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Old 10-17-2012, 11:31 AM   #1
C Mart
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NFP Matt Bowen: Want to beat Brady? Then you have to limit this route

Inside look at the Patriots' top route concept
Want to beat Brady? Then you have to limit this route. Matt Bowen

If you want to beat Tom Brady and limit the Patriots offensively, you have to protect the middle of the field. The Patriots have a multiple attack from an offensive perspective and will run a variety of route concepts. Think inside combinations (plus the vertical seam) that convert based on the defensive look: Cover 1, Cover 2, Cover 3, etc.


But what is the top route concept—or combination—in the New England scheme? After watching some tape, plus talking to an NFL secondary coach, here is the route you must stop vs. the Patriots.

Some coaching points to break down…
- Empty alignment from the Patriots. The X and R? Decoys. Hitch, clear out 9 (fade) route, curl, etc. And this is why the Patriots don’t overpay for a X receiver—because that’s not where the ball is going on a consistent basis.
- I have Hernandez (81) in the slot to the open (weak) side of the formation with Gronkowski (87) and Welker (83) aligned in a “stack” to the closed (strong). However, all three receivers can play the open side slot or align in the “stack.” Interchangeable parts.
- No.3 to the closed side (87 in this breakdown) will convert the route based on the defensive coverage. If he reads Cover 1 or Cover 4, then run the dig (square-in). Read Cover 2, Cover 3 (or Cover 1 depending on game plan), then stay vertical up the field.
- No.2 to the closed side (83 in this breakdown) will run the Hi-Lo read vs. Cover 1, break outside to the numbers vs. 2-Man (2-Deep, man-under) and sit it down vs. zone looks (Cover 2, Cover 3, Cover 4).
- To the open side, the No.2 (81 in this breakdown) will always run the inside vertical seam. Stem to the numbers to create leverage vs. Cover 1 and work the deep hole vs. zone coverage.
Where does this route show up?
- Next time the Pats play, focus on No.2 and No.3. You will see multiple combinations, but the Hi-Lo is the top read. It shows up often. Yes, you can get the "whip" underneath (stem inside, break back to the numbers), but we are still looking at the same concept.
- Welker’s TD catch on Sunday in Seattle. The WR aligned as the No.2 receiver to the open side of the formation (Seam) with No.2 to the closed side (Gronkowski) running the underneath read and No.3 working the inside vertical vs. Cover 1.
- How about the Super Bowl? The play we talked about all offseason with the Welker drop/ Brady ball placement? Welker aligned as the No.2 to the open or weak side of the formation. This is the same route with Hernandez as the No.2 (underneath read) and Gronkowski (vertical) as the No.3 to the closed side.
Here is the All-22 cut-up of the Super Bowl route…

Why is it a productive scheme?
Middle of the field throws with some added window dressing. Hernandez can play the open side slot, or align at No.3 to the closed side. Same with Welker or Gronkowski. Flip alignments and give the defense something new to look at. Plus when you throw the ball inside of the numbers, receivers have open field to work with and can create yardage after the catch. Again, we have to understand this isn't the Patriots only route concept in the playbook. However, it is one of the top schemes you will see on game day from Brady and this New England offense.


http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/...e-concept.html
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Old 10-17-2012, 11:34 AM   #2
Carlton
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Quote:
Originally Posted by C Mart View Post
Inside look at the Patriots' top route concept
Want to beat Brady? Then you have to limit this route. Matt Bowen

If you want to beat Tom Brady and limit the Patriots offensively, you have to protect the middle of the field. The Patriots have a multiple attack from an offensive perspective and will run a variety of route concepts. Think inside combinations (plus the vertical seam) that convert based on the defensive look: Cover 1, Cover 2, Cover 3, etc.


But what is the top route concept—or combination—in the New England scheme? After watching some tape, plus talking to an NFL secondary coach, here is the route you must stop vs. the Patriots.

Some coaching points to break down…
- Empty alignment from the Patriots. The X and R? Decoys. Hitch, clear out 9 (fade) route, curl, etc. And this is why the Patriots don’t overpay for a X receiver—because that’s not where the ball is going on a consistent basis.
- I have Hernandez (81) in the slot to the open (weak) side of the formation with Gronkowski (87) and Welker (83) aligned in a “stack” to the closed (strong). However, all three receivers can play the open side slot or align in the “stack.” Interchangeable parts.
- No.3 to the closed side (87 in this breakdown) will convert the route based on the defensive coverage. If he reads Cover 1 or Cover 4, then run the dig (square-in). Read Cover 2, Cover 3 (or Cover 1 depending on game plan), then stay vertical up the field.
- No.2 to the closed side (83 in this breakdown) will run the Hi-Lo read vs. Cover 1, break outside to the numbers vs. 2-Man (2-Deep, man-under) and sit it down vs. zone looks (Cover 2, Cover 3, Cover 4).
- To the open side, the No.2 (81 in this breakdown) will always run the inside vertical seam. Stem to the numbers to create leverage vs. Cover 1 and work the deep hole vs. zone coverage.
Where does this route show up?
- Next time the Pats play, focus on No.2 and No.3. You will see multiple combinations, but the Hi-Lo is the top read. It shows up often. Yes, you can get the "whip" underneath (stem inside, break back to the numbers), but we are still looking at the same concept.
- Welker’s TD catch on Sunday in Seattle. The WR aligned as the No.2 receiver to the open side of the formation (Seam) with No.2 to the closed side (Gronkowski) running the underneath read and No.3 working the inside vertical vs. Cover 1.
- How about the Super Bowl? The play we talked about all offseason with the Welker drop/ Brady ball placement? Welker aligned as the No.2 to the open or weak side of the formation. This is the same route with Hernandez as the No.2 (underneath read) and Gronkowski (vertical) as the No.3 to the closed side.
Here is the All-22 cut-up of the Super Bowl route…

Why is it a productive scheme?
Middle of the field throws with some added window dressing. Hernandez can play the open side slot, or align at No.3 to the closed side. Same with Welker or Gronkowski. Flip alignments and give the defense something new to look at. Plus when you throw the ball inside of the numbers, receivers have open field to work with and can create yardage after the catch. Again, we have to understand this isn't the Patriots only route concept in the playbook. However, it is one of the top schemes you will see on game day from Brady and this New England offense.


http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/...e-concept.html
Awesome stuff. Thank ya.
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Old 10-17-2012, 05:04 PM   #3
Tackleem
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All you need to pull this off is one burner deep threat, a midget with the lateral quickness of a cheetah, and two 260lb men with hands the size of baseball gloves.
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Old 10-17-2012, 05:07 PM   #4
InsideBlitz
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Nice post.
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Old 10-17-2012, 05:23 PM   #5
jetstream23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tackleem View Post
All you need to pull this off is one burner deep threat, a midget with the lateral quickness of a cheetah, and two 260lb men with hands the size of baseball gloves.
Bingo.

The Pats have excellent personnel to run what they want to run. And a dart thrower like Brady makes it work. That said, it's not unstoppable if you have a very tight man coverage and you can pressure the QB. We've typically been good at the former but not so much at the latter.

It's no secret, rush Brady, move him off "the spot" and cover the receivers long enough to disrupt his rythm. Much easier said than done though.
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