Navy pursues a new offense...The Wing T is back !
Posted: Thu May 02, 2024 12:10 pm
Though he was hired in early January, it took reading this and listening to his interviews for me to recognize that Navy's new offensive coordinator Drew Cronic (great FB name) will install an offense that will have only a slight resemblance to their traditional triple option offense. Seems that Navy is in some ways trying what Army sought to do in 2023. Let's see how that works for them.
Here's an article in full that gives a sense of Navy's new offense:
"COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Navy introduces a new offensive coordinator and a change of scheme
The triple-option offense has become synonymous with Navy football over the years, and the tradition continued even after Brian Newberry was promoted from defensive coordinator to head coach before this past season. The idea was for the scheme to remain the base of the offense, with new offensive coordinator Grant Chesnut implementing some wrinkles.
.
That lasted just one season before Chesnut was fired last month after the team finished 5-7 and averaged just 17.7 points per game, its second-lowest output in the past 15 seasons.
Welcome to the next era of Navy football: Drew Cronic has been hired as offensive coordinator, and he intends to implement what he labeled a “hybrid wing-T” offense.
“I want to be creative,” Cronic said Thursday during his introductory news conference. “There’s certain things you’ve got to be good at. At the same time, you’ve got to be able to adapt. So there’s been many seasons where we’ve started with our base and then it evolves a certain way based on who you have, what you’re doing well. You’ve got to have answers. Whatever you’re doing, what are people taking away from you? What are the answers?”
Cronic, 49, arrives in Annapolis after four seasons as the coach at Mercer, where he compiled a 28-17 record at the Football Championship Subdivision school. He was previously coach for two seasons at Division II Lenoir-Rhyne, where he was named national coach of the year by the American Football Coaches Association in 2018, and for two seasons at Reinhardt of the NAIA. In between those two jobs in 2017, Cronic served as offensive coordinator for a season at Furman.
He takes over an offense that averaged 300.3 yards per game in 2023, which ranked 123rd in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
Cronic “has had success everywhere he’s been in a lot of different ways,” Newberry said. “A guy that’s been able to adapt to his personnel. A guy that’s been able to do more with less. A guy that’s taken programs that were not doing well and turn them around quickly.
“He understands what we need to do here at the Naval Academy to be successful.”
The wing-T typically features a tailback, fullback and wingback to go along with a wide receiver and tight end, though Cronic prides himself on being creative while evolving the scheme he learned from his father, a high school coach in Georgia. He said there will be a lot of shifting, motions, movement and formations. Mercer faced Alabama in 2021, and Nick Saban spoke then about the challenges of the scheme.
“The easiest way to categorize it would be there’s a lot of three-back runs, even though it isn’t what people would recognize as the wishbone,” Saban told reporters at the time. “Between the motions and so forth you know it’s kind of a combination of running three-back-type runs that are not in spread out formations.
“There are a lot of bunch formations, and there’s a lot of motions and adjustments that players have to make. So this is totally unique to anything that we’ve played against and will play against the rest of the season.”
Cronic said the Mids will still run some traditional Navy option schemes, but he wants to be versatile and take advantage of his players’ strengths. There will be a lot of similar looks and principles to what Navy fans are familiar with. Ideally, Cronic said, he would like to throw the ball 20 to 25 percent of the time, but that will depend on the skill set of the quarterback.
“Obviously we all want the biggest, fastest, most elusive quarterback that can throw it and hit every target,” Cronic said. “You want a kid who can do different things. With what we’ve done over the past, I think we’ve adapted to different quarterbacks pretty well. Wing-T offense, that quarterback can be a good runner, he can be a good thrower, he can be a good game manager. He doesn’t have to be a great runner, but we’d like for him to hurt people with his legs. So some of it’s just getting the best football player and then building it around him."
Here's an article in full that gives a sense of Navy's new offense:
"COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Navy introduces a new offensive coordinator and a change of scheme
The triple-option offense has become synonymous with Navy football over the years, and the tradition continued even after Brian Newberry was promoted from defensive coordinator to head coach before this past season. The idea was for the scheme to remain the base of the offense, with new offensive coordinator Grant Chesnut implementing some wrinkles.
.
That lasted just one season before Chesnut was fired last month after the team finished 5-7 and averaged just 17.7 points per game, its second-lowest output in the past 15 seasons.
Welcome to the next era of Navy football: Drew Cronic has been hired as offensive coordinator, and he intends to implement what he labeled a “hybrid wing-T” offense.
“I want to be creative,” Cronic said Thursday during his introductory news conference. “There’s certain things you’ve got to be good at. At the same time, you’ve got to be able to adapt. So there’s been many seasons where we’ve started with our base and then it evolves a certain way based on who you have, what you’re doing well. You’ve got to have answers. Whatever you’re doing, what are people taking away from you? What are the answers?”
Cronic, 49, arrives in Annapolis after four seasons as the coach at Mercer, where he compiled a 28-17 record at the Football Championship Subdivision school. He was previously coach for two seasons at Division II Lenoir-Rhyne, where he was named national coach of the year by the American Football Coaches Association in 2018, and for two seasons at Reinhardt of the NAIA. In between those two jobs in 2017, Cronic served as offensive coordinator for a season at Furman.
He takes over an offense that averaged 300.3 yards per game in 2023, which ranked 123rd in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
Cronic “has had success everywhere he’s been in a lot of different ways,” Newberry said. “A guy that’s been able to adapt to his personnel. A guy that’s been able to do more with less. A guy that’s taken programs that were not doing well and turn them around quickly.
“He understands what we need to do here at the Naval Academy to be successful.”
The wing-T typically features a tailback, fullback and wingback to go along with a wide receiver and tight end, though Cronic prides himself on being creative while evolving the scheme he learned from his father, a high school coach in Georgia. He said there will be a lot of shifting, motions, movement and formations. Mercer faced Alabama in 2021, and Nick Saban spoke then about the challenges of the scheme.
“The easiest way to categorize it would be there’s a lot of three-back runs, even though it isn’t what people would recognize as the wishbone,” Saban told reporters at the time. “Between the motions and so forth you know it’s kind of a combination of running three-back-type runs that are not in spread out formations.
“There are a lot of bunch formations, and there’s a lot of motions and adjustments that players have to make. So this is totally unique to anything that we’ve played against and will play against the rest of the season.”
Cronic said the Mids will still run some traditional Navy option schemes, but he wants to be versatile and take advantage of his players’ strengths. There will be a lot of similar looks and principles to what Navy fans are familiar with. Ideally, Cronic said, he would like to throw the ball 20 to 25 percent of the time, but that will depend on the skill set of the quarterback.
“Obviously we all want the biggest, fastest, most elusive quarterback that can throw it and hit every target,” Cronic said. “You want a kid who can do different things. With what we’ve done over the past, I think we’ve adapted to different quarterbacks pretty well. Wing-T offense, that quarterback can be a good runner, he can be a good thrower, he can be a good game manager. He doesn’t have to be a great runner, but we’d like for him to hurt people with his legs. So some of it’s just getting the best football player and then building it around him."