06-30-2018, 10:18 PM
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#2
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Tossed Salad & Scrambled Eggs
Join Date: Jan 2009
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Part 1: Run-Pass Options
Quote:
Spoiler!
We’ll start with the buzzword of 2017 and the foundation of the offense I would like to see Patrick Mahomes run this season: run-pass options.
As a refresher, a run-pass option (or RPO for short) is a concept that allows the quarterback to determine at the snap of the ball whether to hand the ball off to a running back or throw one of the passing options built into the play. Usually the passing concepts require that the ball be delivered quickly in order to keep the offensive linemen from getting an illegal man downfield penalty.
The quarterback has keys to determining the choice at the snap based on the rules of the play. He could be reading the number of players in the box, the leverage of a player(s), the actions of one player and more.
This is not unfamiliar to Mahomes. The Chiefs ran 23 RPOs (mostly a bubble screen tagged to a run play) in his start Week 17 against Denver. They ran only seven run plays without some kind of passing choice attached to it. That’s an incredible amount. The Chiefs had a ton of success in that game with the concept. For instance, on bubble screens, Patrick Mahomes average 8.2 yards per attempt. Just on a simple concept. That’s because the ball is out so quickly when Mahomes is the one throwing it.
As you can see, the ball is to Albert Wilson so soon that he had an extra split second in space to maximize his yardage. It’s like having an additional blocker in space it’s there so fast. A simple bubble screen is better with Mahomes throwing it. It’s a good staple concept to establish. It can help dictate what defenses will have to do to take away the easy stuff. And it’s just one small element to the play design and stress it can put on the defense.
We haven’t even mentioned the fact that the players on the receiving ends of theses bubbles screens would likely be Tyreek Hill, one of the most explosive players in football. While the bubble concept is an obvious threat, you also have to account for the NFL’s leading rusher in the backfield.
There was a live bubble attached to Hunt’s record-sealing touchdown run. So if you worry too much about the leverage of a bubble screen on the front side of the play, Hunt can run all over you. The Chiefs are a zone running team. So these simple elements can be easily combined together. A simple bubble screen and a zone run play now require more focus and attention in practice and in game prep. But there’s still another element to the problems the Chiefs can create.
Travis Kelce is often isolated in one-on-one situations on the backside of the formation. In fact, you would frequently see Kelce isolated in these RPO looks. He can run a quick out or slant from that alignment, so you also have to make sure you’re well prepared to keep Kelce at bay. If not, you’re giving up easy completions to an exceptional playmaker.
With this one simple concept, a defense is stressed by the best tight end in football isolated on the backside, a need to keep the box heavy enough to stop runs from one of the best backs in the game and also have to worry about one of the most explosive players in football getting the ball in space. All those plays are simple, high percentage options on one play so Mahomes is given easy options for positive results. You can’t take them all away.
What’s beautiful about this is that’s it’s simple. It’s just the baseline. There’s so much that they can do from this simple spacing structure and designs. A team could have to be prepared to handle three unique issues in three different parts of the field, not just with the RPOs but also the players spaced out all over the field and all the different things they can do outside of their simple assignments in an RPO.
Throw in the fact that you can run these plays easily from 12 personnel (one running back, two tight ends) and also just as easily 13 personnel (one running back, three tight ends) you’ve also created tough personnel decisions for the defense. Depending on if they go too heavy or too light on the bodies they put on the field to defend this group, the options can become more clear for Mahomes in determining the decision to make, and near impossible for a defense to correctly choose. It can also make the job of the offensive line much easier with the potential to be dealing with lighter boxes or lighter personnel. We have yet to even mention the shiny new toy the Chiefs just acquired in wide receiver Sammy Watkins.
By simply adding a few elements to the run plays they were already going to run anyway, the Chiefs can put a lot of stress on a defense with the personnel they have on the field. Three of the biggest threats at their respective positions can easily be spread all over the field with a near certainty that one of them will have a favorable matchup. It’s simply up to the young quarterback to correctly determine what the rules tell him to do. He probably can’t be wrong.
If I were the Chiefs, I would continue to make the RPO the base element of my run game. It will require Reid to trust that Mahomes will correctly hand the ball off when the situation presents itself and not get too aggressive throwing. Mahomes fared well in the regard in his first exposure to a real NFL game. He handed the ball of on 15/23 RPOs he was entrusted with, and was remarkably efficient when choosing to throw. I’d make 23 of the 65 play calls in a game a simple RPO and take the profits all over the field from your best players. Also, the game can dictate the choice to run with RPOs as well. If it’s a blurred line between run and pass, the Chiefs may be more inclined to run if they have they lead.
I’d also include 10 run plays without a pass option to keep some of the control for the run game. The formations and looks the Chiefs run those 10 plays will be run out of the remaining looks we will discuss the coming weeks. The Chiefs would need to be able to keep defenses honest to the run game in a variety of looks, those 10 run plays would help that.
Breakdown:
33/65 plays
RPOs (23) and called run plays (10)
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Last edited by Dante84; 06-30-2018 at 10:24 PM..
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