Football Geeks: Do we have an official name for that one-man play action thing Denard does?

Submitted by griesecheeks on

See: Thread Title.

Seriously, this play alone is worth keeping Coach Rod on. It is pure genius, and literally makes me squeal like Dennis Nedry when Dodgson pulls out the Shaving Cream Can. This is totally unfair to opposing defenses and I love, love, love it! It's gotta be hard for Rod/Magee to not call it more often than they do.

Can't wait to see 'the play,' for lack of a better description, in The Shoe a few weeks from now!

Dodgson-Nedry

quiqsilver

November 8th, 2010 at 10:24 PM ^

QB Iso Pass or QB Sweep Pass, depending on which you're referring to.  I sometimes call it LOLOLOLOLOL because that's what I'm doing at the safety, but that's overly technical and pedantic.  If it's run out of trips, as we like to do, it would be Trips (Left/Right) QB Sweep Pass.  For example:

Claretts Folly

November 9th, 2010 at 3:50 PM ^

The play will not always have a consistent name because certian elements such as the formation and pass concept will be changed from time-to-time.

One thing that will remain constant, however, is that the number will always be an 80 or 90 number (80 if the play is run to the right, 90 if the play is run to the left). Reason being that Rich Rodrugiez's 80/90 series is the mobile game/protection common to the play.

Using this play from the ND game as an example;

The play would be "Leo Tite 90 Stalk n' Go"

Formation: Leo Tite

Protection/QB action: 90

Pass Concept: Stalk n' Go. That was my added guess. "Stalk" is a type of block a WR executes on an off-coverage defender. A "Go" route is just a take-off downfield hence "Stalk n' Go". The concept could be called anything that Michigan has in-house ("foolie", "lookie", etc.) but that was my educated guess. Sidenote: the WR's don't do a hell of a job selling the stalk but I'm guessing that was more a function of ND's quick reaction to the potential QB run.