Thank you coach. The vallejo Jags ran all over us last year with this system and we couldn't find a way to stop. Now we will be better prepared because I know what they want to do. Dont forget about us defensive guys 😅, we like content too lol
@@CoachTobyXL funny bc I used to beat the crap out of them every season no matter what they did to stop me. I’ve seen others run it but also keep in mind they might not be running my version of this with blocking and everything I do. I don’t know of any coach from Vallejo that bought my stuff. But yes. They want to run power till u stop it. If u can’t they’ll keep running it till the wheels fall off
@@CoachTobyXL were they pulling backside? At least two? Or were they trying to run this without pulling? That usually tells me the skill of their staff.
@@YoYoCoCo777 correct. But harder to do at youth level. And what about wedge? I do have two plays where my line pulls opposite directions to combat that. But generally yes. You gotta read the line. I keep all my handoffs low and rarely show the ball. Also by design.
How does the timing differ when you run no mo? Seems like the initial back would get the ball a little later than with toss. Also seems like the QB would have a harder time getting to that KO block. Is he stepping deeper for the handoff, bcuz the pullers have to get by underneath him right?
@@bigshel1963 he actually get the ball around the same time cuz he’s moving before the snap with motion and he’s not if it’s NOMO. You can see in the video that the QB isn’t stepping any deeper. He takes ONE step quickly to seven and tosses. His second step is downhill right at the DE. The pullers never even really get close to him because they are behind him technically. The order of attack in a basic line is QB, BSG, FB, BSTE. And a key point is that the QB and BSG are pulling to two different areas immediately. The QB flat pulls down the line. The BSG needs to get to second level so he pulls and immediately gobbles up space the C and PSG make with their double. Think of what happens when everyone is moving versus pulling and having everyone stay static. The field space drastically changes once the ball is snapped.
@@coachb7373I went back and looked again in slo mo. It looks like the QB starts his pull at the snap, literally bringing the bal to the 2 back on his way to the kickout. The 2 back takes the hand-off and loses a little ground to make the inside hand-off to the 3 back. Would that be a correct interpretation?
We really appreciate the thoroughness of your breakdowns on each video. It’s helping our team tremendously. Keep up the great work.
@@driftsportz4669 no problem at all Coach!!!
Criss cross counters are fire!🔥🔥
@@coachwedd6608 literally the nastiest misdirection play in the whole playbook.
@@coachb7373 I gotta show you our scrimmage!
@@coachwedd6608 what’s the media. Email me at westcoastload@yahoo.com and I’ll give you my text number.
That Cris cross is deadly
It’s a ridiculous good play
Thank you coach. The vallejo Jags ran all over us last year with this system and we couldn't find a way to stop. Now we will be better prepared because I know what they want to do. Dont forget about us defensive guys 😅, we like content too lol
@@CoachTobyXL funny bc I used to beat the crap out of them every season no matter what they did to stop me. I’ve seen others run it but also keep in mind they might not be running my version of this with blocking and everything I do. I don’t know of any coach from Vallejo that bought my stuff. But yes. They want to run power till u stop it. If u can’t they’ll keep running it till the wheels fall off
@@CoachTobyXL were they pulling backside? At least two? Or were they trying to run this without pulling? That usually tells me the skill of their staff.
Coach Toby. The way you stop it is to coach your team to read the pulling linemen. Read the whole line. They will lead you to the play.
@@YoYoCoCo777 correct. But harder to do at youth level. And what about wedge? I do have two plays where my line pulls opposite directions to combat that. But generally yes. You gotta read the line. I keep all my handoffs low and rarely show the ball. Also by design.
💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
@@OsirisParquette LFG!!!!
I HIT THE LIKE BUTTON, DID YOU?
How does the timing differ when you run no mo? Seems like the initial back would get the ball a little later than with toss. Also seems like the QB would have a harder time getting to that KO block. Is he stepping deeper for the handoff, bcuz the pullers have to get by underneath him right?
@@bigshel1963 he actually get the ball around the same time cuz he’s moving before the snap with motion and he’s not if it’s NOMO. You can see in the video that the QB isn’t stepping any deeper. He takes ONE step quickly to seven and tosses. His second step is downhill right at the DE. The pullers never even really get close to him because they are behind him technically. The order of attack in a basic line is QB, BSG, FB, BSTE. And a key point is that the QB and BSG are pulling to two different areas immediately. The QB flat pulls down the line. The BSG needs to get to second level so he pulls and immediately gobbles up space the C and PSG make with their double. Think of what happens when everyone is moving versus pulling and having everyone stay static. The field space drastically changes once the ball is snapped.
@@coachb7373I went back and looked again in slo mo. It looks like the QB starts his pull at the snap, literally bringing the bal to the 2 back on his way to the kickout. The 2 back takes the hand-off and loses a little ground to make the inside hand-off to the 3 back. Would that be a correct interpretation?