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How Many Yards Will GT Run For Against Duke
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<blockquote data-quote="MidtownJacket" data-source="post: 470802" data-attributes="member: 959"><p>The other thing that is important to remember is that all offenses that are worth a lick take what the defense is giving them. If you play a stand out coverage guy, then you don’t throw to his side of the field / assignment unless forced to. </p><p></p><p>The defense we played was unable to stop our options and types of run. If you move away from that and all of a sudden start to have issues (fumble, interception, 3 and out) you give away momentum. In an emotional game already fraught with boogeymen for our yellow jackets it feels foolhardy to focus on anything other than gas down, full frontal assault winning. We exorcised the road game demons, we won on a huge stage - only game of P5vP5 on espn and beat a team who had every reason to come out hot as hell and angry based on their last loss. </p><p></p><p>I’ll take that. </p><p></p><p>If we go up to duke and they stop the dive then I hope we run the counter trap we had going all night as well next week. CPJ says time and time again the opponent stopping the run against a traditional offense opens up quick throws for their QB. Against us it should open up quick pitches and outside options or midline/counter/traps. We use more intricate ball movement and misdirection in lieu of the quick throw / bubble screen / slants that I think many other teams run (tic) against run defense. </p><p></p><p>Even though we had the clear ability to road grade their Dline and just pound the inside he went more exotic with the traps and pitches to practice our response to the exact thing people are demanding he prepare for: traditional run defense stopping our dive and midfield run game. </p><p></p><p>CBP admitted to emptying their scheme bank against us on defense, he actually said “we tried every look we had game planned all year long and couldn’t stop them” or STTE. We literally just ran a clinic on how the option accounts for any Defensive look without passing (because the option accomplishes the same thing as the pass, get the ball outside quickly). The level of opponent certainly goes up next week but “game-practice” in garbage time on what we do makes more sense to me than forcing pass concepts we don’t know cold. We need this and every win we can get, that comes first. </p><p></p><p></p><p>Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MidtownJacket, post: 470802, member: 959"] The other thing that is important to remember is that all offenses that are worth a lick take what the defense is giving them. If you play a stand out coverage guy, then you don’t throw to his side of the field / assignment unless forced to. The defense we played was unable to stop our options and types of run. If you move away from that and all of a sudden start to have issues (fumble, interception, 3 and out) you give away momentum. In an emotional game already fraught with boogeymen for our yellow jackets it feels foolhardy to focus on anything other than gas down, full frontal assault winning. We exorcised the road game demons, we won on a huge stage - only game of P5vP5 on espn and beat a team who had every reason to come out hot as hell and angry based on their last loss. I’ll take that. If we go up to duke and they stop the dive then I hope we run the counter trap we had going all night as well next week. CPJ says time and time again the opponent stopping the run against a traditional offense opens up quick throws for their QB. Against us it should open up quick pitches and outside options or midline/counter/traps. We use more intricate ball movement and misdirection in lieu of the quick throw / bubble screen / slants that I think many other teams run (tic) against run defense. Even though we had the clear ability to road grade their Dline and just pound the inside he went more exotic with the traps and pitches to practice our response to the exact thing people are demanding he prepare for: traditional run defense stopping our dive and midfield run game. CBP admitted to emptying their scheme bank against us on defense, he actually said “we tried every look we had game planned all year long and couldn’t stop them” or STTE. We literally just ran a clinic on how the option accounts for any Defensive look without passing (because the option accomplishes the same thing as the pass, get the ball outside quickly). The level of opponent certainly goes up next week but “game-practice” in garbage time on what we do makes more sense to me than forcing pass concepts we don’t know cold. We need this and every win we can get, that comes first. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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