Not to mention every team has their own codes and things like that. There really is no way to fully translate any of this without knowing what "Rick Flair", "Obama", or "Al Pacino" are in reference to..
“Y Mo to Bunch Left Al Pacino” means Cooper Kupp will get free Any Given Sunday and you throw it to him Carlito’s Way. Y (likely Kupp) goes in motion to the left of course.
It’s not as hard as u would think, each word is either specific to a position group, or the formation for instance “Y-Mo to Bunch left, Al Pacino” could be something as simple as Y-Receiver motions to the Bunch Left Formation, with Al Pacino being the play call simply being anything from a Screen Play, to a draw play, and they hafta constantly switch code names, for if the other team either has ex-players or just figures out the play calls.. and these are actually very short plays, I’ve heard 20 word play calls! Also I heard Sean Mcvay say “11” before that play, that would be the personnel, like in Madden “Goal Line”, “Shotgun” “1RB 2TE 1WR”.. one more thing I just wanted to say, I played up to high school and I had play calls as simple as “32 dive” and 34 crossbuck” which was 3 back to the 2 hole or crossbuck was fake to the 4 back and hand to the 3 back crossing to the 4 hole, and as deep as naming each WR in the play call and what route they would run by numbers 1-9 using the route tree
@@TC-kh1ep he has his personnel groups wrong. 11 is usually 1 TE and 1 back. and yes the TE is usually the Y. In bunch or trips bunch he's generally at the front tip of the bunch formation. There are variations in the language in every playbook.
@@CarlosRenfroe read it back, i wasn’t even sayin Y was any WR, I was basically sayin 11 or the numbers in general were to state what typa personel, and just explaining to ppl XYZ usually goes to label the receivers in general, a basic interpretation for ppl that weren’t aware, see what I’m sayin? I wasn’t sayin 11 personel is any personel grouping, just that it states the personel group, which is also why i said it can go for like goal line or heavy sets etc, it was basically for the ones that weren’t familiar with it at all
@@nonyabizz3533 Lmao no he isn't. He's an above average QB who plays like a top 10 QB at his best. And before you call me a delusional Cowboys fan, I hate the Cowboys with every ounce of me being. I'm just realistic
You can't translate unless your part of the team learning the offensive playbook or watching film and breaking down formations..all teams use variants of the same plays and formations really just with different verbiage..receiver y receiver one to join a bunch formation of 3 wideouts on the left..with shallow crossing routs and a deep clear
This isn’t as hard as people think. Usually the word means something either a route or pass pro. Or the 1st letter in the word means a direction (Leopard for strong Left or Rhino for strong Right), etc….Z X Y F means positional players. Y(TE most of the time) Mo (motion) to bunch left Al Pacino probably means this. The Y(TE) motions left to form a bunch formation to the left. Probably strong right single back set with 2 WR to left and 1 to the right. TE motions to the left forming a bunch formation to the left leaving the WR on the Right 1v1 hopefully. The motion to the left causes a leveraged position for the offense for a run to the left or PA to the left. The coverage could also rotate or shift to the left to counter act the motion by the offense which could leave the right WR (X) 1v1 with no inside or outside leverage help by the safety. X WR could run a slant or go route to exploit 1v1 coverage.
As a former DC I could honestly give you what these roughly mean if I could see the play that takes place after the call. For example just from a first listen: Y-Mo to Bunch L Al Pacino Could mean Y motions L to make Bunch Al Pacino = go to left side 11 Bunch R Robert Deniro 11 is the personnel which means the Y is now on the line as a tight end with a bunch to the right side and Robert Deniro = go to right side Why is aL pacino left and Rob deniRo right? They’re both actors which means a certain type of play. One has an L in his name while the other has an R but they’re relatable (high schools may use River/Lake, Rolex/Lexus, etc).
Y Moe, X Hustle im assuming is telling which WR to motion. I retired from football in 10th grade so IDK. IDK WTF Goff is talking about. Obama, Tupac, and Ric Flair is a sick combo.
Scanning the defensive line and telling how many are gonna rush and who is also al pichno is a slang for "heat" "heat go deep" Stafford throwing far to a open WR
Y’all gotta understand it’s probably easy for them to get it for you listen for your position and not worry about anyone else and they probably go over it so much
It's more harder on the quarterback because the quarterback has to know everybody's assignment and where to be b4 play snaps.... That's why it's the most important position on the field you have to know your job plus everybody else's plus do your job right....
The X Y and Z refer to receivers the rest are the other positions and the play itself. Each team have and create different meaning for all their plays.
Yeah it does sound like science experiments lol but within those the 11 men on the field, everybody does different things on the play so it’s key words for each group. Some of words when they are at the line of scrimmage just means shift the play from right to left etc..
I have no clue but I feel like the Sean Mcvay one is telling the QB to throw to the receiver bunch either left or right maybe as part of a screen or something with the particular actor code names (Al Pacino and Robert De Niro) referring to a particular receiver.
Why mo or whatever he said = personnel- (who’s on the field ) bunch left - formation and where the play is going al Pacino tells wrs there routes and/or blocking assignments
@@coreywilson3508 Right. And that’s also where practice and the playbook come in. The calls and plays mean what you want them to mean. Essentially they’re just code words. They’re meant to sound confusing outsiders.
One name is for the line blocking. Next name receiver's another name formation and name for the HB. Each name is a assignments telling ppl what to do on the play.
Usually the first letter of thr first two words are the play and direction then the snap count. Usually lol. As an eagles fan they say some off the wall shxt. And then there is Peyton manning. We won't get into that. He will read a entire novel just to have the tight end block
My secret call I use are all named from wrestlers but one is a football Codename and it’s roger staubach and that’s my teams code for me to throw a Hail Mary
Every playbook has its own language. You have to know your keywords, if you hear the audible word (Omaha), then listen for a different keyword for your position group, if you don't hear a keyword for your group, you don't change from the original play.
Rams - (y) receiver (mo) trips to both sides (on separate plays) and then celebs names were just names of the play Goff - Hurry up! We Gonna Run! Fake that We throwing We Throwing We Throwing! Hot Man Hot Man
It’s not that hard. If you are in the system and how they teach plays it’s pretty simple. You have the backs, the revivers, and the position of the QB depending on the system then you break it down by code names for routs motions and play fakes. Sometimes if there isn’t a word for what your position is doing you have a base things of what you do based on if it’s a run or pass or read option play. You also only listen to certain words based on your position. Only the QB needs to know what everything means. As a coach your play sheet is in-front of you and you designed most of the plays and came up with the game plan so it’s not as hard as people would think.
It’s not as confusing. You’re only listening for 1 or 2 words out of those that pertain to you. Rest is the other positions groups
What about the QB lol he has to remember the whole thing so he can tell the team
@@josec011
That's why they get the big, big bucks!!!
@@josec011 And that's one of the many reasons they get paid so much and are usually the most valuable player on the team
Ya but the qb has to tell everybody and has to read the play and know the routes
Not to mention every team has their own codes and things like that. There really is no way to fully translate any of this without knowing what "Rick Flair", "Obama", or "Al Pacino" are in reference to..
“Y Mo to Bunch Left Al Pacino” means Cooper Kupp will get free Any Given Sunday and you throw it to him Carlito’s Way. Y (likely Kupp) goes in motion to the left of course.
I was think more of a run play because of him being in the film Heat
Y is tight end so the tight end would be the one motioning into the bunch
It’s not as hard as u would think, each word is either specific to a position group, or the formation for instance “Y-Mo to Bunch left, Al Pacino” could be something as simple as Y-Receiver motions to the Bunch Left Formation, with Al Pacino being the play call simply being anything from a Screen Play, to a draw play, and they hafta constantly switch code names, for if the other team either has ex-players or just figures out the play calls.. and these are actually very short plays, I’ve heard 20 word play calls! Also I heard Sean Mcvay say “11” before that play, that would be the personnel, like in Madden “Goal Line”, “Shotgun” “1RB 2TE 1WR”.. one more thing I just wanted to say, I played up to high school and I had play calls as simple as “32 dive” and 34 crossbuck” which was 3 back to the 2 hole or crossbuck was fake to the 4 back and hand to the 3 back crossing to the 4 hole, and as deep as naming each WR in the play call and what route they would run by numbers 1-9 using the route tree
Damn how much does it take you to type this💀
dawg Y is usually the TE lmao
@@TC-kh1ep he has his personnel groups wrong. 11 is usually 1 TE and 1 back. and yes the TE is usually the Y. In bunch or trips bunch he's generally at the front tip of the bunch formation. There are variations in the language in every playbook.
@@TC-kh1ep Y is the TE in 11 personnel, but if a team was to go 10 personnel, the Y would just be another receiver, still labeled as the Y...
@@CarlosRenfroe read it back, i wasn’t even sayin Y was any WR, I was basically sayin 11 or the numbers in general were to state what typa personel, and just explaining to ppl XYZ usually goes to label the receivers in general, a basic interpretation for ppl that weren’t aware, see what I’m sayin? I wasn’t sayin 11 personel is any personel grouping, just that it states the personel group, which is also why i said it can go for like goal line or heavy sets etc, it was basically for the ones that weren’t familiar with it at all
"Kentucky Kentucky, 88 square cake, goat sauce, 734 axe murderer on THREE...hut hut huuut..."
Flanker runs a square route and sits down.. like a cake..
Uhhh…It’s actually on three on three. U gotta say it twice. 😂🤓
Prolly got ‘em off of “random play name generator” 😂
Dak and Dez…good times 😢
Scrubs
Didn't win nothing 😭😭
Dak a glorified back up
@@nonyabizz3533 Lmao no he isn't. He's an above average QB who plays like a top 10 QB at his best. And before you call me a delusional Cowboys fan, I hate the Cowboys with every ounce of me being. I'm just realistic
@@selling1760 🤣 😂
Sean McVay : Im gonna give them the play call they cant refuse
Using certain words and it means something else. Calling people with other people's name. Flashback on high school era playing rugby. 🏉🏈
You can't translate unless your part of the team learning the offensive playbook or watching film and breaking down formations..all teams use variants of the same plays and formations really just with different verbiage..receiver y receiver one to join a bunch formation of 3 wideouts on the left..with shallow crossing routs and a deep clear
Exactly! I couldn't have explained it any better
Nah bro what? really? I didnt know you cant translate the language you dont speak! Wow!
"Obama , Obama, Obama!"
Lol I love it
Must be a similar pattern of "Omaha." 😉
Why? Does the Obama play ruin the economy 😂
Sean McVay on Thursday: "Ok Matt, let's go wide right Brad Pitt, Ben Affleck - Slot 3 divided by 6 - Robert Downey Jr."
No Peyton with Omaha can watch that all day lol
That sh!t was annoying asf. Hut the damn ball already
It's one of the many reasons I could NEVER be QB 😆
Buddy sounds like your captain speaking, calling these plays
This isn’t as hard as people think. Usually the word means something either a route or pass pro. Or the 1st letter in the word means a direction (Leopard for strong Left or Rhino for strong Right), etc….Z X Y F means positional players.
Y(TE most of the time) Mo (motion) to bunch left Al Pacino probably means this.
The Y(TE) motions left to form a bunch formation to the left. Probably strong right single back set with 2 WR to left and 1 to the right. TE motions to the left forming a bunch formation to the left leaving the WR on the Right 1v1 hopefully. The motion to the left causes a leveraged position for the offense for a run to the left or PA to the left. The coverage could also rotate or shift to the left to counter act the motion by the offense which could leave the right WR (X) 1v1 with no inside or outside leverage help by the safety. X WR could run a slant or go route to exploit 1v1 coverage.
As a former DC I could honestly give you what these roughly mean if I could see the play that takes place after the call. For example just from a first listen:
Y-Mo to Bunch L Al Pacino
Could mean Y motions L to make Bunch Al Pacino = go to left side
11 Bunch R Robert Deniro
11 is the personnel which means the Y is now on the line as a tight end with a bunch to the right side and Robert Deniro = go to right side
Why is aL pacino left and Rob deniRo right? They’re both actors which means a certain type of play. One has an L in his name while the other has an R but they’re relatable (high schools may use River/Lake, Rolex/Lexus, etc).
“ Ric Flair “ 😂😂😂
Listen but don't pay attention?😂😂😂
Play was probably for Dez but they don't want to give the defense any clues about who the first read was
it makes perfect sense
Y Moe, X Hustle im assuming is telling which WR to motion. I retired from football in 10th grade so IDK.
IDK WTF Goff is talking about. Obama, Tupac, and Ric Flair is a sick combo.
Tupac, Dusty, Obama, Ric Flair 🤣🤣🤣
Rick Flair. WOOOOOOOOOOO
“Tupac”😂😂
Ric flair + Woo = wide out idk I tried 😭
Obama = Alabama Offensive Line, this is the play where the lineman basically try to prevent the defensive lineman from getting to the quarterback
Crossing slant, Outside go deep, tight end down the middle go either left or right. Rb stay and block
Ric flair ric flair : wooooo
Halle Berry! Halle Berry!
Scanning the defensive line and telling how many are gonna rush and who is also al pichno is a slang for "heat" "heat go deep" Stafford throwing far to a open WR
Al Pacino - L Pacino = left. Robert Deniro - R = right.
Y’all gotta understand it’s probably easy for them to get it for you listen for your position and not worry about anyone else and they probably go over it so much
He got them off "Ask Madden"
Bunch right 3 WRs to the right then the Robert de Niro is probably dive right
It's a pass to the Y receiver (Outside(
He's probably running a hitch, OUT route, or a dig.
“Alright guys, Annexation Of Puerto Rico on 2, readyyy BREAK!”
He said code words that the players understand so they know what play to run
Let's go with the, what do U mean I'm funny? funny how? Joe Pesci Ray Liotta Goodfellas on 1ready break lol
It's more harder on the quarterback because the quarterback has to know everybody's assignment and where to be b4 play snaps.... That's why it's the most important position on the field you have to know your job plus everybody else's plus do your job right....
The X Y and Z refer to receivers the rest are the other positions and the play itself. Each team have and create different meaning for all their plays.
"Wooo!" ... "Timeout"
For a second there I thought they wanted to "Do The Hustle"
It's FOOTBALL 🏈 TIME Guys!!!! HeLL YeSSS !!!! Let's GOOOO ⭐
I'd be like the comebacks and have a madden game in the background picking plays lol
Yeah it does sound like science experiments lol but within those the 11 men on the field, everybody does different things on the play so it’s key words for each group. Some of words when they are at the line of scrimmage just means shift the play from right to left etc..
If the word has an R it’s usually to the right if it has a L it usually to the left
Y motion to bunch left. Al pacino- AL(left) some kind of play to the left
He’s telling Dak to run the ball with no timeouts at the end of the game
Cold blooded! 🤣🤣🤣
Anyone remember the defensive scheme?
Me at the start: this is probably some banana split shi
Ric Flare must be a flare route on the right side of the field
Signal calls, formations. Position groups. Plays
Tight end motion A (slot wide out) pick route
Little did we know that cooper rush would be starting years later lol.
I have no clue but I feel like the Sean Mcvay one is telling the QB to throw to the receiver bunch either left or right maybe as part of a screen or something with the particular actor code names (Al Pacino and Robert De Niro) referring to a particular receiver.
Why mo or whatever he said = personnel- (who’s on the field ) bunch left - formation and where the play is going al Pacino tells wrs there routes and/or blocking assignments
“Dez listen but don’t pay attention”
“Y Mo to Bunch Left” means the Y will do a “Mo” motion to the left and the new formation will be Bunch Left. “Al Pacino” is the playcall.
ZERO CABLE TRAIN!!
No wonder the Rams look all confused when they play...
Pro Right ISO Right. We about to run this damn ball down there throats. Simple 🤷🏾♂️😂
Something left something right, something left
“11” - single back, “y mo to bunch right” - double left, motion slot to bunch right, “Robert Dinero”, Handoff RB to D gap.
How did I do?
Coach be saying silver to trips flip to bubble 149 same side Sunday
This is why I could never play football, i would be so confused lol
Not if you grew up playing. You wouldn't have to learn everything at once and it'll come natural like learning a language as a kid
@@coreywilson3508 Right. And that’s also where practice and the playbook come in. The calls and plays mean what you want them to mean. Essentially they’re just code words. They’re meant to sound confusing outsiders.
Scatter to west right tight, F left 372 Y stick Z spot
It’s just certain parts for certain positions groups….not too confusing but some of it is kind of “coded” I guess
One name is for the line blocking. Next name receiver's another name formation and name for the HB. Each name is a assignments telling ppl what to do on the play.
32 dive on 1. Reaaady break 👏
Usually the first letter of thr first two words are the play and direction then the snap count. Usually lol. As an eagles fan they say some off the wall shxt. And then there is Peyton manning. We won't get into that. He will read a entire novel just to have the tight end block
About time they used figure 4 leg locks
Pass play: one's long, ones short, ones right, ones left. Duh!
Hahaha and the cowboys stuff? Couldn't understand a word he axed me. Blahahahaha
Tupac dusty Obama is crazy work 😂😂😂
These are hardly complicated. Most The NFL has simplified their terminology so much. Old play calls used to to 3 times as long.
Bro called an air strike
screen , strongside run , follow the fullback and i quit
wait i skipped quick out 2
My secret call I use are all named from wrestlers but one is a football Codename and it’s roger staubach and that’s my teams code for me to throw a Hail Mary
2pac obama Obama💀💀
Run da gabagool fool...
No Spider 2Y Banana??
When you hear an actors name that means you typically have to sell on a fake in your route or the play action
Tell 87 hes got an inside issue 🤣
Every playbook has its own language. You have to know your keywords, if you hear the audible word (Omaha), then listen for a different keyword for your position group, if you don't hear a keyword for your group, you don't change from the original play.
A lot of play calls are plays that say what we Adler doing then the the play everyone else but that is your first read and formation
Sometimes, it's not the word, it's the concept. For instance, one call might be "Male Actor." Hence, Al Pacino or Robert DiNero.
Look what you started Peyton M
Rams - (y) receiver (mo) trips to both sides (on separate plays) and then celebs names were just names of the play
Goff - Hurry up! We Gonna Run! Fake that We throwing We Throwing We Throwing! Hot Man Hot Man
You only need to know a short phrase (unless you are the qb) in the statement as the rest is a different position group
Al Pacino means they re going to the Left
Robert de Niro means they are going Right
Rick Flair also means going Right
I think I got the Obama one, just give me a sec. One sec.
The second string receiver motions into bunch. They're using names instead of numbers so I'm going to assume they're passing.
Is it just me or did the Cowboys OC sound like he didn’t know what he wanted to call
Bunch left = Trips on the left. Al Pacino = ????
Y mo to bunch right- y motion to bunch right. Robert deniro, robert starts with R, some play to the right
It’s not that hard. If you are in the system and how they teach plays it’s pretty simple. You have the backs, the revivers, and the position of the QB depending on the system then you break it down by code names for routs motions and play fakes. Sometimes if there isn’t a word for what your position is doing you have a base things of what you do based on if it’s a run or pass or read option play. You also only listen to certain words based on your position. Only the QB needs to know what everything means. As a coach your play sheet is in-front of you and you designed most of the plays and came up with the game plan so it’s not as hard as people would think.
Once u do this a bunch in practice u understand, and half the time ur only listening for like one to two words for ur position
Dez Listen but don’t pay attention
Yea I can translate
Slant, steak, curl, flat, zig
Amazing
RIP FLARE
Al Pacino could mean left while Robert De Niro means right.
If your hearing it,it means nothing...
OBAMA! RIC FLAIR! UNDERTAKER!