BENTONVILLE — A giant, white dry erase board hangs from the wall behind the desk of Bentonville offensive coordinator Barry Lunney Jr.
Diagrams of all kinds of plays litter the board these days. Same was the case this past summer, when Bentonville’s offensive coaches spent considerable time dreaming up ways to adapt the Tigers’ playbook for this season.
“We went through a lot of markers on the board,” said Bentonville offensive line coach Benji Mahan. “One thing we have at Bentonville is we have smart kids. We feel like we can load them up mentally with different formations, and force defenses to cover it all.”
Lunney Jr. and Mahan, roommates from their playing days at Arkansas, didn’t reshape the Bentonville offense. The Tigers are still running the same kind of zone rushing plays they always have under fifth-year coach Barry Lunney.
Only now, they’re doing so out of a plethora of different looks, evidenced by the summer sessions at the dry erase board. The reason for the tweaking: The combination new running back Courtney Haskell calls the “three-back threat.”
Haskell, a senior transfer from Warren, possesses Division I talent and has averaged 7.3 yards per carry this season. Shane Boedeker rushed for 1,243 yards last season in helping Bentonville win the 7A state championship. And junior quarterback Pearson Gean is a strong runner at 6-foot-2, 195 pounds.
That talent and depth — along with a smart and talented offensive line — has given Bentonville a legit chance at leading the 7A-West in rushing again, for the third straight season. Trying to accomplish the same goal through a different style has Lunney guarded, but excited.
“I know we’re probably giving defensive coordinators a lot to work on,” Lunney said. “We still have so much to work on, but we’re able to do a lot of different things this year.”
History With The Run
Bentonville has run more often than it has passed the previous two seasons, and so far this year. That must make Lunney — and Lunney Jr. — feel nostalgic.
Lunney coached Fort Smith Southside to four state championships during his second stint as a head coach at the Fort Smith school. The first two titles came via the nearly extinct Wing-T formation, one with Lunney Jr. playing quarterback.
Still, the fact Bentonville has relied so heavily on the run in recent years was never the plan. Lunney played an integral role in introducing the spread offense throughout Arkansas high school football, and his first two Tiger teams weren’t bashful through the air.
In fact, when Lunney arrived in Bentonville, there wasn’t much mystery about the type of offense he intended to run. Mahan remembered thinking Bentonville’s 2005 and 2006 teams would operate with quarterback Ryan Isabell solely in the shotgun.
“When we first got here, we pretty much were a spread team,” Lunney Jr. said. “We had small linemen, a good quarterback and good wideouts. So we tried to spread it out and throw it. We felt good about it at the time, but things changed (in 2007).
Lunney Jr. said the coaching staff noticed “bigger linemen” in 2007 and, of course, the Tigers had running back Anthony Blackmon, who’s now at Central Arkansas. So the switch to an offense operating “under center” seemed to make sense.
Blackmon ended up rushing for 2,596 yards in 2007, setting the single-season record for most regular-season yards.
“That’s the year we decided to hang our hat on the zone play,” Mahan said. “We decided we wanted to be great at that. We didn’t want to just be good at a bunch of things. We didn’t even care if other teams knew how to beat us.
“We just wanted to be able to line up, know exactly what we’re doing and run the ball well.”
Tiger Transition
Bentonville’s mastering of the zone play helped the Tigers win the state championship last season.
While their stingy defense fueled the Tigers’ state title run, the backfield combination of Boedeker and Erik Ragsdale aided them immensely. The Tigers still led the 7A-West in rushing, and Lunney Jr. didn’t figure he’d spend the summer adding formations on a dry erase board.
But then Haskell walked into Lunney’s office, a gift to an already stacked Bentonville offense for 2009. The Tigers’ coaches already believed they’d succeed on the ground this season with Gean and Boedeker behind an experienced, intelligent and athletic offensive line.
Haskell’s arrival changed everything.
“I’ve told my guys this,” Mahan said. “Very few times do you have a line like ours with an explosive back like Courtney. Usually it’s one or the other, but not both. I tell them we shouldn’t waste it.”
Lunney Jr. didn’t intend to. When asked earlier this week to draw out a few offensive formations for a reporter, he smiled. He didn’t mind describing a few, but he insisted Bentonville intended to expand their offense in the coming weeks and months.
The Tigers haven’t been tested offensively through two games, scoring 92 points, and they won’t face much resistance tonight against Nettleton. So expect the Tigers to unveil more of their offense when they begin 7A-West play next Friday at Fayetteville.
Expect more of Gean in the shotgun and expect more of Boedeker and Haskell in the backfield together — they had 15 plays at the same time last Friday night.
“We’ve always been fairly multiple, but this is the most versatile we’ve been,” Lunney Jr. said. “We’re the most broad as far as formations. We want to continue to do that down the stretch.
“I feel like we’ve almost come full circle with our offense, since we’re doing some things out of the spread now again.”
Three-Back Threat
Fort Zumwalt (Mo.) West coach Paul Day didn’t mince words last Friday night.
Bentonville’s running game pounded out 300 yards, and Gean completed passes to eight different Tigers during the 50-19 blowout. After the game, Day said Bentonville had “the best offensive team we’ve seen in more than 10 years.”
The fact each of Bentonville’s three backs possesses unique talents surely helps to explain that comment.
Haskell, a 5-11, 202-pounder with 4.4 speed, displays a rare mix of speed and strength. Warren coach Bo Hembree said he felt sick when Haskell informed him about his move to Northwest Arkansas for family reasons.
Hembree thought so much of Haskell to give him five carries in the Class 4A state championship game — as a freshman. Haskell battled injuries his last two seasons at Warren but played when he could, forever earning his coach’s respect.
“I wish I would’ve played him more that year to be honest,” Hembree said. “We may have won that state title game.”
Lunney Jr. said the Bentonville offense “doesn’t really play to Courtney’s strengths,” so that’s part of the reason he and Mahan have created plays for him. Boedeker does know the Tigers’ offense inside and out, however, he said Wednesday that Haskell has caught on so fast, the Warren transfer helps Boedeker during some practices.
Boedeker, 5-9, 197, possesses an uncanny ability to read blocks and cut back at the right time, Lunney said. And Lunney Jr. said Gean deserves to be referred to as “another running back. The junior quarterback has seemed increasingly comfortable running Bentonville’s zone option play out of the shotgun, sometimes run with Boedeker and Haskell on either side of him.
That’s a dangerous play the Tigers haven’t run much under Lunney before this season, another example of the offense’s 2009 expansion.
“The one thing I’ve really been proud of the last five years is that we’ve been able to adapt to our kids,” Mahan said. “You can’t recruit. You get what you get, and our system has been able to adapt to that.
“We have Pearson, Courtney and Shane now, and we have to get them all the ball. It’s no longer just two-tight, Blackmon back there and hand it to him. Now we have some weapons and we’ve adapted our system, without really changing it all that much.”