As far as I can tell, NO College Football team currently uses the wishbone offensive scheme. Oklahoma, under Barry Switzer, made the wishbone a legitimate, winning offensive formation in the 70's. Navy runs the triple-option veer formation....though it is still a far cry from the wishbone, it does have its similarities.
Bill Walsh is famous for being a college and professional American football coach. He developed the West Coast offense which is still used in American football today.
Yes, in football, if a field goal attempt is blocked by the defense, the offense can still advance the ball if they recover it behind the line of scrimmage.
yes
no
They are technically offense now and to adhere to offensive rules. Blocking, laterals, ball possession, etc....
Yes
Wishbone usually stands for a wish or desire. If the wishbone is unbroken it means the wish will be fulfilled in the near future. If the wishbone is broken or cracked, but all of the pieces are still there the wish will eventually come true. However if the wishbone is broken and a piece is missing, it means your wish will go un-granted.
I think it's illegal, and you can be prosecuted for the offense. But you can still ask the ministry.
not yet still waiting
67
Yes they can
The University of Oklahoma. In 1971 the Oklahoma Sooners offense led the nation in both scoring (45 points average) and total yards (563 total yards average), and set a NCAA record by averaging over 472 rushing yards per game. A record that still stands.