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<blockquote data-quote="takethepoints" data-source="post: 1008557" data-attributes="member: 265"><p>Since most schools run pretty much the same plays with different emphasis (Kansas State runs the QB a lot, Michigan runs their TB, ect.) I doubt knowing the plays in a standard playbook would help any opponent much. It sure won't tell them when or against who certain mixes of plays will be run; i.e. it won't reveal game plans. That's why schools employ so many "assistants" to plot how teams run plays. Usually this isn't too hard to figure out as the season progresses. Then it all depends on talent and execution.</p><p></p><p>And, again, this is one of the things I liked about the spread option. There were only about 20 or so plays. The difference was in how the opposing D was blocked and that was something the opposing DC provided Paul information about as the game progressed; i.e there was no game plan except what Paul called and how the play was blocked. Crafty that was.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="takethepoints, post: 1008557, member: 265"] Since most schools run pretty much the same plays with different emphasis (Kansas State runs the QB a lot, Michigan runs their TB, ect.) I doubt knowing the plays in a standard playbook would help any opponent much. It sure won't tell them when or against who certain mixes of plays will be run; i.e. it won't reveal game plans. That's why schools employ so many "assistants" to plot how teams run plays. Usually this isn't too hard to figure out as the season progresses. Then it all depends on talent and execution. And, again, this is one of the things I liked about the spread option. There were only about 20 or so plays. The difference was in how the opposing D was blocked and that was something the opposing DC provided Paul information about as the game progressed; i.e there was no game plan except what Paul called and how the play was blocked. Crafty that was. [/QUOTE]
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