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Creativity is key with McFadden Published: Saturday, September 08, 2007 PRINT E-MAIL FAYETTEVILLE — There is no secret where Arkansas coaches want the football most this season when on offense. With All-American tailback Darren McFadden in the backfield, they want the ball in his hands as much as possible. What coaches don’t want is to simply hand the ball off to Mc-Fadden 20 to 30 times a game. It’s too predictable. Plus, they feel they can better maximize his size and athletic ability with more creative play-calling. McFadden, 6-2, 215 pounds, showcased his versatility last year, moonlighting at quarterback in the Razorbacks’ Wildcat (now WildHog ) package. Coaches typically put McFadden in the Shotgun with a predetermined play call, meaning he knew if he was going to hand off, keep the ball or pass it before the play ever began.
It appears McFadden could have more decision-making power this year when he is lined up at quarterback. New offensive coordinator David Lee has implemented option components to the offense, which means there will be times when McFadden will be asked to do even more than he already does. McFadden said he has no problem with the additional responsibility. He hasn’t perfected the art of reading a defense but is confident he can pick things up by maximizing his limited practice time. “It’s something I’m real comfortable with,” McFadden said. “It is something I have to work quite a bit on, though. I can’t just walk out there and do it. “ I’m an ex-quarterback. Anytime the ball is in my hands, I like it.” Option sightings have been rare during open portions of practice this season. McFadden, who ran for a school-record 1, 647 yards in 2006, has worked on it briefly while teammates worked on specialteams drills during early practice periods. Occasionally, the Doak Walker Award winner will stick around with Lee after practice for more tutoring. How much option-specific work is taking place behind closed doors is unclear, but there is no denying Arkansas would like to utilize its option packages more as the season progresses. What McFadden is being asked to do shouldn’t be unfamiliar to Razorbacks fans. Arkansas implemented the radar option in 2003 to take advantage of quarterback Matt Jones’ athleticism. Lee was Arkansas’ quarterbacks coach at that time. “We’re just trying to create confusion for the defense, make it hard for them to try to defend,” Lee said. Arkansas can utilize McFadden at quarterback in at least two offensive packages. They’ll use Racehorse and WildHog, which look a lot alike at first glance because McFadden is lined up in the Shotgun for both. Fullback Peyton Hillis and tailback Felix Jones join McFadden in the backfield for Racehorse packages. WildHog formations most likely have Hillis or Jones lined up in the slot. No matter the package name, the purpose is to get the Razorbacks’ best playmakers on the field together. Both Racehorse and WildHog afford them that luxury. Arkansas used both against Troy when McFadden tossed a 42-yard touchdown out of the WildHog and finished with 200 all-purpose yards. Attempts at using the option yielded mixed results in the 46-26 victory. Hillis had a 14-yard gain off a McFadden handoff early in the third quarter, but two other attempts led to McFadden fumbles. Hillis said it’s only a matter of time before McFadden perfects the skill of making reads. “Darren is a smart athlete,” Hillis said. “He’s a football player and a smart competitor. If Darren can get it all the way down, it will cause problems.” Lee and Coach Houston Nutt said mistakes weren’t a surprise with the minimal amount of time devoted to the option in practice. McFadden’s mistakes weren’t a matter of making the wrong read, but not pulling the ball out cleanly when he elected to keep it. Those initial hiccups won’t deter Lee from asking more of McFadden. “I’m going to keep doing it,” Lee said. “We’re going to stay with it and try to give people headaches trying to defend it.” More Stories From: CHRIS BAHN Yesterday's Most Popular 1. Arkansas football team still making noise 3. Hogs downplay talk of rankings 4. HOG CALLS : Blue-collar Hogs' effort energizing crowds 5. Surging Hogs not obsessing over national polls Today's Most E-mailed 1. Hogs, Horns renew rivalry with fresh faces 2. ARKANSAS RAZORBACKS VS. NO. 7 TEXAS LONGHORNS : 'A different animal'Pelphrey : Longhorns SEC-like 3. LIKE IT IS : Texas' Barnes good at raising bar, eyebrows 4. THE RECRUITING GUY : 3 UA recruits on display at all-star event |
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