A New Look Offense or the Same but Better?

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30gut
06-25-2012, 11:02 PM
Great article by Bucky Brooks that breaks down the QB keeper and the zone-read in the NFL by the Broncos:

Zone-read option leads to big results for Tebow, Broncos - NFL.com (http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d5d823f11ac/article/zoneread-option-leads-to-big-results-for-tebow-broncos)

In a league driven by the performance of the quarterback, the most successful coaches are adaptable and willing to cater their offensive systems to fit the skill set of the signal caller.

In Denver, John Fox and his coaching staff are undergoing a radical offensive makeover to maximize the talents of Tim Tebow. Part of the transformation includes featuring the zone-read option play that Tebow made famous at the University of Florida while winning two national championships and a Heisman Trophy.

Other teams (like the Panthers with Cam Newton and the Bills with Brad Smith) have certainly sprinkled some elements of the formation into their playbooks. However, no team has featured the play as prominently as the Broncos did in their 38-24 win over the Raiders.

To the surprise of traditionalists who have often dismissed the prospects of the zone-read succeeding in the league, the concept not only worked but also generated the kind of production that will lead others to explore the possibility of adding it to their respective playbooks.

Let's take a closer look at three ways the Broncos' zone-read produced big results against the Raiders:

Quarterback keeper

Tim Tebow 32 Yard Run (11/6/11) - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Ev2wE69S0U)
The most dangerous element of the zone-read is the quarterback keeper. A quarterback with explosive running skills can wreak havoc on the edges, and the play often puts him in isolated situations with defenders in space. If he is able to elude the first defender, he often has a lot of running room on the outside and it typically leads to huge gains.

Against Oakland, the Broncos were able to establish the threat of Tebow on the corner early in the game. On a play in the first quarter (right), the Broncos aligned in "Trips" -- three receivers on the right and the tight end on the backside of the shotgun formation. Tebow took the snap and read Jarvis Moss' (No. 94) while sticking the ball in McGahee's belly. When Moss took a flat angle to pursue the runner, Tebow pulled the ball out and raced around the corner for a 32-yard gain.

This was a pivotal play for the Broncos' offense because it forced the Raiders to pay close attention to the quarterback, which prevented defenders from aggressively pursuing runners on the zone run.

Inside zone

The inside zone is the complementary run to the quarterback keeper. The running back will cross the face of the quarterback while taking a direct path to the inside foot of the opposite offensive guard. His approach to the line of scrimmage is important because it forces linebackers to flow aggressively to the frontside, which creates better blocking angles for the offensive line. The front five is simply asked to latch onto a defender in their assigned area and push down the line of scrimmage. The runner reads the initial flow of the defense and bursts through the first available hole once he hits his landmark. This eliminates the chances of a negative run and also leads to the possibility of a big gain if one or two defenders fail to stay in their assigned gaps.

In looking at McGahee's 60-yard run at the end of the third quarter (right), the lack of gap discipline led to the big play. The Broncos aligned in an unbalanced "Trips" formation. McGahee was set to the right of the shotgun formation beside Tebow. At the snap, McGahee took a path to the inside foot of the left guard with Tebow riding the handoff while reading Kamerion Wimbley (No. 96) on the right. Wimbley stayed home, which prompted the quarteback to hand the ball off before carrying out his fake. The extended action of Tebow caused Darryl Blackstock (No. 56) to hesitate, leaving a huge hole for McGahee to sprint through on the way to a score.

Zone-read cutback

When both elements of the zone-read are working effectively, offensive coordinators will routinely call a designed cut back to take advantage of aggressive linebackers. The play design and execution are the same, but the path of the running back is changed to give him the opportunity to get to the backside quicker. Rather than aim for the inside foot of the opposite guard, he will take a downhill angle in the direction of the center to allow him to cut back immediately at the line of scrimmage.

In looking at McGahee's game-clinching 24-yard touchdown run (right), it was the cutback element that led to the big run. The Broncos aligned in a "Trey" formation with McGahee set to the left. He stepped in the direction of the center while Tebow continued to read Aaron Curry (No. 51) on the left. When Curry flew up the field to chase the quarterback, Tebow slipped the ball to McGahee, who immediately bends it back to the left to take advantage of an overaggressive Blackstock flying to the frontside to stop the inside zone. With the linebacker out of position, McGahee skated into the end zone untouched for his second score of the day.

Follow Bucky Brooks on Twitter @BuckyBrooks

Lotus
06-25-2012, 11:40 PM
^ That Brooks article made me salivate. Replace Tebow/McGahee with Griffin/Helu and things look potentially devastating.


To your last point, having a zone-read based series of plays could actual help Griffin read the defensive coverages because those plays could dictate/force defenses to play certain known coverages.


That is an intelligent insight.

I like your idea of the counter/veer. I also like the idea of a zone-read triple option: (1) running back, (2) keeper, or (3) pass to wideout on QB's side or crossing route. We could run such a zone-read play three times and it could be different each time. Or we could low-high the QB's side with a TE short and a wideout deep, putting intense confusing pressure on the LB and CB, as part of the triple option.

If it were me, I would also be liberal in adding pure play action plays that looked like run option plays but were passes from the get-go. This would take advantage of Griffin's arm while also protecting him from injury (the specter of an injury makes me like the threat of a run by #10 perhaps more than an actual run, as long as the threat is established).

30gut
07-01-2012, 07:57 PM
Playbook: Panthers 'counter' option
By Matt Bowen | National Football Post – Wed, 27 Jun, 2012 5:30 AM EDT

Playbook: Panthers 'counter' option | National Football Post (http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/Playbook-Panthers-counter-option-5403.html)

Option football does exist in the NFL when you have the personnel at the QB position to run the Read Option, Speed Option and the “Counter” Option. Today, I want to take a look back at the Saints-Panthers matchup from the 2011 season and breakdown Carolina’s option scheme with Cam Newton at QB...

lPO4g14h-zI

Lotus
07-01-2012, 08:35 PM
^ Good stuff 30 Gut.

skinsfaninok
07-01-2012, 09:26 PM
Playbook: Panthers 'counter' option
By Matt Bowen | National Football Post – Wed, 27 Jun, 2012 5:30 AM EDT

Playbook: Panthers 'counter' option | National Football Post (http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/Playbook-Panthers-counter-option-5403.html)



lPO4g14h-zI

With their QB I'm sure they can run any offense. Cam is about to take over the NFL

30gut
07-01-2012, 10:47 PM
They ran that same option play again later on, (i'm surprised Bowen didn't mention it) and Cam kept it for a good gain in the RZ 15+ yards.

Yahoo! Video Detail for Panthers vs Saints - Week 5 (http://video.search.yahoo.com/video/play?p=cam%20panthers%20vs%20saints%20youtube&tnr=21&vid=4859932210364488&turl=http%3A%2F%2Fts1.mm.bing.net%2Fvideos%2Fthumb nail.aspx%3Fq%3D4859932210364488%26id%3D5130cf0491 1fff33e77809e3e8f01907%26bid%3DNN37xm8j%252b9Hy4Q% 26bn%3DThumb%26url%3Dhttp%253a%252f%252fwww.youtub e.com%252fwatch%253fv%253djY_ODH-b0JM&rurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DjY _ODH-b0JM&sigr=11ak59ef7&newfp=1&tit=Panthers+vs+Saints+-+Week+5)

@12:20 on the vid (1st play of the 4th qtr)

30gut
07-20-2012, 11:29 PM
"If you go back and look at the things we did offensively and the different types of pass plays off of play-action, drop-back passes, then incorporating some of the spread offense that he was used to seeing," Panthers head coach Ron Rivera said at the 2012 scouting combine. "[I]Our coaches went back and studied some of the Auburn things and looked at that and adapted that to our playbook."
No longer were NFL coaches dealing inflexibly with spread offense quarterbacks in ways that caused stunted development for players like Alex Smith and Michael Vick -- now, the idea is to bring what the quarterback can do, and what he should do, together as an organic whole. It helps that the NFL has taken great strides in the last half-decade to meet spread offense concepts halfway -- specifically in the higher percentage of shotgun snaps and tight ends detached from the formation -- but credit should be given to coaches like Chudzinski and Denver Broncos offensive coordinator Mike McCoy, who willingly and helpfully went back to the future with Tim Tebow's old Florida playbook when Tebow became Denver's starter.

Meeting RGIII halfway will be key to Redskins’ early success | Shutdown Corner - Yahoo! Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/meeting-rgiii-halfway-key-redskins-early-success-192336439--nfl.html)

MTK
07-22-2012, 11:28 AM
ProFootballWeekly.com - RG3 can rev up Redskins' running backs too (http://www.profootballweekly.com/2012/07/20/rg3-can-rev-up-redskins-running-backs-too)

30gut
07-22-2012, 12:44 PM
ProFootballWeekly.com - RG3 can rev up Redskins' running backs too (http://www.profootballweekly.com/2012/07/20/rg3-can-rev-up-redskins-running-backs-too)

A former Broncos assistant who spent time on Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan’s staff in DenverYeah, I read this earlier and I was thinking Jeremy Bates, not that it matters who said it.

RGIII
07-22-2012, 01:41 PM
How different will the Madden 13 playbook be?

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