Talk:Pistol offense

Gregg Easterbrook being used as a reference
Don't use as a reference an article with as many factual articles as Greg Easterbrook included in his article on the pistol. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.135.137.165 (talk) 02:33, 6 December 2010 (UTC)

reference to Nebraska in the 1997 Fiesta Bowl
Perhaps the 1996 Fiesta Bowl (2 Jan 1996) was intended here and not the 1997 Fiesta Bowl. According to Wikipedia Nebraska played in the Fiesta Bowl on 2 Jan 1996 and 2 Jan 2000. Nebraska played in the Orange Bowl on 2 Jan 1998 which could loosely be called the 1997 Orange Bowl perhaps as it was a bowl game for the end of the 1997 college football season. I believe that I recall Nebraska beating Florida for the national championship in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl (which capped off the 1995 college football season) and lining up at least one time in a passing formation after having established a dominant running game from one of their tripple option formations at the time. Florida's defense lined up spread out to cover a pass as that was what Nebraska was showing but Nebraska then proceeded to run from that formation gaining significant yards on that play. I do not recall if the Nebraska quarterback (Tommy Frazier) lined up under center or three or five yards back. But it would make sense if he did not line up under center in order to show pass to the Florida defense. Halconen (talk) 19:28, 11 November 2008 (UTC)

Kansas City Chiefs
I think the first sighting of the pistol offense in the NFL is with the Kansas City Chiefs except they call it the "I-Gun," but the principles are there - the QB lines up in a "half-shotgun" position like the quarterbacks at the University Of Nevada and it helps the young quarterback, Tyler Thigpen greatly.

21:24, 30 November 2008 (UTC)

List
Is it really necessary to have a list of teams using the formation? It's long and unwieldy, not to mention potentially inaccurate as teams change schemes year-to-year.

Gedca (talk) 00:42, 1 August 2014 (UTC)