Showing posts with label Outside Zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outside Zone. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2015

Treggs' TD vs. UW


If you're interested in scheme, go back and watch Cal's offense vs. UW's defense right now. Do it twice. This game was awesome. Both sides had clearly scouted each other well, and both sides made great adjustments from those initial good gameplans. I've got a few aspects of our offense that I want to write posts on, so be on the lookout for a later post about what Brandon Jones has added to our run game (more lead blocking!), but for now I want to talk packaged plays, and particularly Treggs' 1st half TD.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

UCLA Defensive Gameplan

Up until the UCLA game, our defense had never given up more than 5 ypc against the rush, and had only given up more than 4 ypc twice. We'd only given up 150+ yards one time (to Colorado), and had held everyone else under 120. In the UCLA game we gave up 237 yards at 5.04 ypc. Why the sudden change? It's tempting to say that they're just better than the teams we'd played up to that point, but on the season they aren't that far ahead of UA. As always, it's a lot more complicated than the size, strength, and speed of your opponent.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Formations, Tendencies, and Packaged Plays

One part of understanding an offense is understanding its tendencies. Some of these might be related to down and distance (“What do they run on first and ten?”), but many are also based on formation. It's obvious that you run different plays out of a 4-wide spread formation than you do out of a three TE power set. Even in spread offenses that are 4-wide most of the time formations play a crucial role in understanding an offense's tendencies and, in turn, in understanding what the offense is trying to do. This post will break down our offense in terms of the plays that we run out of our main formations, and the advantages and disadvantages that each formation has. It'll also look at some of our “packaged plays,” which are closely linked to the formations that we run and do some interesting things to our tendencies. It should be noted that all of my information for this post and those before it comes from the first three games of the season, and so the picture might look different by the time we get through breaking down the rest of the season.
 

Monday, January 20, 2014

Bear Raid: The Run Game

This is the first post of a lengthy study on the Bear Raid offense. My first three posts will look at the most common plays in the run game, the quick passing game/screens, and the deep passing game from the first three games of the season. I'll outline how our most common plays are supposed to work, and then comment on how successful they were, what players were most successful at running them, etc.

Once I've gone through these basics I'll talk about how all these plays fit together, game-planning, adjustments, etc. Once I've done this for the first three games of the season, I plan to treat the rest of the season more briefly in three game chunks, showing what changed and why as the season progressed. Let's get it started.