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Searn |
#21 | |||
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All-Searn Hall of Fame
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Posts: 5137 08/01/08 12:47 AM Board Owner |
I think I read somewhere that the DL and LBers actually have to count to "5-Apple" before rushing the Quarterback. ... and possibly one
"blitz' per series.
Vote on Conference Champions and State Champions for 2008, Summer Polls Series
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BiasedGuy |
#22 | |||
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Don't forget that two completed passes = a first down....
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WolverineKeith |
#23 | |||
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Ha! Those were the days. Always use your blitz on first down....no need to save it, as then it might never be used. I also recall getting to 4th down and
needing two completions for a 1st. Punt? Never! We're going for the end zone!
WolverineKeith@hotmail.com
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someJets |
#24 | |||
Mr NCAA wrote: Sure there are 5 OL.... but if you rush 6 guys against the 3 guys on the LOS in the middle of the field, then you are only leaving 3 on each side of the field max..... One "Lineman" on each side can not catch a pass, but he can stand in the way of a defender so that in the case of a blitz, there is always a safety valve "screen"available. If you rush 6 guys at the QBs, they have to pretty much sprint 7-10 yards before the QB with the ball releases his pass. I bet the QB almost never gets sacked. |
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pats99 |
#25 | |||
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Here is a story from ESPN.com today in their page 2 section....
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=weinreb/080811 |
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someJets |
#26 | |||
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Thats an interesting piece from pg2!
I would think about putting a package in if I was coaching a highschool team. |
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Muskyfan |
#27 | |||
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Does anyone know if any coaches in Michigan are considering this offense? I'd bet Dave Duram is already working on this at Hudsonville!
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GHSfootball1990 |
#28 | |||
Muskyfan wrote:I would not be surprised if there were a few coaches adding some of this to their playbook. |
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Hiesman84 |
color me unimpressed | #29 | ||
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color me unimpressed....you can put any number on anyone you want, you still have to have guys capable of power blocking, blocking in space, running in space,
running in traffic, catching, etc etc. If you ask your whole squad to be a jack of all trades, then you'll get 11 guys who are a master of none.
I'm sure it makes a huge difference in "bad team vs bad team" games, but I have to think that good teams with good staffs can identify who is desigened for what role, and defense it. You can put any # on a kid with an OT's body that you want. At the end of the day, if he's an OT wearing #3, he's still got OT skills...and if he spends 1/2 his practice time knowing how to also do RB & WR stuff, then he's going to be 1/2 the OT skill he could be. I just think sound, well coached teams, and beat people on excecution (most playoff teams) should be able to out excecute this. Maybe I'm oversimplifying things... |
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Muskyfan |
#30 | |||
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Its going to cause confusion at first, but then teams will get used to it and defend it easily.
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GHSfootball1990 |
#31 | |||
Hiesman84 wrote:Your missing the whole concept of the offense. It is designed to maximize the number of athletes on the field on a given play. Trust me they are not putting a #3 on a OT or OG at telling him to catch the ball on run is space. The kids they put on the field will be capable of making things happen. |
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cumcball11 |
#32 | |||
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Small teams will have a lot of problems with the O-line, and this is a way to help that. They don't have to pound it between the tackles, or have the QB
drop back while 6 guys plow through the line and pressure the QB to throw into tight coverage or take a sack. I think it's really genius.
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