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The Hurry Up Offense
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<blockquote data-quote="steebu" data-source="post: 18856" data-attributes="member: 740"><p>Boomer's listed a bunch of good points and floridajacket mentions depth. One thing we haven't thought about is the practical implementation of a hurry-up style of offense. For simplicity's sake, we can assume hurry-up typically infers no-huddle, which is important to this discussion. </p><p></p><p>PJ likes to substitute players in with the play - he does not like to use hand signals, although he says we have them for hurry-up situations.</p><p></p><p>If you run no-huddle and substitute, the other team is allowed to substitute as well; the umpire stands over the ball in order to give the defense a chance to counter your substitution thus negating any hurry-up advantage you might have. Sure, you're still running a bit faster but you lose the "zip" of a fast-break style offense. </p><p></p><p>You could certainly go quick huddle and break with no subs (like an open huddle), but regardless PJ must fundamentally change how he sends in plays. If we see sandwich boards with four quadrants of random pictures during spring ball, we'll know something's up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="steebu, post: 18856, member: 740"] Boomer's listed a bunch of good points and floridajacket mentions depth. One thing we haven't thought about is the practical implementation of a hurry-up style of offense. For simplicity's sake, we can assume hurry-up typically infers no-huddle, which is important to this discussion. PJ likes to substitute players in with the play - he does not like to use hand signals, although he says we have them for hurry-up situations. If you run no-huddle and substitute, the other team is allowed to substitute as well; the umpire stands over the ball in order to give the defense a chance to counter your substitution thus negating any hurry-up advantage you might have. Sure, you're still running a bit faster but you lose the "zip" of a fast-break style offense. You could certainly go quick huddle and break with no subs (like an open huddle), but regardless PJ must fundamentally change how he sends in plays. If we see sandwich boards with four quadrants of random pictures during spring ball, we'll know something's up. [/QUOTE]
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