To be tackle eligible, the lineman must disclose their intent to the referee before the play. A tackle eligible player is unidentified unless they receive a forward pass. Before the catching tackle can return to their original position, they must stand out for one play.
You probably also realized that the defense, if it did not recognize the "slot" receiver was ineligible, wasted a defensive back covering a guy who cannot catch a forward pass. An offensive coordinator could bank on such and use this to his advantage. The offense could also try to utilize better blocking receivers and run the ball to the trips side against extra defensive backs.
If anyone else has ideas, let them fly. Cookie banner We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from.
By choosing I Accept , you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. Stories Schedule Roster Stats. Filed under: Offensive Strategy. Reddit Pocket Flipboard Email. Schematically, here is what this formation looks like: The first item you probably noticed about this set was Tajh Boyd under center. Covered and uncovered are as follows: Any player who is on the line of scrimmage LOS and "inside" another player who is on the LOS is considered covered.
You don't want your "surprise play" to be a surprise failure to your own sideline. We have thrown as many as 11 TDs to him in a single season- on just one route we have several. Those that just attended our Seattle or Orange County clinics- can attest- we put all the clips of that 1 play from just 1 season- into the presentation.
The most consistently effective ones are the pop pass as the QB approaches the LOS in the opposite direction of the weakside TE- the QB pops up just before he crosses the LOS and tosses to the weakside TE who is running a short seam- the pattern may vary a bit based on the defenses alignment- if the CB is wide and safety staying home a bit, we may fade it out a bit etc The TE may also in some cases step down and engange for a step before getting into his pattern. We wont run this play until my complementary play coach tells me the weakside LB is flying up to stop our off tackle strong running play.
Again sometimes there is additional seperation- due to the defenses alignment- when we fade the pattern out a bit. Clark is correct- you have to be able to have an angle there- that's why the same play with a pass to the Strongside TE isnt nearly as effective. When we throw to him using our other plays- we have 2 backs blocking the perimiter-3 recievers going out etc.
None of these plays are 1 trick ponies- all series plays etc. Most of the teams in our league cover that guy fairly well from an initial intent and alignment perspective they all have my book and DVDs - BUT yes I have seen in tournaments where teams dont know us- that you can get teams to forget about that player.
Especially in the SPread SW- which we put in in VERY easy play to install- bolting it on to those series. While the pass to the weakside TE in my offense may not be the strongest part of our passing game- it has been an important and consistently effective part of it- for the last 14 seasons- we didnt throw to him the first 2. Also- our "shallow" concept uses the Flanker or slot as the under route- he gets a LOT of seperation early.
Not when you are putting in a true receiver at the OT position. Then it becomes a very good play. The Mission Statement: "I want to show any young man that he is far tougher than he thinks, that he can accomplish more than what he dreamed and that his work ethic will take him wherever he wants to go.
Thanks for all the input coaches. I'm going to have to put some work in on the chalk board and see how it looks in practice. If the second string can blow it up I guess that means time to move on ;D I'm running Jack Gregory's DW this year so with the O line being foot to foot not sure it would even work cause of the separation problem DC was talking about.
My only use for tackle eligible would be as a weak side play for after a player was shifted to the other side of the line as part of a motion series. Up until this year, in the local Pop Warner league, we ran an unbalanced line offense which was filtered down from the local high school. The weak side tackle was the TE. He was actually one of the primary receivers in the offense and always had good hands. We had several plays designed for him for one of 3 routes- 1 a yard out; 2 a drag to the strong side of the formation; and 3 the quick pop pass or a seam.
Our main play to the TE was the yard out which ran off of heavy play action off a speed sweep or a weak belly play with the QB booting hard to get around a hard charging DE. With a good run fake, a proper arc, and some wheels, the QB clears the DE, has a good view of the field, and sees the TE running the 10 yard out and sometimes a FB or a wing running a flat. Sometimes we would throw a slot out there on a fade to run off the CB and the TE would be running all alone.
If the receivers are covered, the field was wide open for the QB to take off and run for big yards. It you really worry about the DE, you can put a wing over there to help slow him down.
The drag was also an excellent play on a sprint or roll out to the strong side. I would tell the refs in pre-game that we ran an unbalanced line and the weakside tackle Most would simply shrug and it was never an issue.
Then was it just arbitrary that you referred to him as a tackle? I know the names of many positions are arbitrary, but most people would just call him an end in an unbalanced line. Not what most people would think of as "tackle eligible". Or do you mean he was sometimes a tackle, and sometimes for instance, if the end outside him was shifted to the backfield or to the other side of the line an end?
That 's what most people would think of as a tackle eligible: a receiver whose eligibility was disguised because it might not be so obvious whether he was an end or not. Yes, we had a strong tackle that we flipped back and forth along with our wideout depending on the formation strength which helped disguise the uncovered tackle which became eligible. Run Jet and when the CB starts to follow across we fake Jet and throw an out.
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