|
Post by cardinalsins on Sept 8, 2021 7:32:40 GMT -7
I got a question, likely a few to be honest. I don't watch college football unless it's film on draft prospects. Something to do with my aversion to brass instruments, and how they permeate college football culture.
Anyway, here's my question. Does Air Raid not utilize any presnap movement? Or is our lack of pre-snap movement a K2 thing? The following video had me thinking...
|
|
|
Post by jeffcardinalfan on Sept 8, 2021 13:59:23 GMT -7
I got a question, likely a few to be honest. I don't watch college football unless it's film on draft prospects. Something to do with my aversion to brass instruments, and how they permeate college football culture. Anyway, here's my question. Does Air Raid not utilize any presnap movement? Or is our lack of pre-snap movement a K2 thing? The following video had me thinking... the key to air raid is the ability to run plays fast and to complete 5,6,7, short passes in a row. pre snap movement is used some but not a lot.
|
|
|
Post by Chirpn’time on Sept 8, 2021 17:20:43 GMT -7
Another misconception at the college level is that most teams are running everything. There is so much film out there that concepts from all types of schemes are mixed into game plans. For the most part college offenses are focused on isolating a player in space and get defender to make a mistake. With lack of basic fundamentals this becomes the easy strategy of a OC.
Teams in HS and college are suffering from this some is due to limiting physical contact in practice. Even in NFL the teams who are fundamentally sound on defense will keep even a poor offense in the game.
Air raid is simply get ball where defense isn’t. They would rather quick run a play without presnap motion than allow defense time to diagnose their next play. Count defenders in box to determine run or pass, throw where blitz comes from (no defender there) defense playing wide, work middle (no defender) defense plays more to middle, then work edges (no defender). The offense becomes more consistent because you always work where defense isn’t.
Even air raid teams mix in RPO and option concepts on a regular basis.
One of the air raid type coaches introduced the jet sweep where QB in shotgun forward passes to sweep player to avoid fumbles, in sweep player muffs pass then is a incompletion (Bob Stitt is. Credited with this little change).
TE’s mean little to nothing to some Air Raid schemes.
|
|
|
Post by FLCardinalFan on Sept 8, 2021 17:57:17 GMT -7
Anyway, here's my question. Does Air Raid not utilize any presnap movement? Or is our lack of pre-snap movement a K2 thing? The following video had me thinking...
cardinalsins you should have watched my FLCF educational videos
Anyway Jeff has it right not that much motion in Air Raid
Which is what I wan to see in the game.
|
|
|
Post by Chirpn’time on Sept 8, 2021 18:40:08 GMT -7
Another factor of Air Raid hat doesn’t translate well in NFL is with 53 man roster is not protecting your defense. Chip Kelly’s offense was a good example of not protecting the defense.
Consistency is the solution with playing penalty free on offense. No proof of this so far in AZ. K1 doesn’t show enough respect for every down and until he does the offense and defense will suffer.
The defense has to give offense more opportunities by getting off field better, I put more hope in defense doing this, than K1 changing.
It comes down to the players more than coaches or scheme. How much the defense has improved will be the deciding factor in Cards success this year. Turnovers and getting off the field without long sustained drives.
I would like to see more pre-snap motion and a slow and more methodical offense, but do not foresee it. So, Go Defense!!!
|
|