No Bostic did right. It's up to the qb to adjust to the pitch key walked up on the LOS. Also the the OT is responsible for the MLB in a 4-3. The play side A back has the safety, although you will see him switch with the WR and take the corner at times.
This is actually veer, and it looks like a it was read. The DE shoved the OT down to disrupt his release to the 2nd level and to squeeze the B backs's path. Brady Swilling did a great job on this play.
No, predetermined has to do with the play call from CPJ, not a qbs decision. If a true midline (with a read) is called and there is a 1 tech, you can either flip the play or check to veer.
Again another predetermined keep. You can tell because the 3 Tech gets blocked, and Laskey doesn't sell the mesh well and immediately acts as a lead blocker. Another dead give away that a play is predetermined is when you see Base blocking across the front. This play was base blocked. Looks...
pretty much. There are 2 types of veer. Inside and outside. Outside veer is not used much if at all anymore. So the term veer refers to inside veer. Midline is almost straight up the middle on b back path. Blocking rules for veer and midline are quite different, but you are correct on...
Didn't say it was midline. What I said is that is a play that mimics the veer when a qb misses the give to the B back and follows behind him. It was a designed keep. Most veer teams have a rule that if you miss your read on the DE, you follow behind the B back.
When a qb misses his read on veer, he is supposed to follow the B back. It looks like he didn't miss his read, but was told to keep and follow no matter what.
What 33 is saying makes since, because there is a pitch, which rarely happens with midline. It was midline and predetermined because CPJ wanted to suck the Sam in and go wide. It's basically a rocket toss with misdirection if you catch my drift. You can't misdirection a rocket toss, and veer...
It's got a "crack" tag on it as well. No doubt it predetermined. Very rarely will a midline have a pitch that is not predetermined. We ran this play vs FSU in '09 when their safeties were chasing a back motion. Dwyer had a long TD run although it may have been veer out of the same motion.
It's Midline predetermined pitch. Midline rarely has a pitch as an possibility. The reason it was called, is that SAM LB is sucking in on midline because there usually is not a pitch. When it's predetermined, you can dedicate blockers to the edge that you normally can't due to reading the play.
The Byerly play is Veer and it looks like he missed the read on the DE. The Va Tech play also Veer, but was a predetermined qb keep. Since the qb is going to keep the ball, the B back fakes the dive and reach blocks the overhang. On most of our predetermined veer plays, the DE is blocked...
It depends on what the defense is running and what they are giving you. For example if we are facing the 3-4, the midline becomes a veer track for the b back, so you can't run it. The more traditional 4-3 we see, the more midline you will see. You can't just run the midline because you have...
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