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With work being busy I haven't been on the boards as frequently as years past, so my apologies if this has already been talked about at length......but I wanted to see how the board felt about the Patriots going into their lightning quick offense when the previous play takes the ball to the opponents one yard line.
I've never played or coached football so I'm sure some here have a much better grasp of the x's and o's or strategy behind it, so correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm thinking here are the reasons why we do it......
1.) Pedal to the Metal - after making a big positive play to get the ball to the 1 yard, I figured the Pats want to strike again before the defense can process what just happened and are not mentally prepared to defend the next snap
2.) Personnel - there are times when the prior play was run with a "small" package with 4 or 5 wide receivers. This will have the defense in a nickel or dime package. The difference for us, however, is that our 4 or 5 wide set includes Gronk and Vereen playing the role of wide receiver. Those two are also integral to a "big" package as well so we can switch from small to big without actually changing personnel. By running at a lightning quick pace, the defense can't substitute to their "big" defensive package.
Please educate me if there is more to it as I'd be interested to learn. If my understanding is correct, I do see the strategic benefits and oftentimes do see the positive results, so I guess it's a matter of taking some of the small negative side affects as well.
The one negative side affect is that the Pats don't give themselves a chance to challenge the previous play because they don't even give themselves the opportunity to look at a replay. I'm sure many consider that a small point because if you can't score from first and goal at the one then maybe you didn't deserve to score, but I do find myself yelling at the TV for some challenges. I'm not sure about you guys.
A few examples....
Gronk successfully did drag multiple Broncos into the end zone when they ruled him down at the one.
I think Gronk did score on one of the opening drives against the Steelers (that one is less clear though).
I also thought Amendola's catch and roll against the Bengals was worth another look. It was close.
I'm sure there are some more examples I am not recollecting at the moment, and yes, I realize they did end up scoring on the Broncos situation I brought up. Maybe it is a case of the positives far outweighing the negatives so you have to be willing to take the negatives.
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
Also, do you think there is something the opponents can do to adjust? I mean, it's no secret by now, but I still think it may be unstoppable due to Gronk and Vereen's flexibility. I don't think it's a matter of coaching from a defensive perspective but instead a matter of personnel. You either have players on defense that are flexible (can play in a big or small package) or you don't.
I've never played or coached football so I'm sure some here have a much better grasp of the x's and o's or strategy behind it, so correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm thinking here are the reasons why we do it......
1.) Pedal to the Metal - after making a big positive play to get the ball to the 1 yard, I figured the Pats want to strike again before the defense can process what just happened and are not mentally prepared to defend the next snap
2.) Personnel - there are times when the prior play was run with a "small" package with 4 or 5 wide receivers. This will have the defense in a nickel or dime package. The difference for us, however, is that our 4 or 5 wide set includes Gronk and Vereen playing the role of wide receiver. Those two are also integral to a "big" package as well so we can switch from small to big without actually changing personnel. By running at a lightning quick pace, the defense can't substitute to their "big" defensive package.
Please educate me if there is more to it as I'd be interested to learn. If my understanding is correct, I do see the strategic benefits and oftentimes do see the positive results, so I guess it's a matter of taking some of the small negative side affects as well.
The one negative side affect is that the Pats don't give themselves a chance to challenge the previous play because they don't even give themselves the opportunity to look at a replay. I'm sure many consider that a small point because if you can't score from first and goal at the one then maybe you didn't deserve to score, but I do find myself yelling at the TV for some challenges. I'm not sure about you guys.
A few examples....
Gronk successfully did drag multiple Broncos into the end zone when they ruled him down at the one.
I think Gronk did score on one of the opening drives against the Steelers (that one is less clear though).
I also thought Amendola's catch and roll against the Bengals was worth another look. It was close.
I'm sure there are some more examples I am not recollecting at the moment, and yes, I realize they did end up scoring on the Broncos situation I brought up. Maybe it is a case of the positives far outweighing the negatives so you have to be willing to take the negatives.
I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
Also, do you think there is something the opponents can do to adjust? I mean, it's no secret by now, but I still think it may be unstoppable due to Gronk and Vereen's flexibility. I don't think it's a matter of coaching from a defensive perspective but instead a matter of personnel. You either have players on defense that are flexible (can play in a big or small package) or you don't.












