In some high schools, coaches are preparing to use the highly unusual formation known as the A-11 Offense. At first, this formation seems to be just plain retarded, but actually if you think about this formation as how the defense has to block against it, it's quite unique (in a good way). Here's how it breaks down:
- One Center -- obviously, to hike the football
- Two Tight Ends -- one positioned to the left of center, one positioned to the right of center
- Six Wide Receivers -- three positioned to the left and three positioned to the right
- Two Quarterbacks -- both positioned in the shotgun, with one to the left and one to the right
Now, when I first read this, I thought just like you guys did -- whoever actually uses this in a football game isn't going to have a coaching job anytime soon. But, think about this strategy in terms of how the defense has to control this unusual formation:
- The defense must cover all 6 wide receivers, or else risk giving up big yardage.
- Sure, only the center and the tight ends are protecting the quarterbacks, but with 6 guys covering the receivers (and for the conservative defensive coordinator, possibly adding one safety for zone support), the maximum number of guys the defense can send is four or five blitzers, at the most.
- Remember, there are two quarterbacks in this, so not only can either one of them throw the ball, they can throw the ball to each other if they get stuck in a tight situation. Also, when they start the play, they are in the shotgun, so they have a good look at the field in case they feel a blitz is coming.
- The biggest advantage to this formation: Every man on the offense is an eligible receiver. The quarterbacks, the wide receivers, the tight ends, and the center all can catch the ball if a play breaks down and they need to make a play with the football. No other formation in football lets an offense get away with this.
- Most of the time, running backs are only as spectacular as their offensive line is, and most NFL teams usually don't have the complete 1-2 package of both offensive line and running back.
- The career span of a running back has shortened considerably. By the time a running back is 28 or 29 years old, they're nothing but old, injury-prone broken engines (see Shaun Alexander if you think that's not true).
- Most elusive running backs often catch the ball now in addition to running the ball (see Brian Westbrook).
1 comment:
Why are all players eligalbe to recieve a pass? Does there still need to be 7 on the los? Very interesting...
Thank you
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