Yeah, I agree. The Pats lined up in a power running formation, with Develin lead blocking for Blout, and Bennett on the line. It's first and ten, and the Pats are notorious to run on first down. This screams run.
As mentioned, the Steelers aren't in their base D. They're in a run stopping 3-4 front, with seven big dudes in the box. The look is a 3-4 front, with three DTs inside, each 300#, with Dupree and Harrison at OLB, Shazier and Timmons at ILB. Plus, the Steelers show the Safety blitz, by bringing #23 Mitchell to the LOS on the strong side.
The math is: Steelers have 3 DL + 4 LB + 1 blitzing... 8 in the box
Tough sledding, but this is the NFL. How many yards are likely in a power run, especially if they called it to the side where the Steelers are showing their run blitz.
To start, by shifting to Jordan, Brady forces the Steelers to abandon the blitz and step into their soft zone, but this time with awkward personnel. It's not their nickel lineup, they've got their pass rushers covering receivers.
By design, Blount and Develin are the guys that line up on the outside. I'm sure the Pats anticipated that the Steelers would matchup the outside guys with their two corners... Burns and ****rell. The two safeties drop into a Cover-2 shell.
That leaves DE Dupree matched up with Bennett, LB Timmons on Edelman, and a DE Harrison on Hogan-- all favorable matchups. If the Pats had started in this formation, they would have put a safety on Bennett, at least, and some legitimate cover guys on Edelman and Hogan.
Hogan runs a seam that generally would have been a Gronkowski route, and Brady goes there for a first down. Edelman would have been open, too.
Keys to Jordan:
- Diffuse the run blitz
- Avoid the teeth of a run-stopping front
- Put their elephants on roller skates
- Force the corners will take Develin and Blount through the formation
- Challenge their LBs and DEs to cover Edelman, Hogan and Bennett
It worked. This has McDaniels fingerprints all over it.