In all seriousness, what I love about the Shallow Cross concept is that it can be used the same way out of multiple looks - no matter what, the QB can play the same reads every time. In the video I posted above, you can see 3-wide, 4-wide, motion, etc. over MULTIPLE years (David Greene-Aaron Murray I think) and the overall route concept remains consistent -
#1 Shallow Cross,
#2 Deep Curl,
#3 Flat/Bubble. This is a HUGE deal in making life easy on an already accurate QB, and has the added benefit of getting the ball out quickly and assisting what may be an inconsistent offensive line.
Furthermore, keeping the reads consistent across multiple formations means you can use your personnel in a number of ways to fit the playcall. For example, on one play maybe Njoku runs the shallow cross while Coley runs the deep curl and Walton runs the flat out of the backfield. Another time it might be Berrios on the cross, Coley on the flat/bubble, and maybe Harris or even Njoku on the curl.
THEN you can run variations off of that route tree - CB starts biting on the curl? Hitch-and-go or Post. LBs running with the cross? Run a draw option or middle screen...
This is why I'm excited about the potential of this offense - clean, QB-friendly, logical.