timing of the way everybody flowed.

"When I think about it, this was really just the 46 flipped upside down because in the 46 you have three D-linemen lined up over the center and the two guards."

You can see the defense in action here:

Nebraska kept trying to block the MIK, which enabled somebody else to always come free. Oklahoma State ran Jet about 30-35 percent of the game against Nebraska, Yauger estimated.

"If anybody really figured it out, I guess they would"ve quarterback sneaked it against us," Yauger said. "They would"ve gotten three, four, five yards probably every time and then we would"ve had to get out of it."

Despite the success of Jet, the game was tied at 17-17 in the fourth quarter when Nebraska scored on a 73-yard punt return to win the game.

"d**n punt return," Yauger says shaking his head.

He said they ran the scheme the rest of the season at Oklahoma Stateand that Rob Ryan told him he still broke it out in the NFL from time to time back when he was the Raiders defensive coordinator when they were trying to stop LaDainian Tomlinson and the Chargers because it also was really a good scheme against "12" personnel and offenses that used one running back and two-tight end formations.

"It really was the beauty of what Buddy did defensively," Yauger said. "He always had more guys than you could block."

Source: http://www.foxsports.com/college-football/story/the-time-buddy-ryan-conjured-up-a-defense-that-nearly-beat-mighty-nebraska-062816

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A different side of Buddy Ryan


Hall of famers Buddy Ryan and Pat Summit pass away on the same day

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) --

Ginny Lasco saw Buddy Ryan through a different prism than most of us.

"There was nobody like him. There"s never going to be another guy like him," Lasco said.

Lasco was a young woman working in television when she tagged along with a photographer to a Philadelphia Eagles practice and first met Buddy Ryan. It was 1986.

The pair started chatting, hit it off immediately, and became close friends for years to come.

"To me, he was a father figure. He was very dad-like. That"s what drew me to him plus his sense of humor. We were constantly laughing and being smart alecs," Lasco said.

Lasco talked about the fun times she and Ryan shared as she looked through treasured photos at her Manayunk home.

"We started having lunch every Tuesday at a place at the end of the practice field when it was down at the old stadium. We"d have eggplant parmigiana and two beers every single time we went," Lasco said.

A longtime horse enthusiast, Ryan named two horses after Lasco.

"The first was Ginny"s Pursuit which sounds weird, but it was the offspring of a horse named Pursuit and the second one was Lucky Lasco. Yeah, I won $90 on him one time," Lasco said.

This city might remember Ryan as blunt, brash, often foul-mouthed, even physical at times. Lasco grew to know and love a kinder, gentler side of a man some considered a football genius.

"I mean he touches everybody. He"s so generous and so kind and always cared about what was going on in your life," Lasco said.

Ryan bought Lasco a new winter coat every year concerned she wasn"t staying warm.

She thinks they last spoke by phone about three years ago. He couldn"t communicate very clearly and she knew she would soon learn of his passing. A friend called with the sad news Tuesday morning.

"It"s heartbreaking. I mean he was suffering. And now, he"s with his wife, in heaven," Lasco said.

(Copyright 2016 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.)

Source: http://6abc.com/sports/a-different-side-of-buddy-ryan/1405801/

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