TheGridironGeek
Jolly Good Fellow
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Also just wanted to point out that they still called these plays last year. More often than not they were snuffed out for little to no gain.
You're right, but it doesn't mean they didn't screw up by phasing it out. No play will automatically work whenever you run it. The option can't be successful as a token that you run once in a while (see Mississippi State in the Orange Bowl). It has to be an integrated part of your playbook, with counters that will hurt the defense if they try to stop it.
For instance, the best way to stop the Read-O is to sit your DE's in the weeds, Tom Landry style, like Nick Saban does at Alabama. However, when an offense runs it repetitiously and forces you to sit your DE's for most of the game, it cancels out your pass rush. That's why Ohio State was able to burn Alabama on play action.
If NFL DC's are convinced that they have "figured out" 11 x 11 running plays and that the numerical advantage doesn't matter, how do you account for the Seahawks? The Panthers? Those teams are using the option in an integrated, focused way. Meanwhile other teams are running it every so often as a trick play, and when it doesn't happen to work their coaches say, "See? I knew it was a fad." Yet every time a West Coast style team has a bad day, the players are blamed, not the playbook.
Every Tech fan is familiar with the double standard. My favorite NFL team being the Cardinals, I hope the 49'ers keep believing in it too.
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