Yes, a good analysis of Walsh and the WCO. However, it seems to me that fans have mostly forgotten how important Paul Brown was. Without digging back for the previous THN discussion of WCO, which included a drawing of a tree to show Brown's "coaching tree", here are a few tid-bits from Wiki.
In my opinion, most of modern NFL coaching techniques derive from Brown. He was probably about ten years ahead of the NFL when his All-America Footbal Conference Cleveland Browns (long withg the Colts and 49ers) joined the NFL.
Paul Eugene Brown (September 7, 1908 - August 5, 1991) was a coach in American football and a major figure in the development of the National Football League. A seminal figure in football history, Brown is considered the "father of the modern offense," with many claiming that he ranks as one of if not the greatest of football coaches in history. Such claims are backed by significant evidence: Brown dominated as a gridiron general on every major level -- high school, college, and professional.
Brown began as a high school coach in Severna, Maryland (!), quickly moving back to Massillon, Ohio.
Brown had achieved this success by implementing a system at Massillon based on techniques developed by Dr. John B. "Jock" Sutherland, head coach at the University of Pittsburgh. Sutherland had played professional football for the pioneer Massillon Tigers club when Brown was a boy and had gone on to success as a coach. Brown planned every phase of his program, detailing practice schedules, assigning assistant coaches (which he dubbed "position coaches") specific duties, and installing his entire system in Massillon's junior high schools so that players would already know his system when they reached high school.
Note that. In high school, no less, at a time when champions like the Redskins and Bears were still wrapped up in the raccoon-coat style of 1920's college football.
While the AAFC lasted only four seasons, the Browns served as the gold standard for the league, winning all four championships and losing only four games during the league's four-year existence.
Brown put together the most extensive player recruitment network that had ever been seen in pro football at the time. The great majority of the early Browns teams came from Massillon, Ohio State and Great Lakes. One key move came when he tapped Otto Graham, a single-wing tailback during his days at Northwestern University, as his quarterback, providing the team with a signal caller who would lead the team to the league title game in each of his 10 seasons. In addition, Brown ignored the gentlemen's agreement that barred African-American players from the league, adding future Pro Football Hall of Famers Marion Motley and Bill Willis.
Following the merger between the NFL and AAFC, the Browns, along with the San Francisco 49ers and the first Baltimore Colts franchise, moved to the NFL in 1950. Critics had predicted that the overall weakness of the AAFC would expose the Browns. However, in their very first official NFL game, the Browns dismantled the two-time defending champion Philadelphia Eagles 35-10, putting up 487 yards of total offense, 346 of them in the air. They won the NFL Championship in their first year, defeating the Rams in the title game on December 24 on a last-minute field goal by Lou Groza. The Browns went on to appear in the next five title games, winning back-to-back titles in 1954 and 1955.
Brown was a great innovator during his time in Cleveland. He was the first to use intelligence tests to judge players, establish a game film library, instruct players in a classroom setting, use a radio transmitter to communicate with players on the field, and install face masks on helmets. Another innovation was the use of "messenger guards" to relay plays from the sidelines after the radio proved problematic due to the technology then available. The offense directed by Graham was the predecessor of the West Coast offense made famous by Bill Walsh, a protégé of Brown.
He was also a person known for his stubborn approach to criticism. In 1950, Eagles head coach Greasy Neale dismissed the Browns' shredding of his Eagles' vaunted defense in the season opener by saying, "All they do is pass the ball." In the team's subsequent meeting a few months later, the Browns set an NFL record that still stands by attempting no passes in a 13-7 win over the Eagles.
After being shoved out of the NFL by Browns owner Art Modell, Brown made a success of the Bengals.
Coaching family tree
The following coaches either coached under or played for Paul Brown and were influenced at least to some degree by him and his football knowledge and offensive system:
* Blanton Collier (coach)
* Weeb Ewbank (coach under Paul Brown)
* Abe Gibron (player)
* Sid Gillman (coach)
* Otto Graham (player)
* Bill "Tiger" Johnson (coach)
* Chuck Noll (player)
* Ara Parseghian (player)
* Don Shula (player for Paul Brown)
* Bill Walsh (coach)
* Sam Wyche (player and head coach under team President Paul Brown)
Connection to the Redskins?
- Brown's Browns consistently mashed the Redskins in the '50s
- In the late 50s, when George Preston Marshall refused to allow black players on the Skins, Post great Shirley Povich used one Browns game to note: "While Marshall's Redskins remain firmly segregated, Jim Brown and Bobby Mitchell integrated the Redskins endzone for five touchdowns yesterday.."
- Otto Graham instituted the Paul Brown passing game as Redskins head coach in the '60s. That team had no running game, not much defense, but few teams have ever had a passing game as good.