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Post by abarney51 on Dec 12, 2006 8:13:07 GMT -6
I was wanting some ideas for ways people call different things. Not formations,, but movements and shifts, motions all that stuff. For example, we Call our motinos Zap, Zip and Zoom. When we have our TE over we call it Flip To.. then if we want to motion him and block we call it YAK or YUK (Y across and kick out or Y Uturn in the middle and kick out) Here is what I am looking for
Offset FB I want a call to move him across in a shuffle motion and snap with him onthe opposit side, I also want him to be able togo across and come back to where he was. Also moving him from FB out to a reciever..
ALso how about JET sweep. How do you call it if your not a wing t systems where it all fits together...
My imaganation is not very good. Some people are excellent at this.. Post or email me
abarney51@yahoo.com
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Post by Coach Huey on Dec 12, 2006 8:20:10 GMT -6
Fly - across (like normal motion .. i.e. from slot to wing, etc.) Flash - shuffle (short motion, go from weak to strong, go from wing to offset, etc.) F-Ski -- cross ball & return
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Post by coachcalande on Dec 12, 2006 9:35:43 GMT -6
fly- fullback flanked right free- fullback flanked left
near/far, off set to or away from te side.
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Post by brophy on Dec 12, 2006 11:02:01 GMT -6
coachhuey.proboards42.com/index.cgi?board=pass&action=display&thread=1164674825here is a good thread, coach for our jet sweep stuff....we just call the name/number of the player (ie. "Z" = the '4' player) and call "49/48 Jet"....Jet tells us the play, 4 tells us WHO, 9 or 8 tells us where we are going. A lot of wing-t teams run their plays by series.....so if you said had a "10" play you're running veer, "20" you're running belly, "40" you're running speed sweep / jets, etc.
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Post by spreadattack on Dec 12, 2006 12:49:11 GMT -6
I like to label it by what the action is, and the formation we call is what formation we will actually end up in.
For example, to use very basic terminology, Twins Rt (TE Right, twins receivers left) Z-Fly has the Z receiver line up to the right like a normal Pro-set, and then "Fly" across the formation to make it a twins formation to the left. Makes it simple for everyone else, including the QB. The motion receiver just has to know where he has to line up to begin with to get where he needs to go.
Examples:
Near (Start outside, motion inside) Orbit (Fake across and finish up where you started) Scat (begin in the backfield and motion out) Trade (TE begin on one side and shift to the other) Jake (motion from split receiver to backfield. We didn't know what to call this and our QB at the time was named Jake, so we said "start outside, and then go to Jake" and it stuck) Jet (a "jet sweep" motion, only used with jet calls, the jet receiver is either taking the ball or faking the handoff).
There's tons more. I also like this because it cuts down the words, and players should know where they need to line up for a given play, so telling them where to go exactly seemed superfluous.
Shifts I tend to practice a few set shifts during the week to make sure you get it all right, or you can just shift from one formation to the next. A hypothetical example would just be saying "Power Rt shift Empty Rt"--nothing tricky really (I just invented formation names, use whatever you already use for this). We sometimes will have a few set "one-word" shifts like "Starburst" was one where we used to shift from some base sets to a bunch set and often had a few predesigned plays, like toss sweep or a quick pass.
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Post by coachsky on Dec 12, 2006 15:44:29 GMT -6
I've used offset in the past.
We called our fullback motionings across as (Hop). So If I want to call 44 ISO. The call would be:
Hop to King Right 44 ISO.
This tells the Fullback to Line up Queen and then shuffle motion to King at the snap count.
If we want him to cross and then return it simply "Hop Back". The call would be:
Hop Back to King Right 44 ISO.
This tells the Fullback to Line up King shuffle to Queen and then back to King. Frankly we did not use the "back" motion very often. If we found a team was not adjusting, we would HOP and Trade (TE) all night.
There was one Night when We found a LBer would trace the F&B once direction, but not follow him back. We used "Hop Back" several times in a row until they finally adjusted. We want to "Hop" on ISO when we move from Q to K and the SSDT doesn't shift from a 1 tech to a 3 Tech. Gives us a great angle.
When they do shift we want to TRAP the 3 Tech.
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