UNT football: 'Fake fair catch' represents culmination of major special teams investment

By Gary Sanderson

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DENTON -- UNT football made a whole bunch of national headlines after destroying Arkansas 44-17. But easily the signature play of the day wasn’t on offense or defense – it was on special teams.

Punt returner Keegan Brewer pulled off what became known as the “fake fair catch,” though both Brewer and special teams coordinator Marty Biagi take issue with the name. UNT legend “Mean” Joe Green even called it the greatest play he’s ever seen.

Those plays don’t just happen by accident. UNT is meticulous with its preparation on special teams, treating it just like both other phases of the game. The “fake fair catch” is only the culmination of that investment.

“Special teams ia a big part of this program,” Brewer said. “We practice thousands and thousands of reps to make sure that we can win that phase. It has to do with trust too, because trust plays a big part between the players and the coaches here.”

The attention to detail in the play was astounding. Biagi communicated with the refs that Brewer would not be signaling for a fair catch, so to not blow the whistle. Quarterback Mason Fine said his job was to keep the offense off the field so the group wouldn’t be penalized. Biagi coached Brewer to keep his feet moving, even after he settled, so that he could switch into running mode as quickly as possible and potentially avoid defenders.

Ultimately, it ended with a huge punt return for a touchdown to take a 14-0 lead in Fayetteville and steal the momentum.

Littrell has preached special teams since he arrived in 2016. The Mean Green jumped from No. 96 in S&P+ special teams efficiency under Dan McCarney to No. 34 in one offseason.

“It’s huge. There’s three phases of football: offense, defense and special teams. You gotta win two out of the three phases in order to win a football game,” Littrell said. “Our guys work extremely hard – just like they do on offense and defense – to perfect special teams.”

In 2017, Littrell decided to invest even more in the third phase. He hired Biagi away from Notre Dame to be a dedicated special teams coach. Only four other FBS programs in the state have a dedicated special teams coach. Four programs don’t have special teams coaches at all.

Special teams coordinator Programs Average ST rank
Full-time UNT, Texas Tech, UTEP, UTSA, Rice 20.5
Part-time Texas, Texas State, Houston 62.3
None Baylor, Texas A&M, TCU, SMU 53.5

The results have been dramatic. UNT ranks No. 10 nationally in special teams efficiency in 2018, behind only Texas Tech in the state.

UNT is dominating opponents in every phase of special teams. The Mean Green average 33.4 yards per kick return, but allow just 18.2 yards per return. They’ve held opponents to just two punt returns on 12 attempts.

Transfer kicker Cole Hedlund has nailed all 10 of his field goals and all 16 of his extra points. UNT’s opponents are just 2-of-3 overall. In addition to Brewer’s punt return touchdown, DeAndre Torrey has a 96-yard touchdown kickoff return.

Simply put, UNT consistently starts with better field position than its opponents, scores without its offense being on the field and capitalizes on virtually all its trips inside the 30-yard line. That’s an incredible advantage.

Every phase came to fruition against Arkansas. Brewer had his 90-yard punt return for a touchdown against the Razorbacks. On average, Arkansas started within its own 17-yard line after UNT punts. Hedlund, a former Arkansas kicker, nailed all three of his field goals in Fayetteville. The Razorbacks missed a 38-yard kick in the second quarter.

These numbers aren’t sexy. Fans want to read about video game offenses and game-breaking defenses. UNT has both of those too. But when the margin of error slips and games are closer, special teams can provide that final edge. The third phase of the game will undoubtedly come into play later in the year, and UNT will be prepared. 

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