Casey Sully and Weekly Spiral break down NFL All-22 coaches film every week with the goal of providing some of the highest level yet understandable football analysis out there and to explain current trends, big plays, player breakdowns, and schematic philosophies. If you'd like to support the growth of the channel, you can visit my Patreon page here: www.patreon.com/weeklyspiral
Follow me on: Twitter: @weeklyspiral and @CoachCaseySully Instagram: @weeklyspiral Patreon: www.patreon.com/weeklyspiral
This and PA seemed like a staple in the Bears Getsy offense. JF is accused of holding the ball too long. long developing plays plus the fact he’s a scramble/ running QB is going to give a false reading on that metric for his TTT average.
I don't know if this will ever get answered but if someone does want to help me out... at 2:53 he says Lamar is reading the Will backer and that if he flows away from the playside he'll take it himself. My question is, what happens if the backer flows playside instead? If Lamar hands the ball off to the RB they'll get tackled immediately by the unblocked DE surely?
Fundamentally zone defense principles involve defenders being responsible for particular areas of the field. Man defense involves defenders being responsible for specific offensive players. Real defenses are more complicated and like the cover 7 defense in the video involve both man and zone concepts
I'm not an experienced coach so maybe this is a dumb question. But what I don't get about this is, sure you get the POA double-team. But it's still x blockers against y defenders. The guy you pull is going to leave an unblocked man opposite him, who is free to go and mess things up.
Fun fact: I tried to follow the example Rams/Seahawks play, and *now* I understand *far* better why watching film takes hours to comprehend. I had to go through what this lineman did, go back, what did the next one, go back, what did that linebacker do...and where the heck did this guy come from screaming to the left (that's the pulling guard that I had forgotten about, so back again). This game's hard.
I love that you use the Vikings as the first example because Jerry Burns of the Vikings used this scheme before it was coined as the west coast offense. Walsh used his system, and quite honestly some college teams systems and made it famous
Can we stop calling sniffer backs sniffers? Lol 😂 I never played on a team that had that formation. We always played in I-formation and split backs so it was always 2 backs, one tight end 2 receiver type formations. So i counter it was always a guard pulling never a sniffer H back. Sometimes the Z receiver would jet motion and get out there as well on the play side but yeah. So sniffer was never something i heard until I started learning about wing sets, single back sets, ect.
I regularly score with this on madden lol fave concept when youre about 30-40 yards from the endzone after you dink and dunk and run all the way up the field.
Thank you for nice break down coach!. I have a question. on the second play (Colts) is it possible Center block NT and RG reach to 2nd level? if it is possible is it decided pre-snap or rule that Coach set up for this kind of front?
It's basic concepts in Cv 2 Cv 3 and C4. Nothing is new really but the terminology 😊 Aby kid can run it but you definitely need speed on the CB and OLB positions. It mks a difference...the rest is letting them GO with confidence 😊 Great analysis 👍