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.
Coach, We are a flexbone offense. Last year, we were loaded with talent at the skill positions and played 100% of snaps with no TE. Next season, our talent level drops off tremendously. We graduate 19 seniors who accounted for all of our passing yards/receiving yards, 90% of our rushing yards and 3 starting lineman. As we prepare for next season, our staff is split. Part of our staff wants to spread the field more next season with the idea that it will pull players out of the box, spread the defense and create more running lanes. The other part believes that we can't afford to spread the field with fewer athletes, and we need to run out of a TE set more now. What would run your option out of in this situation?
Post by Coach Campbell on Feb 10, 2012 9:11:37 GMT
AN offense is considered at its strongest point with a tight end and two backs in the game that would be the consideration. DO you feel you can line up and get physical with people? this would be my first question and the second if you do go to the spread do you have the skilled athletes to do so. Looking forward to your reply. Coach Campbell
I don't believe that adding a TE with our personnel will make us any more physical or create any type of advantage. We are not a big team. The skill players will not be huge threats, but teams will at least have to respect them. The idea is widen the splits, pull defenders out of the box and run midline or other versions of double option.
In my opinion if you have lost that much, it pays off more to stay in the flexbone. Any kid you can put at TE, can instantly become an OL for you, especially a tackle that you can veer release. On top of all of this, the kids have already been running the flexbone, so why overhaul what the kids have been doing? Lastly, why change away from a system that is designed to be successful with less talent to go to one that requires more speed and athletes to be successful?
Nick Medinger Head Coach C.C. Griffin Middle School
Games are won during the season, Championships are won in the off-season.
We are still going to be an option team, and the flexbone will be our base formation. But the discussion of adding some TE formations into the offense to run midline and triple out of came up in the last staff meeting. That is what sparked the arguement of bringing a TE into the box vs. running trips and a 2x2 formation to pull people out of the box.
Our two biggest weapons will be our QB and FB. That is another reason the idea of spreading the A-backs out and running double options is intriguing.
The QB and FB should be your best weapons in the flexbone. There is nothing wrong with splitting the A-backs out wide to put more pressure on the defense, but IMO, a TE isn't necessary in the flexbone and those type of players are better utilized as OL or on D. You can always turn the triple into a double by running IV like midline-iso with the BSA leading for the QB, it is a nice adjustment if the opponent is taking your QB out of the game, plus it turns it into a double which involves less decisions for your QB. Just my .02
Nick Medinger Head Coach C.C. Griffin Middle School
Games are won during the season, Championships are won in the off-season.
Typically, the slot side is to the field. I think it puts the defense in a potential bind. If they are an even front team, you are likely to get a 1 tech weak and a 3 tech strong. That is tailor-made for mid-line strong and ISV weak. The secondary will have to decide how to adjust as well. You should be able to drag someone out to at least split the difference between the weak OT and the slot (if not throw out there until they respect it). If the defense goes corner-over, motion your strong A-back (or FB) out wide and see how they react to that, or run speed option with QB and FB strong, pitch off first man outside the TE. With the CB gone, you should be able to block the rest. You slot can run counters for you too from out there, does not take long to time it up.
Scott Orndoff
Varsity Assistant
Williamsville East High School
Williamsville, NY
I personally favor tight ends. They can set a defense's strength for you which allows you to create some opportunistic mismatches if possible. I actually like double tight most often and most teams will only commit 8 to the box which means you have an 11 on 8 advantage in the box, if you running a bone formation.
If you lack talent - stress INTENSITY. It can make a BIG DIFFERENCE in W & L:
PLAYING WITH MORALE AND INTENSITY (with thanks to Bud Wilkinson)
There is no magic formula for developing morale, but there is a means of getting consistent effort from your team and intensity is what it is all about. How close do your players come to making their best effort every time the ball is snapped? That is what it is all about, and if your team can do that then they are going to play very well. My theory of judging how well a team is coached is not how many games they won that they shouldn't have won (they upset somebody), it's games they lost when they were a superior team, they didn't play well that day. And why didn't they play well --- nobody got geared up about it. Teach your players to think of the game totally as a chance to find out about themselves --- what kind of a man am I and how well can I play when it is tough to play? You begin by explaining to them that this is a most uncomfortable game to play. There is no way you can play football and feel good. The first two or three plays everybody feels good. But now I am the Nose Tackle and I have got to meet someone me and now it's a sweep and I've got to run 20 yards and there is a big collision and I've got to line up again and meet somebody and run 20 yards and then there is another collision. I do this three or four times and I don't feel good. Now, do I quit at this point and wait to get my breath or do I continue to go as hard as I can to try as hard as I can try? THAT'S WHERE THE GAME IS WON OR LOST! What happens to most teams is they play the first two or three plays as well as they can, then they get to a point, I used to call this the "QUITTING DOWN", where two or three guys tell themselves, "If I coast on this play then I'll be able to go real hard on the next one". They have gotten kind of tired so they coast for a while. So they go hard again but now a few others decide it is time for them to coast and the result of this is that you never get eleven guys going all out.
So to get back to the basic point, if you can convince your people that the reason for playing is for them to find out about themselves and for them to find out how close they can come to playing as well as they can on every snap. Then you can eliminate, I think, that "up and down". So now I have three practices and I get the men together after practice and I ask them, "how many of you think you went as hard as you could every time" and if anybody puts his hand up he is lying. "How many of you did it 90% of the time", I don't think you get any hands if you have an honest relationship. "80% of the time", you will get some hands and you explain to them again, that's not very good if you expect to be a good football team, and we've got to make the effort every time the ball is snapped and if you don't think you can, walk off the field --- it takes more courage than standing out there bluffing. I'm never going to know if you make the big effort, and your teammates are not going to know if you make the big effort, but you are going to know and the whole game is a test of yourself. Now, if your players understand this, and I think if you explain it to them they will, some days they are going to play a guy in a red shirt who is a super athlete, some other day it will be a guy in a green shirt who cannot play a lick but that does not effect your guy's performance at all because his whole purpose is to find out today how close, "I can come to making my maximum effort every time they snap the ball". After the game in the locker room, "Okay how many of you went the best you could everytime", I don't think you will ever see any hands. How many of you went 95%", maybe one. "90%", maybe 4. But this is something that if they understand what I'm talking about, as the season goes along more and more of them will be able to get their hand up and if you can ever get them all giving their best effort then it is going to be awfully hard to beat you. And the major thing that happens is this, if you players begin to think this is just an opportunity to for me to find out about myself, "today, how close can I come to doing the best I possibly can", then it doesn't matter whether you are supposed to win by four touchdowns, because the objective has nothing to do with that, their objective is to find out about themselves. Or, they are supposed to lose by three, that has nothing to do with it. It is simply a question of "today, am I able to beat MYSELF". I'm the toughest opponent that anybody ever had, there is no question about that. If they do honestly believe that, that is the purpose of the game, then I believe they will play consistently with MAXIMUIM INTENSITY!!! Get everyone on the field doing that — it will be very hard for anyone to defeat you!