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.
Monday, September 28, 2015
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Introducing Oregon State's New Coaches
Later in the off-season I plan to put
out some e-books on the other teams in the PAC-12. In most cases,
the coaching staffs at other schools are staying the same, so the
breakdowns are easier to do. Oregon State's new staff is cobbled
together from several different places, however, and so my breakdown
of them will be a little more complicated. As a result, I'm putting
together a three part preview of what we can expect from Gary
Andersen's Beavers. This post, on the coaching staff and its
background, is installment one.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
A Study in 4-Verticals: Cal vs. UCLA (2013 and 2014)
When Cal played UCLA at the Rose Bowl
in 2013, the game was downright boring. Cal got shut out in every
quarter but the second, and after scoring ten points in that quarter
gave up twenty unanswered to lose the game 10-37. Goff threw for a
near season low 215 yards with zero TD's and one awful INT. One year
later, Cal was driving with a chance to kick a go-ahead FG in
the final minutes of an exciting, back-and-forth 34-36 shootout. Unfortunately, we
all know how that ended.
This post is going to answer two
questions about the scenario that I just described. The first is, “Why was Cal's offense so much more successful in 2014
than in 2013,” and the second is “Why did we throw a deep
interception on a play that didn't need a deep pass?”
Conveniently, an answer to both of these questions is the pass
concept “4 Verticals,” a concept I've discussed a few times on
this blog. There are a ton of interesting specifics behind that
general answer, though, and this post will focus on
those details.
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