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<blockquote data-quote="slugboy" data-source="post: 916418" data-attributes="member: 282"><p>When Fridge went to Maryland and O’Brien took over, BO’B had been tutored by Fridge for years and there was a marked drop off from teacher to student. That’s with the playbook handed down, watching Fridge lead the offense in practice, teaching the QB how to make the reads, and seeing how he made the calls and planned the games. When Fridge wanted an OC, he got the OC he learned a lot from. </p><p></p><p>Likewise, when we look at Patenaude vs some of the OCs that are the best in the game, the same offense under a different coordinator can be vastly different. The strategy and tactics are huge. Making the most out of the week so that your players practice what they need to is huge. </p><p></p><p>Even though offenses might take a little from the run and shoot and a little from the veer and add them together, the big thing is understanding the core principles of the offense and what you’re using the parts to accomplish what you want with them. With the flexbone, Johnson wanted to get the defense to reveal what they were ready for so he could do something else. In RPO, the QB is reading to see what the LBs commit to, and making them pay for their decision. The big thing is that the master strategists using the offenses have a theory of the game and the plays are extensions of that. The people with the playbooks are the other 80% of OCs that are calling plays but don’t have an advantage over the defense.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="slugboy, post: 916418, member: 282"] When Fridge went to Maryland and O’Brien took over, BO’B had been tutored by Fridge for years and there was a marked drop off from teacher to student. That’s with the playbook handed down, watching Fridge lead the offense in practice, teaching the QB how to make the reads, and seeing how he made the calls and planned the games. When Fridge wanted an OC, he got the OC he learned a lot from. Likewise, when we look at Patenaude vs some of the OCs that are the best in the game, the same offense under a different coordinator can be vastly different. The strategy and tactics are huge. Making the most out of the week so that your players practice what they need to is huge. Even though offenses might take a little from the run and shoot and a little from the veer and add them together, the big thing is understanding the core principles of the offense and what you’re using the parts to accomplish what you want with them. With the flexbone, Johnson wanted to get the defense to reveal what they were ready for so he could do something else. In RPO, the QB is reading to see what the LBs commit to, and making them pay for their decision. The big thing is that the master strategists using the offenses have a theory of the game and the plays are extensions of that. The people with the playbooks are the other 80% of OCs that are calling plays but don’t have an advantage over the defense. [/QUOTE]
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