the only evidence on your side really is collins is bad. that doesn’t mean that one system is or isn’t effective. the option was getting crushed by clemson and uga and pretty much rendered useless by any big teams. there’s a reason no one else in p5 football is running it and it really shouldn’t come back
Problem = name any team - besides Bama - that wasn't smushed by Clemson and Ugag in 2016 - 18. Clemson lost by one point to Pitt in 16, to Syracuse (!) by 3 in 17, and were MNC in 18. Ugag lost to Auburn in 17, to several teams (including Tech!) in 16, and LSU in 18. Clemson beat Tech by 19 in 16 and 14 in 17. Ugag beat Tech by 31 in 17 (pretty bad) and
lost to Tech by 1 in 16. Both teams handled us pretty easily in 2018, but then Clemson was MNC that year and Ugag had one regular season loss. In short, everybody got their heads handed to them by Clemson in 2016 - 18 and, with 2016 as an exception, by Ugag too. We simply lost, like most everybody else; worse to Clemson than to Ugag, when you look at the game stats. And, lest we forget, we won 9 games in 2016 and 7 in 2018, despite defensive problems. That doesn't mean, btw, that the 2014 team, for instance, couldn't have done pretty well in 2017 and 18. Or today, for that matter, despite the rule changes. (I don't think these would do anything except change the blocking schemes.)
As to no one else running the spread option in P5 football, two things. First, you are converting a
plus into a minus. When I was in college we ran a classic single wing. And we won like gang busters all four years I was there, mainly because nobody had the time to really prepare for us. We saw the same thing at Tech, even in Paul's later years. Second, the main reason people aren't running the spread option more is that it is hard to find coaches familiar with it. All the coaches out there - you can check - know that it works; ask the P5 teams that Army and Air Force beat in their bowl games last year. But it requires assistants who know what they are doing and that means taking a risk, something nobody in college football wants to do these days.
But I wasn't saying that we should bring back the spread; anything that catches our opponents off track would do just fine. Maybe Long can do something about that. If Collins lets him, that is.