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Why Dajon Williams and the zone read can bring new life to the Mean Gr


tcat75

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Good article but you have the zone-read misinterpreted. The zone read is designed to be given to the RB if the last man on the LOS stays home, not crashes. If he does crashes then it's designed to be pulled by the QB and ran behind the crashing D-end/LB.

I could have picked a better lead example, as the last LOS player in my example doesn't really crash but is focused in on the running back, which isn't always indicative of what that play produces.

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Good article but you have the zone-read misinterpreted. The zone read is designed to be given to the RB if the last man on the LOS stays home, not crashes. If he does crashes then it's designed to be pulled by the QB and ran behind the crashing D-end/LB.

I think you have it backwards. If the DE crashes down the line, towards the center of the LOS, then the QB hands off to the RB.

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The first TD run by Dajon was not a typical "zone read" play. It is called an inverted veer play. This one specifically you call an inverted veer power. The RB and QB are attacking the same side of the field.

In traditional zone read plays your QB is reading the backside DE. If he crashes the QB pulls, if he stays home he gives to the RB. Most coaches prefer the QB hand off to the RB on traditional zone reads.

The inverted veer play is much like the Power O concepts that we use and thats why you see this play more than a traditional zone read. Y'Barbo is the pulling guard on that first TD.

Dajon is reading the DE #99 Cole Frazier. Frazier is the best DL for the Colonels. Its typical that you force the opposing teams best player to be the one being read or zoned.

What needs to happen to stop this play is for the DE to crash the QB and the LB's to scrape over the top to the RB and not over pursue.

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The first TD run by Dajon was not a typical "zone read" play. It is called an inverted veer play. This one specifically you call an inverted veer power. The RB and QB are attacking the same side of the field.

In traditional zone read plays your QB is reading the backside DE. If he crashes the QB pulls, if he stays home he gives to the RB. Most coaches prefer the QB hand off to the RB on traditional zone reads.

The inverted veer play is much like the Power O concepts that we use and thats why you see this play more than a traditional zone read. Y'Barbo is the pulling guard on that first TD.

Dajon is reading the DE #99 Cole Frazier. Frazier is the best DL for the Colonels. Its typical that you force the opposing teams best player to be the one being read or zoned.

What needs to happen to stop this play is for the DE to crash the QB and the LB's to scrape over the top to the RB and not over pursue.

I'm slowly starting to understand what you say.

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