Monday, September 26, 2011

Horizontal Stretch:

The major reason we run the formation we do is that it forces the defense to account for more than they are accustomed to handling on the LOS. In a normal pro offensive set the defense must account for 8 slots on the LOS that can easily be attacked.



Against our base formation the defense is forced to account for 2 more slots on the LOS which usually forces some major changes in their alignment.



If you are defending one of those 4 or 5 wide offenses without a TE, there are even fewer slots on the LOS that have to be defended. Of course, that means that all zones in the secondary have to be defended. People like to talk about the vertical stretching of the defense in order to gain an advantage.

The EQualizer base formation stretches the defense horizontally. For example, if you place a defender in each of the areas along the EQualizer LOS, there can be only 2 defenders left to cover the deep secondary which the SE, TE and WB can easily get to, especially on play action pass.

In addition, as you have seen with the Dive Play videos, once the ball carrier breaks the LOS he is ‘off to races’ with everyone on the defense trying to run the ball carrier down before he can score.

Another thing that happens with the formation is that there are only so many ‘looks’ that the defense can give you at the POA. The looks are generally ‘man-on,’ ‘gap,’ or some combination of each. If they gang up on any particular hole along the LOS, they will weaken themselves in another which is not good for them.

Remember, using the option (or the threat of the option) forces the defense to account for the dive back, the QB and the pitch back on each and every play. That means that three defenders on each side of the formation are tied into those responsibilities. Combine that with two deep defenders; eight people are locked down on the defense. There are only three other guys on the defense that they can play ‘chess’ with.

As it say in the playbook (http://goo.gl/liQlG):

There is an old coaching cliché that states, "Whoever has the chalk last, wins." An offensive coach who has the chalk after the defensive coach has aligned his forces can design a play to defeat it. Conversely, a defensive coach who has the chalk after the offense has designed their attack can position his forces to stop the assault. And the debate rages on and on. Of course, the offense has the ability to audible, but the defense can adjust to the audible.

This back and forth is what makes coaching great. It is a giant chess game between the OC and the DC. The EQualizer advantage is that the defense is locked in to responsibities that they normally are not responsible for and because of the unbalanced set, they are having to adjust and align in a position that they normally are not playing from.

Consider the DE who normally is playing in a 7,8,or 9 techniques on the LOS. That makes him normally the third man out from the center. The EQualizer formation may place him one, two or three guys wider (in distance) from the center. The normal defensive adjustment is to slide the defense over half a man. That puts him out into the 5 yard gap between the OOT and the SE. That puts him up to 7 feet farther out from the ball than he normally plays.

This places him on an island all by himself making an option read easier for the QB to make, especially when you consider that more often than not, he is responsible for the QB and will come across the LOS and work upfield. This action, in effect, “opens the door” for the FB on the dive play.

Now look at the week side or the formation. Just as the strong side DE is placed out on an island, the short side DE plays much closer than normal and things come at him faster than he is used to seeing. He has to make decisions faster as he is also playing out of position.

In essence, the same hold true for everyone on the defense. Look again at the dive 34 play. You see that the LB’ers are executing a blitz into the center of the formation while we will run just to the outside of the blitz. Defenses generally do not adjust their blitz package and continue to blitz the interior. A blitz here is easier to block than any other. Just wash it down to the inside and then run on the outside edge of the formation.

In fact, we have found that very often, we do not get a man freed up to block a LB’er, but the offense will double or combo block a D-Lineman and drive him back into the feet of the LB’ers disrupting their pursuit angle to the ball carrier. I call this creating a covey of defenders that run into and trip over each other near the center of the formation while the FB from the offset I Formation gets to run on the edge toward that running lane we talked about previously.

Be 11!

RF

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