Installing Today’s Hybrid Pistol Offense Run & Pass from Top to Bottom
This manual provides you with the full offensive line, receiver, and quarterback mechanics for installing each offensive play presented. Coach Campbell has left no stone unturned for implementing today’s Pistol Offense into your program.
Can anyone tell me how to stop an attacking 3-4 defense? Certain teams we play blitz at least 7 to 8 players every down. What is the answer to beating a team like this?
Go empty and spread them out and hit hots?
Run ace and balance them up?
Get in a power set and run right at them?
Sell play action?
Someone please tell me how you would pass block a team who blitzes that much
Losers assemble in little groups and bitch about the coaches and the system and other players and other little groups. Winners assemble as a TEAM."
- Bill Bellichick
I RUN A 3 X 2 SPREAD AND YOUR FIRST OPTION APPEALS TO ME WITH ONE EXCEPTION, FORGET THE HOTS! IF THEY SEND 8, TEACH YOUR QB TO SAY WHAT A GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR A BIG PLAY, NOT OH HOLY COW, I'M GOING TO GET CREAMED. IF YOU HAVE 5 RECEIVERS AND THEY SEND 8 THAT LEAVES AT LEAST 2 UNCOVERED AND YOU WILL PROBABLY HAVE A 3RD ALSO! HOTS ARE NOT THE ANSWER, IN AS MUCH AS HOTS ARE ACCOUNTED FOR ALSO, THEY ARE NOT ALWAYS OPEN LIKE MANY THINK THEY ARE! JUST HAVE YOUR QB BE COOL, PICK OUT HIS TARGET IN THE PSL AND IF IT IS STILL
THERE AT THE SNAP GET HIM THE BALL RIGHT NOW! IF NOT, MOVE AROUND AND THROW ON THE DEAD RUN! WE OPERATE ONLY FROM AN EMPTY GUN WITH THE QB AT 6-8 YDS DEEP, NEVER UP UNDER CENTER.
Coach Easton
J.C. EASTON<BR>HEAD COACH<BR>GA TIGERS FOOTBALL<BR>PROFESSIONAL MINOR LEAGUE
TAKEN FROM BILL WALSH LECTURE AT 2003 AFCA CONVENTION
There should be a better way to protect the passer than we do. One way is to use the “tight end” plus “H” & “RB” as pass protectors. All three of them would check and then release, but you would have a way to pick up eight rushers.
You have eight blockers. You’d have a way to pick up eight people. You have two receivers working against man-to-man coverage. Then as those people checking and then releasing, they would release on patterns that would be open vs. the zone. So you could deal with the zone with your late releases, you could deal with man-to-man with your two best receiving people, but you can protect the passer. Do I suggest that you do that full time? No. But I’d have the ABILITY to do it.”
Because of personnel and the fact that most of my kids play defense, too, i only have one protection. We use a big on big scheme in which if u are uncovered, u check LB and peel backside for help. so far, this has helped us. we use to slide and that was no good for us. Our FB always goes playside.
one thing that we do is a lot of perimeter running (jett and sweep) so this keeps some teams from bringing the house on the inside.
i just think there are not enough days in the week for me to implement a new pass pro - especially when i only hve 40 total kids fr - sr. and they all play both ways.