Posted at 6:00am -- 7/2/2008 Michigan Football: Coach's Corner -- Mich..."/> Posted at 6:00am -- 7/2/2008 Michigan Football: Coach's Corner -- Mich..."/>

Michigan Football: Coach’s Corner — Michigan’s “New” Offense

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Posted at 6:00am — 7/2/2008

Michigan Football: Coach’s Corner — Michigan’s “New” Offense

Been planning to do something on Michigan’s offense based on what Coach Rod and Coach Magee talked about at the Michigan coach’s clinic.

We can share at least some of what Michigan’s offense will look like, or the strategy and theory behind the offense. We know this is choppy, but this how the coaches presented to us, and we do not want to put any spin on it. if we miss something, just e-mail us and will do the best to answer.

Coach Rod spoke about coaching as nothing but teaching. Experienced vets teaching youngsters are just as important as coaches teaching players. Always practice fast, and Teach to your least-smart player.

As for the actual offense:
1) Run north and south as fast as can, avoids running east and west.
2) The Running Back needs to react to guy who is tackling them.
3) Controlling all aspects of the game is essential.
4) Conditioning is the most underrated thing in football.

This is how Coach Rod recommends teaching his offense:
1) Teach from back end up: teach Running Backs and Quarterbacks first and then to slots, Offensive linemen and Split Ends.
2) Shrink what the defense can do, this gives you less to prepare for and makes reads and blocking the defense easier.
3) Attack the defense where they are not, makes them run to cover you, either high to low, or east to west.
4) Make them defend what they are defending. If defense is trying to take away running back in quarterback read option, make them defend the running back before using quarterback.
5) Quarterback gives the defense a false snap look to fake defense into tipping what they are doing. After this, coaches will take second read of defense and signal new play/scheme to Quarterback.

Here is the key to what Coach Rod is talking about when he says make defense defend what they are defending. If opponents sell out to stop the run and more specifically quarterback read option, one of the benefits of zone blocking is the scheme alone helps to alleviate the eighth man in the box. In addition, if a defense sells out to stop the run they have to give up something else. Therefore, if we give them what they expect we do two things.

1) I set up everything that comes off the base play. Therefore, they must stay in that defense to continue to stop what we are doing.
2) If they line up to stop the run and I still am able to run the ball, the defense is in a world of crap. Because now they have to add another body to the box, or let me continue to have success. Everybody they add to the front, creates more space, and better mismatches in the secondary.

Example, if Defensive Coordinator decides to play nickel, but rolls nickel into the box, and we can still run the football, defensive coordinator will probably go to base. Now that makes a mismatch in space.

They have set scheme or package, pre-snap; defense is trying to confuse pre-snap reads. Therefore, quarterback fakes snap so defense gives away what they are planning. Some teams actually give players wristbands to make process smoother. All offense is eventually about execution. You will not consistently fool or trick good defenses. Eventually all offenses have to block and make plays.

Coach Magee used a slightly different tact in his lecture. He gave us two lists of things the offense needs to accomplish, or make the defense do.

First list is things offense needs to do.
1) Create mismatches- biggest is slots on outside linebackers or safeties.
2) Get the ball to your play-makers.
3) Use Shotgun/so quarterback can see the defense.
4) Make the defense defend all skill players, including the quarterback.
5) Keep it simple for the offensive line, confused offensive linemen can kill an offense faster than anything can.
6) Make the defense play in space.

Second list is what offense does in a game.
1) Make defenses defend the entire field. Quarterback has pre-snap and post snap reads.
2) Always, play at multiple tempos to keep defense off balance and control their substitution patterns.
3) Make defense prepare for dual threat quarterback, both run and pass.
4) EXECUTION – You want a simple, not predictable offense (most of you should love this one, LOL).
5) Execute your base plays to perfection: Reps and Reps, and more reps, get good at something!
6) It is a numbers game.
7) Create best angles to block, both offensive linemen and split ends.
8) The final one – Find empty grass!

First key number is one or two safeties. This is from my personal experience; this read is the single most important in this offense. It tells you what outside linebackers and corner-backs are going to do. All three coaches, Coach Rod, Coach Magee, and Coach Frey, said the outside linebackers are the most dangerous defenders to this offense.

Second key is how many defenders in box is next read.

In zone blocking, outside linebacker is almost impossible to account for. He is free to flow to the ball. The defense has both the defensive end and outside linebacker to outside of offensive tackle. If positioned correctly he is also in position to disrupt the short passing game.

In blitz packages, he can cause an overload of one sideline. What defensive coordinators have been doing lately is walk the outside linebacker out with slot, but splitting the difference between slot and offensive tackle. This way he can takeaway some of the short routes, but still be effect in run defense. This is especially true when defenses are playing cover two.

They can lineup cover or eliminate #2/the slot and then have safety to help over top. Offenses have adjusted to put outside linebackers in a bind. What they came up with is the vertical, access play. The slot to side you are attacking does exactly what name says, he heads vertical, slot to back side then runs a drag to area vacated by defender. If defender sits, you hit slot going vertical; if outside linebacker also goes vertical with slot, you hit the drag. If safety sits over top of slot, you throw either hitch in front of corner-back, or you throw fade over top depending where corner-back lines up. This is brainchild of Brian Kelly and Cincinnati staff.

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Written by GBMWolverine Staff

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