People that don't like the spread, don't understand the spread. They dislike it due to myths that it's "not physical enough". I've had this argument a million times with people over the years. They would always point to Bama's dominance in the Pro-Style and Oregon's failures in the spread. I always had plenty of rebuttals for that garbage but now that Ohio State, Clemson and even Bama are winning with the spread I don't need to engage people in this debate anymore.
A good spread offense is borderline genius and pretty much unstoppable. Nick Saban is a defensive mastermind and he gets his **** pushed in by good spread offenses.
People that point to Oregon's struggles against good defenses fail to realize that Oregon wouldn't even be a notable squad if it wasn't for their innovative offense. THEY'RE OREGON! There's plenty of other schools in the country that are just like them. Teams with (mostly) inferior players who make a name for themselves by out-coaching Defensive Coordinators week after week.
That Pro-Style prehistoric I-formation stuff is too easy to defend. Unless you have 5 hosses up front, a QB who can take drops, a boulder at Fullback and an inline Tight-End then you're wasting your time. All you're doing is bringing more defenders in the box without a sufficient way to block them. Schematically the Pro-Style offense does little to stress a defense and make a Defensive Coordinator think.
If your advantage is SPEED and you're not running the spread then you're a dummy. Why would I put TE's and FB's on the field when I can utilize four WR's who all run 4.4 forties? Now I force the defense to sub-in more DB's, guys that would normally be 2nd string Corners. Now I've got them scrubs trying to cover my 4.4 slot WR's in space.