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.
ok, i have been running mostly cover 3 and 1, but im thinking of finally going to a robber.
Heres what im thinking out of my 44.
C's 8yds by 2 inside #1, deep 1/2's stay inside #1
OLB's 5 by 1 inside #2 or 4x4 off TE, Flats, man up #2 if he goes flats and carry him on a wheel.
MLB's 5 yds off LOS, Hook/ curl, not sure what other keys to give them??
FS 8-10 yds deep on guard of passing strength, key #2, Take #2 on vertical, if he goes flats, robb #1.
1st question, how does this sound??
2nd, what am i missing? crossers, smash, ect.
3rd, what do you guys do against one back, do you make a call or is it automatic to switch out of robber?
Here is what I was thinking against one back.
switch to cover 2.
Corners take the deep 1/2s on the hash
OLB's line up in the traditional corner position, 5x1 outside #1 funnel and flats, carry if no flats threat.
One thing you might look into is giving your MLB's is a "wall" technique. Look be head's up for slots on a shallow crossing pattern and wall them--force them behind the LB level to your robber.
Ryan Kelly
Offensive Coordinator
Austin High School
Austin, MN
There is nothing that will show a man's true character like the 2 yard line.
425 Cover 2 as your change-up for spreads, and options.
E-mail me and I will send you the Robber package and formation adjustments I got from oneback. Its pretty much the bible for Robber, aligments, reads, etc.... It has ALL the adjustments for 2x2, 3x1 sets besides your basic 2x1 set.
But, like I said, I just check to Cover 1 against all Ace formations unless we have worked some game plan check. Cover 2 is a called coverage.
I usually give no coverage call. Its either Robber or One depending on the formation. 1st skelly day is R/1 to all formations and plays, day two is Cover 2 against all formations and plays. day 3 is both mixed in during pre-game practice day on THursday.
Too many variables, reads, stress calls, and decisions. I just have the kids check to Cover 1, go into a 5 yard catch tech. with the receivers.
There is not much movement and the key is it is SIMPLE and I don;t have to take all kinds of time teaching, I can rep the hell out of opponents O.
It sounds as if we do a lot of the same stuff. We teach cover 3, but rarely play it; I guess it's simply a starting point. We play a form of robber vs a 2-back formation with double width's (pro). Vs a 2-back formation with 2 detached WR's (twins) we play a form of cover2 pattern read. Vs a slot we'll play man-free. We let the WR's split determine what coverage we play.
Vs a 2x2 formation we'll play man-free if we stay in our 8-man front. If we jump into a
4-3, we'll play robber on both isdes of the formation (no new teaching/learning). Being able to do all this has made our adjustments quite simple.
Any chance that I can get a copy of the info you received from ONEBACK? Please e-mail to educ8tu@yahoo.com.
Single width, we roll our Robber into a Cloud. It end up being Cover 2. One corner rolls up, FS and the other corner are half field players.
44 guys pretty much do the same things and its good to see how pwoplw tweak with it.
Without Oneback, i would have been playing Cover 3. Hell.... when I was in college we played Robber and I still taught cover 3 to my own kids.
Robber is way, way, way better than Cover 3 and 1000% more effective.
Robber and Cover 1 are bread and butter 44 coverages if you are committed to 8-man front football.
Obviously Spread teams do what they do and get us out of 8-man fronts and in to 7-man and 6-man stuff but we do our best to stay 8-man as long as we can.
My robber coverage is like this: We align in cover 4 (4 deep zones) and on the snap of the ball, the robber safety rolls up into the middle of the field behind and between the two inside backers drop (4-4) and plays zone in the middle of the field. We coach him to intercept any ball thrown between the hashes. Coverage behind him rolls to 3 while the coverage in front of him plays 3 also. We can also man up underneath and play cover 1 robber the same way. Any thoughts or opinions?
I echo Coach Mountjoy. The three level flood and the 4 verts are a pain in C-3. The verts can be handled if you have a very good OLB/SS who can recognize a vertical pattern and run with a slot. The flood, however, is almost impossible to stop if the QB is able to get on the edge. The other thing that gives me headaches about C-3 is the wheel route from an inside receiver when coupled with a go or a skinny post. Although it should be able to be covered if (especially the wheel/post combo), when they see an out route a few times, the kids suddenly get comfortable with it, and forget to turn with the man as he heads down the sideline--anyone who runs C-3 has felt the same pit develop in their stomach as they see that slot turn up the sideline and the OLB is still covering the flat after he has practiced it correctly and turned with the man all week.
Ryan Kelly
Offensive Coordinator
Austin High School
Austin, MN
There is nothing that will show a man's true character like the 2 yard line.
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.