July 30, 2025

DON’T FORGET BILL WALSH’S OTHER ACHIEVEMENTS

In addition to once dressing up as a bell boy and greeting his team at the door of their hotel once, Bill Walsh should also be remembered for his pioneering work in another important field: video game football.

It was a far piece better than Sega’s “College Football National Championship,” mostly because it was simpler and you couldn’t win every game by running the toss sweep with Jerome Bettis. (Damn you, Cuddles Swindle. Damn you and Jerome to hell.) You got scouting reports from Bill on each team. You got 360 degrees of replay. You got, as you might have guessed, glorious amounts of passing yards. And of course, it also featured, per video game rules of engagement, an unstoppable Bo Jackson bent on destroying the world with his cleats.

BILL WALSH: 1931-2007


Bill Walsh: 1931-2007.

Bill Walsh, pro and college football coach and inventor of the West Coast offense, dead at 75.

Walsh did attain legendary status as a head coach in the pros, but Walsh’s collegiate resume did include a 17-17-1 stint at Stanford. His greatest legacy, the short-pass, horizontal-stretch West Coast offense, has had a limited impact on the collegiate level in its pure form, most likely because of its demanding precision and reliance on extremely aggressive NFL defenses working against it. Many of the phantom fakes and quick moves of the system anticipate elite talent working against it; at the collegiate level, that’s simply not the norm. And the pinpoint hooks and slants of the passing attack elude the grasp of most college qbs.

The basic nuts and bolts of the system, though, have certainly found their way into the collegiate playcalling lexicon. The Northwestern spread and the spread option both rely on quick passes on short routes combined with frequent screen/draw plays to keep the defense discombobulated. These ideas have long been in place in football, but never have they been so eloquently articulated in a single system as in the hands of Bill Walsh during his tenure with the 49ers.

The simplicity was lethal, as anyone who’s ever watched a defense bled to death off draws, counters, and quick slants and four yard hitch routes will testify. Bill Callahan, Paul Hackett, and even non-Walsh-tree coaches like Charlie Weis owe their offensive legerdemain to the San Francisco professor. Walsh also became famous for scripting his first 15 to 20 plays, a practice now commonplace with most offensive coordinators even at the college level.

At his best, Bill Walsh did the work of a gridiron mathematician, icily dissecting defenses and seeing space and opportunity where others merely saw risk. He was, for a great long while, football’s most beautiful mind, and his system a balletic refutation of the charge that football was a sport of brute over brains. Critics often claimed he saw himself as a genius. If his professional record was any indication, he was correct.

THE LEE CORSO SKIN TONE WATCH

Do you have enough plastic sheeting? It’s an essential part of your family’s preparedness for college football season with many uses: makeshift tailgating shelter, sturdy foodwrap, and a handy sanitary flooring you may put around your vomit perimeter during those long buildups to night games.

Just another reminder from the Department of Homeland Security, who reminds you cheerfully that any instant, someone is thinking about vaporizing you and everything you know and love. Be vigilant. Be concerned. And be happy.


You’re totally going to fucking die.

In addition to the plastic sheeting reminder, we’d like to introduce our attempt to keep America vigilant about the skin condition of a national treasure, Lee Corso. Remember that with variations of outdoor lighting and makeup, Corso’s actual skin tone may vary, but the rules are the same: as it gets either darker or more unnaturally bright, we as a nation should be more and more alarmed for his safety.

Today’s rating: Apricot Stay strong, America. With sunscreen and plastic sheeting, victory will be ours.

Serious thanks to Peter for the graphics.

THE CURIOUS INDEX, 7/31/07

1. We’re having a crisis of sorts. Damn you, Phil Steele-you have to point out the ugly facts of the situation rather than letting us dwell in our fantasy world of long-held grudges, stereotypes, and facile prejudices against teams, their coaches, and their fanbases.

Reading through the Bible last night, we came to the Book of Illinois, and…sigh. They’re still gonna suck, especially across the front of the defensive line and in the still-patchy secondary. (Though corner Vontae Davis will be just fine on his lonesome.) But they won’t suck as much as they did the year before, meaning that [NAME REDACTED] won’t be bullshitting (!) for once when he says that he sees improvement.

And offensively, Illinois’s got a fine rushing attack, mostly because they have two tailbacks in the backfield at all times: Rashard Mendenhall (definitely no relation to Bronco), and alleged quarterback Juice Williams, who with a 39 percent completion rate scraped the sludgy bottom of the rankings last year in that department.

So with a revamped, fancified Wing-T on offense, a defense that’s getting “better and better!,” and a schedule loaded with some gimme pastry in the form of Western Illinois, Ball State, a rebuilding Minnesota, a reeling Indiana…oh, God help us. They might win five or even get bowl eligible with one of those patented [NAME REDACTED] wins that keeps him employed for another year. That pen stabbed into the top of our hand? It’ll be fine with a little Bactine and a clean bandage.

We’d bet a kidney that they do some whacked shit like beating Ohio State but losing to Northwestern.

2. We love China. And we think the NFL will love China, too, if for no other reason than giving the Minnesota Vikings a chance to take a fuckboat down the Yangtze. Take McKinnie and Smoot with the points over the entire crew of Han’s Chungking Pleasure Baths.

3. Reader Lance writes in to say that FSU’s 2008 recruiting class has a distinctly English flair. Among their early recruits: Two Nigels (Bradham and Carr,) a Terrance, an Avis, Vincent, Nick, Travis and finally a British. Not as in a person from England referred to incorrectly, but a guy named British Footman. We hear his style of play is both haughty yet servile all at the same time.


Sir? A zone blocking scheme? Done in a trice, sir.

4. Add Guy Morriss to the endangered coaches list, according to this article from the Dallas News. How miserable are the scorched plains of Waco, Texas for football? Morriss had a winning season at Kentucky of all places, as barren a football landscape as one could imagine-and yet Baylor didn’t even sniff hope in most of their games last season, losing by huge margins to good and bad teams alike.

Mike Singletary is the lust object for most win-hungry boosters. He’s also a favorite of the fans, one of whom was removed from the parking lot of the practice facility after he was caught talking to players about how much better things will be next year with Morriss gone.

5. Add a new badass to our hall of cinematic badasses: learning-disabled Gang-Du from the Korean monster flick The Host. We could talk about what a subtle, witty parable the whole thing is, with the director using the monster as a vehicle through which North Korean/South Korean relations are examined and Korean society as a whole are examined and satirized….

Or we could say that Gang-Du rolls through the film like some kind of indestructible supertard. He’s impervious to sedatives and anaesthetics. He fights the monster with bits of metal and concrete he yanks from the street. He takes a direct hit from the beast and lives. He withstands brain surgery with no local whatsoever. Most impressively, he walks unaffected through the deployment of “Agent Yellow,” a super-evil death agent dropped on the monster in huge yellow clouds. Smart ain’t nothing when you laugh at nerve gas and breathe deep. Rock on, you supertard, you.


We salute Gang-du, Supertard.

6. There’s irresponsible but intriguing scuttlebutt percolating around some impending nastiness at Pitt. That’s about all we’re willing to type at the moment in order to preserve the shred of reliability we’re holding on to here at EDSBS. More speculative fun, this time from an FSU fan we ran into this weekend: Jeff Bowden’s amazing survival streak at FSU may be credited not to Bobby Bowden, but to Ann Bowden, who this fan alleged was the prime mover and defender of Jeffy the Unready via Bobby. It’s an absurd, baseless rumor; yet in the absence of other explanations for keeping an incompetent person on staff for five years, we have to embrace the absurd.

7. Leon Kneefinger, young Gator defensive tackle from Poke Barel High in Nitro, West Virginia, we love you. We couldn’t be more proud of your 4.0 GPA, your willingness to bike over to a classmate’s and assist him with homework, gaining +1 on your stamina and +2 on your popularity. We can’t state the emotions we felt when you had 3 TFL, one sack, and seven tackles overall against Vandy, when you finally broke into the starting lineup and showed all the world your potential. Leon…you’re like the son we’ve never had.

(NCAA 2008: it’s not just a game, it’s a family simulation more satisfying than reality! Fathers take note.)

8. Teams we’re thinking about this week: the Arizonas (U and State,) who we’ll look at in a piece we’re calling “The Dennis Erickson Show.” Fresno State, who hasn’t won shit since joining the WAC. Washington State, who grabbed our attention by having a quarterback named “Brink” who might also be fairly good (WSU was one of several teams to come close to nipping USC last year.) Missouri and the inevitable disappointment they’ll dole out, being a Gary Pinkel team with a habit of running up 5-0 records and then tanking in-conference games. Most intriguingly: Nebraska, a tremendously balanced team getting less than their share of publicity despite having Sam Keller coming into the starting lineup. USC/Nebraska will have to be on the ol’ wristwatch television during the UT/UF hatefest on September 15th.

9. We’ve said it before. We repeat: Tennessee hasn’t had a dominant run game since they hired Jimmy Ray Stephens as offensive line coach. (Clarification: we failed to note Steven’s firing in 2006 here. Still true, but not attributable to Stevens in ‘06.) Counting on them to just invent one now seems like one of the great follies of the preseason preview magazines. They’ve become a pass-first team, and smart teams have recognized this and punished the Vols for it.

10. Reading this week: Jeff Galloway’s New Marathon, which has nothing in it regarding when it’s appropriate to just let loose and fart like a madman. We say exercise discretion on the flats and downhills, but on uphills? That’s extra thrust you can’t spare, Phidippides. Go ahead and fire away, passersby and witnesses be damned, we say.

DAILY AFFIRMATION: VIDEO EDITION

In 33 days…fire your coach if this happens to your team. Immediately. Do not pass go. Don’t even fucking think about giving him 200 dollars.


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