Oldgoldandwhite
Helluva Engineer
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Seemed MSU went into halftime with the intention of stopping the passing game and our outside game. They had no answer to what CPJ had waiting for them the second half.
I think those plays are part of the belly series - particularly the play described in the 3rd paragraph. We've seen it a few times this season. Somebody with more knowledge than me can elaborate.
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This is true. However, I don't think the kids were learning this stuff for the first time. We have run all these plays in the past. I am sure we repped them to death in the practices leading up to the game to get sharp though. I think the way CPJ operates is he installs a bunch of stuff over time, but only uses a portion of it in any one game plan. Then, if he decides to use some wrinkles from the playbook, he only has to polish the diamond in the week of practice. We run our bread and butter plays every game, but there always seems to be somethng to go to if that stuff starts to break down.I think a large amount of recognition needs to be paid to our our offensive assistant coaches who took CPJ's game plan and taught it to the players in the weeks leading up to the game. Coach can't do it by himself.
One play that I haven't seen discussed and that really got my attention was Michael Summer's catch. It wasn't a big gain, nothing fancy, but his acceleration from catching the ball standing still to turning up field was impressive . . . or at least it looked that way in real time. Anyone else remember that play?
edit: great writeup Boomer!