Tuesday, September 4, 2007

220...221...whatever it takes...

What appears below has been excerpted. We might analyze the whole thing later, but we couldn't wait any longer to share this:


Posted by RealSmartGuy
We are in I left with Twins away from the tight end. Troy has their OLB bumped out over our # 2 receiver and are playing quarters coverage behind it. Their CB's and FS on the tight end side are 8-10 yards off the line of scrimmage. There are only 6 men in the box period, we have 6 on the line and a FB so we have them outnumbered...Zero combination routes, the only route we actually ran was a boot and we ran it 3 times. Everything else is a FB out or a single receiver route into stacked odds. We don't run anything to stretch the field or the defense where we actually can throw underneath... Dick instead of hitting the obvious hot and recognizing the guy was coming, throws a bubble to Hillis which gets blown to hell....High School spread teams hit hots left and right nowadays like its second nature. They run routes that open up things underneath instead of having their QB throw into Quadruple coverage in a one receiver route....
Smarter Hogville Analysis:
Jeremy Grey: John! Red seven!
John Beckwith: I don't know what red seven means.
Jeremy Grey: Hot route!
John Beckwith: I don't... What is hot route?
Jeremy Grey: Will you just go stand on the other side please?



Incidentally, we heard, from a very inside, very anonymous source, that last week, just before Owen Wilson...you know...he stumbled onto Hogville by mistake. Still waiting on confirmation on that one. As Drudge says, DEVELOPING...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I will be totally surprised if that guy isn't a coach at a BCS school within the next month.

Anonymous said...

Like if you read the thread, and be careful of your mortal soul, all the Hogvillians can't wait to pile on.
Not because of the crazy combination of coach speak and Mary May moronism, but because of the post's brilliance. For telling like it is.
This post actually has several problems.
For one, it ignores the possibility that Arkansas might have ran a conservative offense on purpose. Best receiver out. Two really awesome running backs. A quarterback coming off a back injury and learning a new offense.
Secondly, why pull out the fancy stuff for a team you're beating by three touchdowns?
Secondly in the defensive scheme described, it doesn't account for the strong safety. Also the free safety is out of position. In that scheme, the free safety would go to the weakside, opposite of the tight end. Also they aren't playing quarters in the scheme as described. The defense as described is a man coverage with a spy to keep an eye on the tailback. And six men aren't in the box. The strong safety isn't accounted for, but in the way it is described, he is lined up as a spy. Troy has at least seven in the box with him.
The reason the boot was ran to take advantage of single coverage. That defense's scheme flaw is that outlets out of the backfield are wide open in the flat, since if the tight end releases deep, it creates a natural hole underneath, perfect for the fullback sliding out.
These are the things that college coaches know, but it is much easer not to recognize that and bash Nutt instead.
I could go on, but RealSmartGuy doesn't have a damn clue as to what he is talking about.

Anonymous said...

Holy cow. Who is the tool that responded with all of the techno-babble? Maybe he should be smarter hogvilled.