The transition from the spread passing offense to the triple-option attack has been harder on some positions than it has on others, and that was especially evident in Georgia Southern’s 33-31 loss Saturday at home against Wofford, as the offensive line appeared to take a step back after the 38-21 win over Elon on September 25. "We had 12 negative-yardage plays out of 67 plays, and a center-quarterback [exchange], so I guess that was 13," said offensive coordinator/offensive line coach Brent Davis. "I told them when almost 20 percent of your plays are negative yardage plays, you’re in a bad situation.
GSU Football Notebook: Offensive line works on execution