Zone expansion schemes (outside the area or wide area) have long been preferred for attacks across the area to go outside or at least emphasize horizontal defense. Teams like Iowa have long used it as a support for a single support group (often 12 people), while teams like Northwestern have often used it to threaten protection against growing formations. Several other teams, including Maryland, Indiana, Penn State, Ohio State University, Michigan and Michigan State University, recently played this game in their files. But if it is known to be the basis of your hurried attack, it has a fairly direct lock that allows the defense to attack and cover it, either by shaping or by attacking after the attack, so it is sometimes helpful to have options. from the same play. This is where the concept of betting and traction comes into play. The "pen and pull" concept is basically a slit / person shortcut that will switch to OL to attack with what is essentially an expansion scheme. Let's see.
Outdoor area
Basics of football: without a scheme of zones :
Prohibition rulesAs for Belarus, it is of the same material
To really simplify this section, we will treat all rows as if they are equal, instead of dividing the front and last OLs. There are two main principles: closed and uncovered. Closed means you have someone in a row above you or near the playing interval; Hit means there is no one above you or in the gaps on the side of the game.
If you are protected, you will be responsible for the person who attacked you. Many coaches talk about what the 90-50-10 rule is all about. If you are selected but there is a defender in the queue for the match, you will be designated with a 90% probability to guard the combined unit at the first level. If it goes into stop mode, the probability is 50%. If it is shaded at the end of the game, there is only a 10% chance that you will be the main one.
If you get caught, you will see the working side of your barrier and you will work in lock groups from the first defender to the second level. Again, it is important to note that you continue to block your territory while working on the second level. When you leave your area, wrinkles are created for penetrating protection, so you should not stick to your block. Depending on the type of region mentioned, the first level is equipped with aggregate or unit blocks and works on the second level to close the LB.
Teams going outside the zone will have an initial RB pass somewhere 4 meters outside the EMOL to the inside of the TE foot (or a hidden TE). Again, this is usually a reading of RB by two people, the first is EMOL (or forced ball) and the second is the second DL inside. As inside, the judge defender must be patient and not wait too early and not jeopardize his defensive ability to put together Belarus. "Click on line" only applies.
Although the game is designed to reach the edge, the ball rarely bounces and reaches the edge (unless the defense is inadequate); However, this is the main task of the district office in the so-called "regressive reading". If the face is filled and the game is forced to return, it is considered a pair. This is called "reading noise" and is included with EMOL. Finally, when a piece is removed, the RO can do what is called a "curvature reading", reducing it to a space in the game.
Here's what it looks like:
It more or less covers the general plan in terms of stop rules and target points of Belarus.
It more or less covers the general plan in terms of stop rules and target points of Belarus.
Protection of the expansion zone
To understand why teams often turn to these alternatives, it is important to understand how teams generally support long-term play. The purpose of the outer area is to create a horizontal deviation. She does this by either washing off the shield on the sides or covering it from the inside, which creates natural wrinkles.
- This DL is provided to "install"; That is, it keeps its outer arms free, reaches its slender body up to the septum, and absorbs forces and blows from the outer legs so that it does not move outward. This closes the gap.
- LBs, especially in the second level, are quickly filled by open compressions. Sometimes called a "bright or cloudy" reading, that is, open curls that you plug in and then hold while holding a square base and shoulders with LOS. They can attack quickly because the OL directs them towards the ball, so if they can read the alignment quickly, they can attack immediately. It effectively forms a wall.
- In terms of configuration, one of the best ways to disable an outdoor playground is to have 7 Technologies. This means that one leg is extended to the inner shoulder of the TE. Note the outer area diagram that the RB has three pruning options: bounce, noise, and bend. Well, hack 7 technology eliminates two options and causes the RB to deviate from within. The Tech 7 must therefore be effectively sealed from the inside, but because it is on the Tech 7, the OT is really difficult to overcome the unit combined with the TE. This causes the TE to delay its exit to the second level and allows the LB to fill the edges and form walls at the point of attack. Thus, the offense remains a forgotten, distinctive feature of Tech Seven and has a wall of troops and possibly a free LB on the edge to take over the right wing of the RB, or quickly leave the combined unit and the stack to get troops inside.
These reasons are the reasons for the efficiency of tariffs and withdrawals. DLs can no longer dock because they are looking at the block rather than approaching the block. The LB cannot read the coverage area faster because no current flows in the opposite direction, which delays its reading and causes it to occur frequently. 7-tech is now installed indoors and pulls shutters around it to fight edges more effectively. As a change, get right and drag, take advantage of how defenders try to cheat to stop the area from expanding.
Define the forehead against the back
Let’s start by defining the front and back game, as this will change the way graphics are closed.
Forward : Most teams define it as any block that joins the schedule from and covers the middle after the game - OT in the middle
Rear : each dam is connected to a modulator in the back of the middle - OG from back to back TE).
Some teams will include back OG as part of the front, especially if they do not use TE on the game side. The other team does not determine the front and back, but will stand out and play the whole team. This is a variable that changes the scheme a bit, but the rules remain the same.
rear base
It's simple, you block just like an area extension.
rules of confrontation
Like area diagrams, there are two scenarios for OL: closed or not.
Covered: if you are protected, it means the defender is on top or between the side of the game, you cover him.
Hit: When you get caught (without hitting the player in the head or in the slit of the game), you lure and block the first boy to cross your face.
Now some teams will change it a bit to help their players or some players. For example, some teams will treat a vertical defender as a person who has to stop. It depends on your team and players how you want to define it. Others will identify the defender on the side shoulder as "covered", and they will need a closed barrier to reach that defender to prevent the defender from penetrating off the field. It depends on the preparation.
An interesting basis
Like I said, it's a sign of emptiness / people expanding the area. This means that the bottom block covers the gap, and the box has a ball of the second level, which is responsible for the blocking. For the most part, they will try to lock their defenders inside to allow them to play outside, which essentially bends the defense. To do this, they will try to get out of line if they can.
All traction devices must be unlocked. Save pull work on Power O, because the boxes do not have to go completely. By means of a needle and a suction, they are better opened by an external leg and clipped in place.
Sometimes the first load may need to thwart attempts to lock in the protection and use impact blocks. Often defenders try to establish an advantage with the second level ball. In this case, if the defender reaches the LOS before the drawer is rotated vertically, the first box coming out of the formation will hit the defender block to let in the RB box. He had to enter this block with his fifth move, and then, when he was disobedient, ran out onto the field and tried to seal. Once the box is vertical and square, it will look inside to close the fence inside.
The second attraction, or if the center is the only one, will work a little differently. They should try to include the defense. They also want to theoretically get out of shape, get rid of the back of the lower outdoor unit, move the field and help cover up the internal defense. However, they must quickly defeat ILB; When ILB leaves the game, the defense can form a wall at the point of attack and make life difficult for the attacker. Therefore, the boxes do not want to add depth. If the shield can penetrate forward, the box will get a clean first-hand screen that blocks it.
This is therefore the nominal closing position:
This is what happens when the second level loader moves outward and when the first level defender moves forward, forcing the second level over the OL.
TE and OT
At the front of the outfit, the general rules had to be adjusted, often due to unreliable hinge fences with lower blocks. Let's look at the different combinations of these two players.
ACHIEVEMENTS
Blocking of clean access will only occur if there is a guard in the space outside the TE, and there is another shield in the space between overtime and TE.
Nutrition (strike and intervention)
The EAT unit will be a combined unit from TE and OT to level 2. Basically it is your standard open area block diagram. TE and OT will team up on the first level and work with a second-level defender, usually a strong LOS surprise defender.
TEX (Final Transformation)
Not to be confused with the action of TEX on DL, the TEX block sees the TE block below and the OT below. The chair will use the usual lottery rules: when a guy leaves the LOS, you leave when he hesitates or stays on the second level, you hit his outer shoulder and lock him back.
It is important to note that the TEX block can be played with one ball outside the TE and another between the OT and TE or with one ball between OT and the TE and the second level ball.
TESSY (SS intervention and cessation of production)
Usually spelled as TESS, but the words TESS and TEX sound very similar, so I just wrote TESSY not to confuse them. TESSY will only work if the LOS has only one defender, and in our case this Defender was set up outside the TE to distinguish it from the TEX.
by T
Down T is an interesting option that is not widely used by teams as it is difficult to play if the defense is not configured in a certain way. But Down T is similar to a mix of TEX and TESSY. It can only be activated if the defenders are outside the TE and the LBs on the second level are far enough in line so that the TE can shoot them directly at them. In this case, it will release the TE from the inside and immediately try to lock the LB from the most playable side (its release has the added benefit of making it look like it is locked inside). The additional player then hits or reaches the defender outside the TE. The game works well, especially with the bullet blocker in the form of FB to deal with any minor players trying to fill the gaps.
example
Of Indiana's broken tendency to run outside of MA :
TE and OT are established here, and forward OG and average are extended
Here the TE is fixed, and the OT is subtracted and the front of the OG. Note that everyone in the middle of the buttocks is just doing the work of blocking the outer area
Finally, here is a look at the TE mount and the front of the OG, and the front draws the OT and center.
Links / Videos
Michigan Pin and Pull (coming soon)
PSU within zone Pin and pull (fast)
Video: Glen Mason Minnesota Running and Sipping for 30 Minutes
Keith Grabowski Pin and Pull Link (very good here)
Keith Grabowski Pin and Pull Link (very good here)
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