More Stitt, from ESPN: (Includes video)
http://espn.go.com/ncf/story/_/id/13529396/montana-grizzlies-coach-bob-stitt-cult-favorite-coaches
MISSOULA, Montana - New Montana coach Bob Stitt has been called everything from Sasquatch to a mad scientist.
Since West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen used Stitt's version of the fly sweep to score four touchdowns in a 70-33 rout of Clemson in the 2012 Orange Bowl -- and then
gave the Division II coach credit in his postgame interview for drawing up the volleyball-like play -- Stitt has become somewhat of an Internet legend, often whispered about but never seen. . . .
"Sometimes the simplest things make a play great," Stitt said.
That's what makes his offense so unique. Stitt isn't trying to reinvent the wheel -- he's only tweaking traditional plays to make them more efficient. When other coaches see his solutions, they're often left wondering why they didn't think of it.
(Texas A&M) wanted to run a tunnel screen against man-to-man press coverage, but hadn't figured out a way to do it. Stitt told Spavital the solution was simple: Don't send the offensive linemen out to block.
"We studied two years of tape and saw how many times an offensive line actually got a block on a screen," Stitt said. "It wasn't very high. A lot of teams did not want to run screens against man [coverage] because there's a defender that's locked on the running back. If you block that guy and leave the offensive line in, it's a two-man deal. It's so simple but effective."
Texas A&M ran the tunnel screen three times for 49 yards and three first downs in its 52-28 victory at South Carolina in the 2014 opener. . . .
(A fun article to read)