Coach Macho
aka Beardy Ryan
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2012
- Messages
- 14,191
I know you are pretty well versed in all things RPO.
Are we incorporating a read option with it? Malik always puts the ball in the RBs belly, then makes a decision to keep or hand off. I thought he also had the option to throw on those plays, but maybe that's where I am mistaken.
So, do we run both RPO (where malik can pass or run, and decides pre-snap?), and read option (where he can hand off or keep?) - do we do both on the same plays?
Sorry if this sounds dumb, I am just trying to understand it.
Nah, dude, it's a fair question.
From what I've seen we run Read/Option and RPO's separately.
We also run pre-snap RPO's and post-snap RPO's.
Example of pre-snap RPO = Rosier reading the box and leverage of the defenders then handing the ball off or throwing bubble.
Example of post-snap RPO = Rosier reading a "conflict defender" (like an OLB) and handing the ball off or throwing slant/hitch/bubble depending on what said defender does. We ran this several times against LSU for gains.
Some spread offenses have a pass tied in to every run play. It's a common concept. An example would be - the RB and OL run inside zone while the WR's run bubble+vertical. You're forcing the perimeter defenders to be honest. Your OLB or Nickel can't just dive into the line-of-scrimmage to pursue run because he has to respect bubble. Then by him respecting/defending bubble the offense is essentially forcing that defender to get out of the box. (which obviously helps with the run game)
A good way to counter this is by going single-high coverage (Cover-3 or Cover-1) to get guys in the box as well as have "over hang" defenders on the perimeter. But most DC's are scared to go Cover-3 versus spread sets because it leaves you vulnerable to verticals up the seam. (unless you're running a match concept, which I swear by)