bobongo
Helluva Engineer
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It is maddening, seeing them less than a yard from the goal line, snapping the ball backwards 5-6 yards.
Me, too. QB sneak. End of problem.
It is maddening, seeing them less than a yard from the goal line, snapping the ball backwards 5-6 yards.
Me, too. QB sneak. End of problem.
Maybe Coach Pat (I just made that up on the fly) can steal CPJ's goal line package and incorporate it into our new O.
Our kids certainly know how to run it.
I think changing the DC is a D*** move, to towards the current DC... Nate Woody didn't even have time to get his first kid into place. All I can say is, this new DC better be lights out. We just tossed a really good one out.
Is it possible to run those old plays without months of continuous practice by the same people ? We sure didn't shift into different offenses in the past. Had hoped we would sub more than AB to run them."Coach Pat" has been called a "copycat" OC (but they all are, to some extent). I wonder if he'll incorporate some version of Paul Johnson's plays. I would like to see a few derivatives implemented from time to time.
You can make quite a career out of stealing good ideas from other people. I’m living proof of that."Coach Pat" has been called a "copycat" OC (but they all are, to some extent). I wonder if he'll incorporate some version of Paul Johnson's plays. I would like to see a few derivatives implemented from time to time.
Is it possible to run those old plays without months of continuous practice by the same people ? We sure didn't shift into different offenses in the past. Had hoped we would sub more than AB to run them.
I like your idea and say it's a good idea. Make them prepare for all kinds of packages.
I'm with you here...even if our base set is out of the shotgun, we should have a short yardage package that puts the QB under center and consists of more than just sneaks and middle runs. I can't stand watching an offense just give up 5 yards on short yardage plays because they can't take an under-center snap. It's just embarrassing.Me, too. QB sneak. End of problem.
I'm with you here...even if our base set is out of the shotgun, we should have a short yardage package that puts the QB under center and consists of more than just sneaks and middle runs. I can't stand watching an offense just give up 5 yards on short yardage plays because they can't take an under-center snap. It's just embarrassing.
Thought that was really oddas wellTexas's "Victory" formation was also in the shotgun! Thought that was strange, but if you never go under center, it is probably safer...
I too made a career from my R&D work (Rip-off and Duplicate).You can make quite a career out of stealing good ideas from other people. I’m living proof of that.
That and not falling in love with your own ideas is good career advice for youngsters.
99.8 % of architecture is stealing from others. Had a proof a Tech that used to say "Steal from an obscure source"I too made a career from my R&D work (Rip-off and Duplicate).
Texas's "Victory" formation was also in the shotgun! Thought that was strange, but if you never go under center, it is probably safer...
You can make quite a career out of stealing good ideas from other people. I’m living proof of that.
That and not falling in love with your own ideas is good career advice for youngsters.
Andy Reid,Sean McVay, Sean Payton, Bill Bellichek....the list goes on and on. All considered great coaches, but none of their schemes or concepts are original. They just chose to borrow sound schemes and incorporate them while the rest of the league is still stuck in the past which makes them "innovators" on the NFL level.
A couple of years ago, Chris Brown of Smart Football profiled Pete Caroll’s 4-3 defense in Seattle. Unless you knew what to look for , the innovations were invisible.
It was in Grantland (and it’s still up): http://grantland.com/features/whos-laughing-now/
If you don’t know 2-gap from 1-gap, there are nice pictures. The cool thing is that he mixes the techniques with the same front 7 at the same time (or he did).
There’s room to innovate on offense or defense in a 4-3 or a single back RPO with a slot. One question is how many people in the stands can see it when it’s happening?
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I haven’t watched yet, but from what he described I was thinking Pitt, in regards to multiple formations, downhill running, pulling OL,and timing routes. Maybe a little Clemson.