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The era of the long ball
Posted on 1/2/21 at 10:10 am
Posted on 1/2/21 at 10:10 am
Long passes used to be synonymous with low % passes. The first obvious reason is that it is a harder throw. It also takes longer to develop, which leads to more exposure to being sacked. Another reason they were low % is that they were not practiced as much as other throws. Timing is very important on these passes, but practice time was spent on throws they were going to be making in the game. So, it was a lesser used option. Especially against zone defenses who had the luxury of having their eyes on the QB and the ball in flight.
In an unrelated development a few year back. Offenses started using numbers to pound the ball. Either by spreading, shifting, formation, etc. The pounding was a cumulative affect to wear down D lines and linebackers. Passing was almost used to keep defenses honest. The deep ball was more of a “ if you don’t cover this, we are gonna throw it”. Aggressive defensive schemes were developed to attack and stuff the ground pound game and the quick passes that were the counter plays. These complex defenses required a lot of man coverage. In many cases, tight man coverage.
Offenses learned, that by moving players around, you could have your best receivers in slot spots covered by a SS or LB. They also learned that they could manipulate aggressive Safeties with PA and flood type routes/ over-under. This in turn put the coverage on an island with minimal cushion.
So, they started taking shots over the top. These shots used to be low percentage because the coverage almost had an advantage because they were watching the QB. Now, in a lot of cases they are not. They are running in stride with the WR who actually has an advantage in seeing the ball and knowing where he is going. Add that these throws are being made more and practiced more and all of a sudden, they are not as low percentage as they used to be. They are a true offensive tool that can break an opposing defense.
Now that offensive lines can hold and 1/3 of the defensive plays in man on deep balls are PI, offenses are learning to use it effectively. No longer are they low percentage.
Your move DC’s.
In an unrelated development a few year back. Offenses started using numbers to pound the ball. Either by spreading, shifting, formation, etc. The pounding was a cumulative affect to wear down D lines and linebackers. Passing was almost used to keep defenses honest. The deep ball was more of a “ if you don’t cover this, we are gonna throw it”. Aggressive defensive schemes were developed to attack and stuff the ground pound game and the quick passes that were the counter plays. These complex defenses required a lot of man coverage. In many cases, tight man coverage.
Offenses learned, that by moving players around, you could have your best receivers in slot spots covered by a SS or LB. They also learned that they could manipulate aggressive Safeties with PA and flood type routes/ over-under. This in turn put the coverage on an island with minimal cushion.
So, they started taking shots over the top. These shots used to be low percentage because the coverage almost had an advantage because they were watching the QB. Now, in a lot of cases they are not. They are running in stride with the WR who actually has an advantage in seeing the ball and knowing where he is going. Add that these throws are being made more and practiced more and all of a sudden, they are not as low percentage as they used to be. They are a true offensive tool that can break an opposing defense.
Now that offensive lines can hold and 1/3 of the defensive plays in man on deep balls are PI, offenses are learning to use it effectively. No longer are they low percentage.
Your move DC’s.
Posted on 1/2/21 at 10:15 am to Peter Buck
The game needs to level up and allow more contact from the dbs.
Posted on 1/2/21 at 10:30 am to Peter Buck
quote:
Now that offensive lines can hold and 1/3 of the defensive plays in man on deep balls are PI, offenses are learning to use it effectively. No longer are they low percentage.
Your move DC’s.
Notre Dame (I think it was) had 12 on defense and still gave up a TD pass to Bama. Good strategy if the officials aren't looking.
Posted on 1/2/21 at 11:18 am to Peter Buck
More pressure on the QB. A nose tackle that no center can block by himself, elite outside rushing, and solid gap assignment DT's. Motion and stunting, bringing blitzes from all over the place. More speed at LB to help with the mismatches.
This post was edited on 1/2/21 at 11:19 am
Posted on 1/2/21 at 3:32 pm to lewis and herschel
quote:
The era of the long ball
The game needs to level up and allow more contact from the dbs.
A subtle change that would require actual football being played......but it ain’t happening anytime soon.
Posted on 1/2/21 at 9:04 pm to Peter Buck
quote:
Your move DC’s.
Send in the goons. Use walk-on safeties, and headhunt the shite out of the star receivers. Late hits and targeting encouraged.
Crude, and not terribly sportsmanlike, but probably effective.
Posted on 1/2/21 at 9:25 pm to Peter Buck
Pass interference is a joke right now. People want 70+ point games not 21-24 good defensive games.
If the WR touches the DB about as much as he gets touched, they shouldn’t call anything. Right now they call defensive pass interference 95% of the time.
It’s a detrimental penalty too.
Our against bama on 3rd down that should have led to a field goal but instead gave them a new set of downs put that game out of reach
If the WR touches the DB about as much as he gets touched, they shouldn’t call anything. Right now they call defensive pass interference 95% of the time.
It’s a detrimental penalty too.
Our against bama on 3rd down that should have led to a field goal but instead gave them a new set of downs put that game out of reach
Posted on 1/3/21 at 8:18 am to Peter Buck
Offenses have also figured out that they can run block on pass plays and not get penalized for it.
Posted on 1/3/21 at 8:29 am to VADawg
quote:
Offenses have also figured out that they can run block on pass plays and not get penalized for it.
Playaction is at an entirely new level with RPOs.
Defensive eye discipline is near impossible. The amount of wide open drag routes from these explosive offenses is nuts. How does that effect explosive plays? Every first down conversion is 1 step closer to an explosive play on the next snap.
Posted on 1/3/21 at 9:46 am to meansonny
The long ball is open because defenses are attacking and playing aggressive man to stop this kind of stuff.
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