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Duke embracing option offense as 2013 spring football practice opens

DUKEFOOTBALL06.030413.TI
Takaaki Iwabu - tiwabu@newsobserver.com
Duke quarterback Anthony Boone, right, spent the past three years as a backup. This season, it’s Boone’s time to take control of the offense – with his legs and feet. (Takaaki Iwabu - tiwabu@newsobserver.com)

DURHAM Duke coach David Cutcliffe made his name coaching Peyton and Eli Manning, two of the best traditional dropback passers in the NFL.

Now, preparing for his sixth season at Duke, he’s embracing the option offense.

“The game has changed,” Cutcliffe said Monday after Duke’s first spring practice. “The field is the same size that it has always been, and the defense is bigger, faster and stronger. We’re reverting right back to single-wing football is what we’re doing, where you have these weapons at your disposal, misdirection, anything you can do.”

Cutcliffe and his staff have been preparing for a more option-based attack for a few years, as evidenced by their recruiting of dual-threat quarterbacks such as Anthony Boone and his backup, Thomas Sirk. And now that Sean Renfree is gone, it is Boone’s time to take control of the offense – with his feet and his legs.

“I can get the necessary yards, which after a zone read is like four or five yards,” Boone said. “I don’t have the Johnny Manziel breakaway speed, but I definitely have enough to outrun some linebackers.”

Boone, a rising redshirt junior, spent the past three years behind Renfree on the depth chart. But when Renfree went down with an elbow injury late in the third quarter at Wake Forest with the game tied at 20, it was Boone who led the Blue Devils to the win. And the next week against Virginia, he made his first career start, completing 18-of-31 passes for 212 yards and four touchdowns as Duke won 42-17. Boone also ran seven times for 41 yards.

After those two games Boone realized he needed to be in better shape if he was going to be the starting quarterback. He has also worked on staying more even keel so he can avoid excessive celebration penalties like the one he picked up against the Demon Deacons.

“The more comfortable I get in the offense, the more comfortable guys get around me.”

Boone handled his first day as the No. 1 quarterback well, Cutcliffe said. The coach was pleased with everyone’s performance, saying the practice was perfect from an effort standpoint and the best opening day, spring or fall, the Blue Devils have had in his tenure.

“Literally guys were jumping around, moving around, flying around, you could just see that guys were hungry,” defensive end Kenny Anunike said. “Yeah, we got to a bowl game, but we didn’t win. And everybody knows that. And we know that we’re not done yet. We’re not here. We made major steps for this program, but we haven’t arrived.”

To take the next step and clinch the program’s first winning season since 1994 – that Belk Bowl loss left Duke at 6-7 last year – the Blue Devils are making the run game the No. 1 priority for the spring. That includes executing it on offense and stopping it on defense.

“We’re looking forward to being a more physical team,” Boone said.

It will be up to him to help spark that transformation.

Keeley 919-829-4556; Twitter @laurakeeley

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