5 bubbles in a series and a trick play.
Dr. Watson said:
Point being, and I've said this for years, that the hardest route to defend is a come-back when the CB's back is turned.
Almost every CB will have his back turned at some point when you are running a vertical route in man coverage.
When the receiver stops and comes back, he will almost ALWAYS have a huge advantage on the defender.
It's time we start using this a bit more.
Sex Panther said:
The Annexation of Puerto Rico
malenurse said:Sex Panther said:
The Annexation of Puerto Rico
A&M pulled that play back in the day. I'll see if I can find the newspaper article that described it. I have it in hard copy at home, somewhere, but maybe I can find it online.Nino Brown said:
malenurse said:This comes from the pre-snap read. QB must recognize which slot receiver will be uncovered and get the ball out QUICK.emando2000 said:Sounds great, now all we need are receivers that are:Dr. Watson said:
Point being, and I've said this for years, that the hardest route to defend is a come-back when the CB's back is turned.
Almost every CB will have his back turned at some point when you are running a vertical route in man coverage.
When the receiver stops and comes back, he will almost ALWAYS have a huge advantage on the defender.
It's time we start using this a bit more.
Quick & Strong enough to beat man coverage.
Fast enough to get the CB chasing.
Good route runners to not tell their breaks.
Also, we need a QB that has good anticipation to throw before the receiver breaks and he has to be accurate.
AggieDem said:
Comeback route.
Yup.Womackster said:AggieDem said:
Comeback route.
You took advantage of that softball quick!
Wheel routePapaKilo said:
bubble screen
If you can watch that and not get chills on how important/special that game was, you are a ****ing moronC Loves L said:
See... good things happen when we wear the maroon on maroon on maroon...Bodhi said:If you can watch that and not get chills on how important/special that game was, you are a ****ing moronC Loves L said:
PatAg said:
Probably the back shoulder fade.
Doc Daneeka said:
Hardest play to defend besides being athletically superior and running iso over and over is the "mesh" play with a semi-mobile QB. Where two inside slot receivers run crossing routes 2-3 yards deep across the face of the LBs and stop anywhere b/t 2-3 yards within (inside or out, typically outside) the hash marks, flashing their numbers to the QB for a half a second. After flashing they continue their routes to the side lines. If play is extended they turn up field when hitting the side line.
This stresses the LBs more than a well timed play action. A RB could stay for pass protection and after 2 seconds flash to flat or stay in pp. the outside receivers clear safety's and corners with a post or vertical. Thoughts? Flame on.
I laughedPicadillo said:
Texas Tech wheel route