- Messages
- 2,856
I didn’t see anybody wide open. There was a safety over top the guy streaking down the middle. The guys that you could throw to had pretty good coverage. A good throw will beat the coverage, but it’s a tough throw.(Rusher coming from every direction and Disguised pre snap coverage )He had his X & Y WRs wide open.
I didn’t see anybody wide open. There was a safety over top the guy streaking down the middle. The guys that you could throw to had pretty good coverage. A good throw will beat the coverage, but it’s a tough throw.(Rusher coming from every direction and Disguised pre snap coverage )
Didn't Groh have this kind of movement?
Some context here: Wake's offensive FEI that season was 29 (we were #23). App State held Wake to their second lowest point total (20) of the season outside of their game against Clemson (14 points). Game was at App State. BTW, we held Wake to 24 points at home that season.
IMO, that's more of a coverage sack than anything to do with the front 7 and their movement pre snap. I counted 4 seconds (4 mississippi!!!) before the QB started tap dancing...five if he was more savvy to step into the pocket and keep his eyes up field. Still, right slot receiver had bracket coverage with the safety shaded to that side over the top. Right WR was doing an out, and that would have been a 20+/- yard throw from the far hash...which you'd have to have an NFL caliber arm to even think about. CB was close enough to break on the ball or intercept. Smart not to throw it. The left WR had double coverage after the SS peeled down to the flats.
I have no idea what Wake was running, but knowing that the FS was playing over the top, and the slot was running a skinny post....outside LB had coverage on the TE. Could have audibled for RB to leak out to the flats for a 5 yard. Of course, way easier to see after the fact sitting behind a computer screen!
Didn't Groh have this kind of movement?
I didn’t see anybody wide open. There was a safety over top the guy streaking down the middle. The guys that you could throw to had pretty good coverage. A good throw will beat the coverage, but it’s a tough throw.(Rusher coming from every direction and Disguised pre snap coverage )
We looking at two different things. The safety was over the top, so the guy streaking on a go route had someone underneath and over the top. Both of the other guys had decently tight coverage and would have taken a near perfect pass and the far side throw would have been near impossible unless he had an arm like arron Rodgers, that throw can allow a BD to brake on the ball real fast even if the WR looks open. The WR on the short side of the field also had a LB breaking on the underneath while the CB played over the top.He had his X & Y WRs wide open.
Dude that throw is so long it’s not even funny, it’s not nearly as easy as you make it seem, and that far of a throw can be pretty dangerous. A DB can make up a ton of ground and break on a pass like that.A simple out pass to the guy at the top of the screen is an easy completion. that guy is WFO
A simple out pass to the guy at the top of the screen is an easy completion. that guy is WFO
Read post 8 by ibeeballinI’m not hating on this play or D call at all. BUT...if this was a play called by Roof, many posters here would be pulling their hair out and screaming about the DB cushions and back pedaling.
Quick snap while the frikking D is standing in a line. Even in H.S. we had a quick snap play set for occasions like that where the D was goofing around.How dare them actually move around before the snap!
Read post 8 by ibeeballin