Wednesday 28 November 2012

Wild Cat Wallpaper

Source(google.com.pk)
Wild Cat Wallpaper Biography
Heading into the season finale against ASU, a fatigued Wildcat Wallpaper commissioned the help of Robb Gibson, an esteemed local graphic designer (who I have teamed up with previously to create beauties such as our No Pepper Games softball logo) to help put a Ka’Deem Carey twist on a popular British saying. I nearly poured a beer over Robb’s head in June 2010, when he showed up to the bar for the USA-England World Cup game wearing an England shirt, but thankfully we’ve remained friends and I’m pleased to have tapped into Robb’s “‘allo, guv-na!” spirit to create this week’s wallpaper that honors the nation’s leading rusher.The wildcat formation (or wildcat offense), a variation on the single-wing formation, is an offensive American and Canadian football scheme that has been used since the late 1990s at every level of the game including the CFL, NFL, NCAA, NAIA, and many high schools across America. It was invented by Billy Ford and Ryan Wilson, originally called the "Dual" formation. The general scheme can be implemented in many different offensive systems, but the distinguishing factors of Wildcat are a direct snap to the running back and an unbalanced offensive line.
The wildcat is an offensive formation rather than an overall offensive philosophy or offense (for example, a spread option offense might use the wildcat formation to keep the defense guessing, or a West Coast offense may use the power-I formation to threaten a powerful run attack). When the wildcat formation is deployed, it uses the same pre-snap motion coming across the formation on every play and every play initially looks like a sweep behind zone blocking. However, after the snap several things may happen once a player in motion crosses the position of the player receiving the snap.
One possible precursor to the wildcat formation was named the "wing-T",[1][2] and is widely credited to being first implemented by Coach Tubby Raymond and Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team.[3][4][5] Tubby Raymond later wrote a book on the innovative formation. The wildcat's similarity to the wing-T is the focus on series football, where the initial movements of every play look similar. For example, the wing-T makes use of motion across the formation as well in order to draw a reaction from the defense, but runs several different plays from the same look.
Another possible precursor[citation needed] to the wildcat is the offense of Six-Man Football, a form of high school football, played mostly in rural West Texas and Montana, that was developed in 1934. In six-man, the person who receives the snap may not run the ball past the line of scrimmage. To bypass this limitation, teams often hike the ball to a receiver, who then tosses the ball to the potential passer. The passer may then throw the ball to a receiver or run with the ball himself.
The virtue of having a running back take the snap in the wildcat formation is that the rushing play is 11-on-11, although different variations have the running back hand off or throw the football.[citation needed] In a standard football formation, when the quarterback stands watching, the offense operates 10-on-11 basis. The motion also presents the defense with an immediate threat to the outside that it must respect no matter what the offense decides to do with the football.The wildcat has been continued by current Arkansas State head coach Gus Malzahn, and former Ole Miss Rebels offensive coordinator David Lee when they were offensive coordinators for the Arkansas Razorbacks after seeing the success of Bill Snyder and Urban Meyer. In 2006, Malzahn was the offensive coordinator for the Razorbacks. Malzahn introduced the wildcat into the Arkansas offense. When Malzahn left for Tulsa in 2007, Lee became the offensive coordinator for the Razorbacks. Both Malzahn and Lee ran a variation of the wildcat formation which prominently featured running backs Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. The wildcat formation was sometimes called the "wildhog" (in honor of the Razorback mascot at the University of Arkansas) and subsequently rebranded as the "Wild Rebel"[8] when Arkansas head coach Houston Nutt went to Ole Miss as head coach (Ole Miss' mascot being the Rebels), and a variation involving a direct snap to a tight end has also been called the "Wild Turkey" popularized by the Virginia Tech Hokies.
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper 
Wild Cat Wallpaper

No comments:

Post a Comment