Tical21
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I would be surprised if we didn't see some fly sweep action out of the shotgun, adding an element of misdirection to the read option.
Tech Worlds":1mo4hkii said:I hate him running the ball. Too risky for injury.
Give him the ball in space, not between the tackles
:th2thumbs:Cartire":uyhs6kla said:I think people need to stop calling the read-option a gimmick play that is so easy for defense coordinators to figure out. The biggest reason is that the read-option is a play. Not a formation. Just cause we line up in the pistol or shotgun doesnt mean its a read-option play. People really need to get this through their heads. Read-option is a play. Therefor, its not a gimmick because its cant be deciphered before the snap with certainty.
The comparison to the wildcat is so laughable when you know this too. When the wildcat is in play, YOU KNOW ITS THE WILDCAT. When read-option is in play, you dont know till it happens.
As long as QB's have the smarts and skillset to run it correctly. It wont be going anywhere.
Its basically saying, "When defenses figure out the play-action pass, its gone"
Scottemojo":3uvg1fze said:IMO, the read option is going away for the most part. There are a few specific defenses we can target with it, I think the Bills game was a great example. But for the most part, it will have to go. I expect Percy to see a few looks form the read option, but it will hardly be a staple.
Count me in among the group who think the read option is going to not revolutionize the NFL. There are two ways to stop it. First, get a fast edge defense like ours. Difficult. 2nd, do what the slow ass Ravens did and just hit the QB every time he keeps or hands off. Doesn't matter, just hit the QB. Put the onus on the officials to call penalties that they shouldn't. The whole point of the RO is to make the DE choose the QB or RB, just have him choose the QB every time and leave the RB for a linebacker or safety. Let him punish both the OC and QB for even thinking read option.
I dunno man, Kaep got popped by Suggs a good handful of times. Whether the QB is bigger or not, those are hits on a very expensive and important unarmed player. I guarantee you if they were to play the Ravens again soon, they wouldn't run that play very often.kearly":2noczoux said:Scottemojo":2noczoux said:IMO, the read option is going away for the most part. There are a few specific defenses we can target with it, I think the Bills game was a great example. But for the most part, it will have to go. I expect Percy to see a few looks form the read option, but it will hardly be a staple.
Count me in among the group who think the read option is going to not revolutionize the NFL. There are two ways to stop it. First, get a fast edge defense like ours. Difficult. 2nd, do what the slow ass Ravens did and just hit the QB every time he keeps or hands off. Doesn't matter, just hit the QB. Put the onus on the officials to call penalties that they shouldn't. The whole point of the RO is to make the DE choose the QB or RB, just have him choose the QB every time and leave the RB for a linebacker or safety. Let him punish both the OC and QB for even thinking read option.
I don't think that second tactic will do much to stop gigantic RO QBs like Kaepernick and Freeman, though. Most linebackers are 4-5 inches shorter than Kaep (6'5") and Freeman (6'6"). Both weigh about 10-20 pounds more than most LBs. It's also pretty hard to lay a lick on very fast players. Just watch Tavon Austin in college. Wilson took very few hits on QB keepers because hitting Wilson on the move is like trying to hit a squirrel in the yard (that plus Wilson isn't a dummy about his keeper decisions). Now, if we are talking RG3, or Michael Vick, then yeah. Teams are going to tee off on them, no doubt. Maybe they already were.
The Ravens defense pretty much got their asses handed to them by Kaepernick, btw. He had very good numbers and his team scored 31 points. They might have won if the officials weren't terrified to alter the game on a 4th down call, and really the only reason the Ravens won was because Joe Flacco was pretty damn impressive that day.
I think the first tactic will work, but it is difficult to obtain such personnel and even teams that have that kind of speed would still be at a disadvantage having to compensate for read option compared to a non-mobile QB. It's always going to be an advantage for the offense, and I don't see it going away, though teams might only opt to do it if they believe their QB is either very smart or very durable in addition to being very mobile. If injuries become a very serious issue for RO, I think at the very least it will linger as a wrinkle that's used on occasion, much like how the Seahawks used it in 2012.
I disagree. The Ravens team that took the field after the lights went out was lacking some of the nasty, after the game their defensive players admitted that they went from attack to playing on their heels. That was when Kaep did most of his damage.kearly":oskyc65s said:Scottemojo":oskyc65s said:IMO, the read option is going away for the most part. There are a few specific defenses we can target with it, I think the Bills game was a great example. But for the most part, it will have to go. I expect Percy to see a few looks form the read option, but it will hardly be a staple.
Count me in among the group who think the read option is going to not revolutionize the NFL. There are two ways to stop it. First, get a fast edge defense like ours. Difficult. 2nd, do what the slow ass Ravens did and just hit the QB every time he keeps or hands off. Doesn't matter, just hit the QB. Put the onus on the officials to call penalties that they shouldn't. The whole point of the RO is to make the DE choose the QB or RB, just have him choose the QB every time and leave the RB for a linebacker or safety. Let him punish both the OC and QB for even thinking read option.
I don't think that second tactic will do much to stop gigantic RO QBs like Kaepernick and Freeman, though. Most linebackers are 4-5 inches shorter than Kaep (6'5") and Freeman (6'6"). Both weigh about 10-20 pounds more than most LBs. It's also pretty hard to lay a lick on very fast players. Just watch Tavon Austin in college. Wilson took very few hits on QB keepers because hitting Wilson on the move is like trying to hit a squirrel in the yard (that plus Wilson isn't a dummy about his keeper decisions). Now, if we are talking RG3, or Michael Vick, then yeah. Teams are going to tee off on them, no doubt. Maybe they already were.
The Ravens defense pretty much got their asses handed to them by Kaepernick, btw. He had very good numbers and his team scored 31 points. They might have won if the officials weren't terrified to alter the game on a 4th down call, and really the only reason the Ravens won was because Joe Flacco was pretty damn impressive that day.
I think the first tactic will work, but it is difficult to obtain such personnel and even teams that have that kind of speed would still be at a disadvantage having to compensate for read option compared to a non-mobile QB. It's always going to be an advantage for the offense, and I don't see it going away, though teams might only opt to do it if they believe their QB is either very smart or very durable in addition to being very mobile. If injuries become a very serious issue for RO, I think at the very least it will linger as a wrinkle that's used on occasion, much like how the Seahawks used it in 2012.
Lynch Mob":1msmws9z said:that would be my hope i don't think they need him doing too much. But in three WR sets(Rice,Tate,and Baldwin) w/Harvin at RB would seem damn near impossible to cover everyone and thats not even mentioning R. Wilson's mobility. should keep alot of D-coordinators up at night.
kearly":63otfkza said:Scottemojo":63otfkza said:IMO, the read option is going away for the most part. There are a few specific defenses we can target with it, I think the Bills game was a great example. But for the most part, it will have to go. I expect Percy to see a few looks form the read option, but it will hardly be a staple.
Count me in among the group who think the read option is going to not revolutionize the NFL. There are two ways to stop it. First, get a fast edge defense like ours. Difficult. 2nd, do what the slow ass Ravens did and just hit the QB every time he keeps or hands off. Doesn't matter, just hit the QB. Put the onus on the officials to call penalties that they shouldn't. The whole point of the RO is to make the DE choose the QB or RB, just have him choose the QB every time and leave the RB for a linebacker or safety. Let him punish both the OC and QB for even thinking read option.
I don't think that second tactic will do much to stop gigantic RO QBs like Kaepernick and Freeman, though.
kearly":3kwzq370 said:Scottemojo":3kwzq370 said:IMO, the read option is going away for the most part. There are a few specific defenses we can target with it, I think the Bills game was a great example. But for the most part, it will have to go. I expect Percy to see a few looks form the read option, but it will hardly be a staple.
Count me in among the group who think the read option is going to not revolutionize the NFL. There are two ways to stop it. First, get a fast edge defense like ours. Difficult. 2nd, do what the slow ass Ravens did and just hit the QB every time he keeps or hands off. Doesn't matter, just hit the QB. Put the onus on the officials to call penalties that they shouldn't. The whole point of the RO is to make the DE choose the QB or RB, just have him choose the QB every time and leave the RB for a linebacker or safety. Let him punish both the OC and QB for even thinking read option.
I don't think that second tactic will do much to stop gigantic RO QBs like Kaepernick and Freeman, though. Most linebackers are 4-5 inches shorter than Kaep (6'5") and Freeman (6'6"). Both weigh about 10-20 pounds more than most LBs. It's also pretty hard to lay a lick on very fast players. Just watch Tavon Austin in college. Wilson took very few hits on QB keepers because hitting Wilson on the move is like trying to hit a squirrel in the yard (that plus Wilson isn't a dummy about his keeper decisions). Now, if we are talking RG3, or Michael Vick, then yeah. Teams are going to tee off on them, no doubt. Maybe they already were.
The Ravens defense pretty much got their asses handed to them by Kaepernick, btw. He had very good numbers and his team scored 31 points. They might have won if the officials weren't terrified to alter the game on a 4th down call, and really the only reason the Ravens won was because Joe Flacco was pretty damn impressive that day.
I think the first tactic will work, but it is difficult to obtain such personnel and even teams that have that kind of speed would still be at a disadvantage having to compensate for read option compared to a non-mobile QB. It's always going to be an advantage for the offense, and I don't see it going away, though teams might only opt to do it if they believe their QB is either very smart or very durable in addition to being very mobile. If injuries become a very serious issue for RO, I think at the very least it will linger as a wrinkle that's used on occasion, much like how the Seahawks used it in 2012.
Scottemojo":2skcpd4i said:I should have said that teams that run it too much are going to pay a heavy price in injured quarterbacks. Like the Redskins did.
Cartire":3clhqkvr said:Scottemojo":3clhqkvr said:I should have said that teams that run it too much are going to pay a heavy price in injured quarterbacks. Like the Redskins did.
I need to highlight this to tell you your information is incorrect. And this is how bad information spreads.
-Last year, RG3 got hurt against the Falcons, on a scramble down the field.
-He got hurt against Baltimore on a scramble
-He got hurt against us the first time being hit as he was scrambling to find an open receiver
-He got hurt the second time against us on a sack from Bruce Irvin
-And finally he was so hurt at that point his knee just gave out on its own due to prior injuries and crappy turf from a botched snap
You'll notice a big factor in all of these. The RO was never a part of any of these injuries.
Run properly, the RO is the QB's best friend because, if hes smart, he can stay out of danger by either handing the ball off or keeping it. DE crashing the middle, keep it. DE rushing the outside, Hand it off. Everyone just assumes the RO is a QB bootleg scramble where the defense is crashing down on them. Its a designed read to prevent the ball carrier from having crashing lineman.