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 OldSchoolBall on Nov 20, 2004 16:44:40 GMT
When do you have too many running plays? I am working on building my own play book and I have 17 different running plays.
I plan on running an offense simular to what Nebraska ran in their heyday. Multiple-formation I-Back offense.
For the FB I have the Give (inside zone), Belly, "G", and Trap plays. Give I will pair with probably some sort of bootleg since I have the IB blocking BS, and fake give IB pitch type of play. The Belly, "G", and Trap plays will be paired with their option counterparts.
For the IB I have Trap, Dive (inside zone), ISO, Counter, Stretch (outside zone), Power, and toss.
As for options I have Mid-line, Veer, Load, Trap, "G", and Belly.
Then I will have the corresponding play-action passes (inside zone, outside zone, counter, power, options) and reverses (ISO, inside zone, outside zone).
So I am looking at 25 or so plays before I put in my 3-step, 5-step, sprint, and screen passes. Would this be too much for a highschool team to pick up and run efficently? With also runing 10-15 formations a game?
Or will this work since it is basically inside zone, outside zone, and a lot of plays that run off the same scheme?
I've pretty much set it up to where each back can hit every gap, we will run the option as a secondary run. Set up the option with the power inside game before we gash the defense outside.
WITHIN YOUR PASS OFFENSE - BE ABLE TO HANDLE: COVER 3; COVER 2; MAN/BLITZ. YOU CAN PACKAGE PASSES - I REMEMBER THAT DENNIS ERICKSON SAID THAT ALL HIS PASSES AT MIAMI WERE GOOD AGAINST:
Post by OldSchoolBall on Nov 21, 2004 19:52:08 GMT
Thank you to both of you, I'm sure I'll have more questions. I've cut down my running schemes to midline (inside zone), trap, belly (g-scheme), veer and sprint (outside zone) options.
My FB quick hitters which all play off the options.
Inside zone, Outside zone, ISO, Power and Counter for the I-Back.
Sould make it easier to teach and execute.
I'm still working on my passing game and have ordered a few manuals from you Coach Campbell. I've gotten the I-back offense and it looks great so far, very well put together. Still waiting on the one-back and option manuals. I'll probably be ordering the ultimate passing game manual here in a bit. I also just ordered the bunch attack manual written by Andrew Coverdale from Sysco's.