Good stuff again. How about Fox 2 XY Hook or Razor. We’re a split back veer high school team and I think we can throw those old school plays in from our base and twins formations one year.
@@TheQBSchool there is a mic’ed up video of Gruden in Bucs training camp telling Chris Simms to run these plays, and Simms had trouble remembering them. It was a bit of a funny moment. I think it’d be interesting to know what those plays are, why they work, and whether anybody runs them today. I think I have an idea of what they might be, but I’m not quite sure.
I just watched WAS try to run this play on a 2PC (FB got tackled at the 2). Thanks to you JT I was like "HEY they just ran Spider 2 Y Banana!!!" I even watched the replay to make sure the Y ran a banana route. Great breakdown!
I’m about to head to my first conditioning and lifting for the summer at my high school for freshman year and I want to play Qb. I’ve never played before so I’m oblivious as to what to do. What would your advice be to show my coach that I’m the best option for qb and any other advice would be appreciated.
following up: why would you ever spend time to design and train for a throw in the flat to a fullback? The 49ers having kyle juszczyk is a solid reason. I like the Mike Leach approach: Its called offense bc you attack them.
I'd be interested to hear you talk about what percentage of an average team's playbook consists of these "universal" concepts vs bespoke or specialty plays. Like the famous "wasp" super bowl play and a lot of the Reid/Bienemy stuff. Maybe those are still universal concepts just with custom window dressing? I think it'd be an interesting discussion.