Coach Macho
aka Beardy Ryan
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2012
- Messages
- 14,188
That Alignment was designed to take away where spread offenses want to live, which is the B gap, B gap is holy grail of spread offense. It takes that away, also make it hard to pull lineman because you have the lineman sitting right there and tough block for tackle. The 4i/3 techniques don’t allow the guards to pull on gap runs or climb on zone runs. This frees up the ILBs and makes them essentially “free” players
They want to stuff that then when running back obviously bounce it your overhang player who is playing down hill fills it quick, plus he can help out in passing game. The best OC in game have been frustrated by it ISU has given Oklahoma **** running it and Venables went to learn it from them and this has been talked about for a couple seasons now so we should of known he would take away..
Good post!
I (kinda) used it against Palm Beach Gardens in the play-offs last year after they RPO'ed us to death in the 1st quarter. (I didn't know much about the Tite Front and hadn't installed it)
We stayed in 4 techniques and called "pinch" though, which basically put us in a "Tite Front" post-snap rather than lining up in it.
*Pinched both DE's into the B-gaps to take away Inside Zone.
*OLB to the RB's side screaming free off the edge.
*Mike Linebacker was the free player, aligned in a 50-technique, sitting right in the RPO window.
Result was a completely nullified offensive game plan for the following 3 quarters.
Tite is good stuff and I look forward to using it this season.