Published August 03, 2008 12:52 am - By any measuring stick, offenses ran amok in the Big 12 last season. Eight teams averaged over 30 points a game and three topped 40 on a consistent basis. It was a year when offensive coordinators and quarterbacks seemed to do no wrong.
Most defenses didn’t have an answer for the spread offenses most of the teams employed.
The key
History says defense should decide Big 12 champion
By John Shinn
The Norman Transcript
By any measuring stick, offenses ran amok in the Big 12 last season. Eight teams averaged over 30 points a game and three topped 40 on a consistent basis. It was a year when offensive coordinators and quarterbacks seemed to do no wrong.
Most defenses didn’t have an answer for the spread offenses most of the teams employed.
“Teams are throwing it 500-600 times a year,” Missouri quarterback Chase Daniel said. “It’s kind of hard not to throw for a bunch of yards.”
It’s a trend most expect to continue in 2008. Daniel is the conference’s preseason offensive player of the year and is one of 10 quarterbacks returning with starting experience. Most teams also have receivers coming off big seasons.
It isn’t a great time to be a defender.
“It’s extremely hard, because you have so many great players, so many great offenses and different formations going against you,” Oklahoma safety Nic Harris said. “It’s all about the preparation you put in throughout the course of the summer and the season.”
Harris is on the money. It is hard to play in the secondary in this day and age. Offenses get quicker and more deceptive every year. Keeping up is tough.
But history says the team that leads the league in defense has the best shot at winning the conference crown.
Since 1996, the team that gave up the fewest points in conference play has reached the Big 12 championship game 10 times and won six conference titles, including the last four.
The offensive leader has gained a berth in the December game just six times during that span and brought home the conference title just twice.
Those most responsible for the league’s offensive explosion — the quarterbacks — recognize the importance of what happens on the other side of the ball.
Missouri ran over everything in its path last season except for one team — Oklahoma.
The Sooners, who boasted the Big 12’s best defense, beat the Tigers twice last season, including a 38-17 victory in the Big 12 title game.
Daniel said it was a matter of OU being able to match up athletically with any offense.
“It was their speed. They were able to get us with four linemen without blitzing,” Daniel recalled from last season’s Big 12 championship game. “If you were asking me what I’d do to stop (a passing offense), I’d say a ridiculously good defensive line is best option.”