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.
Post by Future Coach Hanson on Feb 5, 2009 16:12:49 GMT
Hey. I'm new to this site, and looking to get into coaching soon. I've been reading a lot on this site and others and trying to learn as much as possible.
Anyway, my question is which coverages you see the most in your league? Especially if you could give a roughly estimated percentage breakdown (i.e. about 30% cover 1, 35% cover 3, 10% cover 0, etc.).
Also, if anyone could do this as a national average for the high school level (I know it won't be exact, that's fine), that would be great too.
Post by Future Coach Hanson on Feb 6, 2009 11:56:39 GMT
Thanks for the responses. So is robber coverage pretty uncommon in your areas, against your particular offense, or is it just uncommon period? I've seen a lot of cover 2 in So Cal, but that's especially against the strong 3 step passing teams.
We go to our 425 package and our Okie 3-4 as a changeup against Spread and flexbone/wishbone teams. LOVE ODP against you wishbone and flex guys. I just got way to many people on the ball.
Cover 3 blows. You are waisting your FS big time and making your backer have to watch the TE release and play the run at the same time.
If you play cover 3 you should look into playing Robber, its way better.
allisojh - can you give me a safe and easy to understand robber package for a 4-4? I have one in place but would like to learn more. Mine is simple. We align in cover 4 (4 deep zones). On the snap of the ball, the designated robber safety rolls to the middle of the field, between the 2 inside backers and just behind them. The other safety rolls to deep middle and we play a 3 deep zone. Underneath coverage is 3 as well. We teach the robber to intercept any ball thrown between the hashes. We can also play man under the robber and cover 1 behind him. Obviously we are in a 3 man line at this time. We teach our inside backers that they can gain more width in their drops when we are in robber. Please give me your opinion on this.
I will give you what I used to install ours. It's Bill Mountjoy's (Oneback) stuff. Awesome stuff. i also will send you V-tech's Robber, and Air Force's Robber.
Bill's is perfect for HS and College but what I like is its SIMPLE!!! Air Force's can get "read happy".
Bill's has the adjustments to 2x1, 2x2, 3x1.
We preferr to Cover 1 to all Ace formations but Bill gives his adjustments. I have them in my playbook but we found there was too much decision making and reading involved. Omce our kids saw ace they just check Cover 1. Its not a press in your face 1. Its a catch THEN in your face cover 1. It allows my kisd to see the play develping and either teh receiver breaks withing 5 yards or thye recognize its a run.
I am a HS coach. We are small and slow, predominatly white kids. We play our Cover 1 against the best receivers and have not had a problem. OUr kids lift 12 months out of teh year and we work on Cover 1 drills EVERY day. They can shuffle and bracket receiers very well and we made a committment to Robber and Cover 1. One of my safetlies just signed a full ride with Maine because of Robber and him roving around as our FS in Cover 1.
Im glad you said you teach a slow HS group, so do I. What do you do with your kids to get them ready for the speedier recivers? I run the same 5 yard off coverage without giving ground, but I only have the guts to run it inside the 20-15 yd line. Also how do you vary your alignment depths to avoid crossers on 2 or 3 recivers sides?
We run it every where outside our own 15. We are either press or go to a Cover 4 inside the 15 but at 5 yards for C4 and hard inside position in their face in Press. So many teams now spread us out when they see press coverage then run to the bubbles. We beleive that because there is no room fro the receivers to fan out and spin us around, if we play a cover 4 and everyone drops it ends up in 1/7ths. If there is a run, my kids see it coming.
I got burnt too many times by receivers drivn my kids either to the sideline for them to run inside or their receivers running slants, etc... then them run outside. We went to a Cover 4 and the first time we did it, I swear the QB and the OC shit themself.
We found that patters with crossers are read within the 5 yards of the collision so they "Banjo" (bracket) them. They take who ever comes their way. Bunch we line the OLB in the up guys face then the corner on the outside and the Buc backer on the inside.
OLB plays the up guy 1/1 and the Corner and backer take whoever comes out their side. Jamming the up guy, we found, destroys them trying to spin my kids all around as they are trying to cross and rub right on the LOS.
Jeff, look forward to your e-mail on the robber coverage stuff. Can you give me your opinion on the robber coverage I mentioned above? Would really like your take on it.
Pass Responsibility: Must stay inside #1 (C.P. – if you are Corner to FS side, you can play much tighter because the free safety is controlling #2. The split side corner must be aware of #2).
FREE SAFETY:
ALIGNMENT: 8 yards deep, inside foot back. Cheat over OT to #2 side late.
KEY: #2
RUN RESPONSIBILITY: 1. TE blocks down – fill outside. Think toss or power. 2. TE blocks out – think ball away. 3. TE cuts off DE – think A gap.
PASS RESPONSIBILITY: 1. #2 vertical – FS must lock on. 2. #2 drag – FS work over top. Look up #1 – opposite side. 3. #2 flat – look up #1 for curl or post.
ADVANTAGES OF “ROBBER”:
1. Able to get FS to both sides of the ball.
2. Able to get control of #2 deep on any vertical routes.
3. Lets inside LB play run because #2 is always controlled vertically to TE side.
4. Able to use 5 DB’s as a base package, which gives us better team speed.
5. Alignments blend in with playing our other two coverages (Cov. 0, and Cov. 1).
OUTSIDE AND INSIDE LINEBACKERS: (“ROBBER COVERAGE”)
OUTSIDE LINEBACKERS (ROVER & WILL):
ALIGNMENT: 2 yards outside TE & 2 yards deep (if NO TE – 2 yards outside OT & 2 yards deep).
KEY: Triangle (flow-TE-QB).
RUN RESPONSIBILITY: 1. Flow to – sky support. 2. Flow away – check reverse, then fold.
NOTE: On split end side if both backs flow into B Gap, then you must fill B Gap. Flow away, B Gap.
PASS RESPONSIBILITY: Once you read pass, work the #’s. You have flat, and any #2 receiver that goes flat and up.
INSIDE LINEBACKERS (SAM & MIKE):
ALIGNMENT: Sam is in a 30 technique (straddle outside leg of OG) 4-5 yards deep. Mike is in a 30 technique (straddle outside leg of OG) 4-5 yards deep.
KEY: Flow, to Guards.
RUN RESPONSIBILITY: (Sam): 1. Flow To – stack C Gap, unless both backs are in A Gap. Flow Away – A Gap front side. (Mike): 1. Flow To: - B Gap. Flow away: - front side A Gap.
PASS RESPONSIBILITIES:
A. Sam: Read #3 (back). Back expands – Sam expands to look up #1. Back goes vertical – Sam must take him man to man. Back blocks – Sam works to front side hook zone.
B. Mike: Read #2 (back). Back expands – Mike expands to look up #1. Back goes vertical – Mike must take him man to man. Back blocks – Mike works straight back to hook.