The trend towards pass first offensive football has generally led to a decrease in run game intricacy. Spread and pass first teams have found that they can put up high point totals with only a few simple run blocking schemes. This approach is sound – with focus on the passing game, the simplified run game means that high levels of execution can be attained on the few blocking schemes that are in the playbook.
This does mean that some concepts of the past have been largely lost. The following play exemplifies the lost art of the complex run game, a tackle trap on a top nose guard (Tony Casillas), intended to make that nose guard’s life difficult while opening a sizeable hole and utilizing angles across the line of scrimmage.
Often, the best offensive system is the one that goes against contemporary trends. Increasingly, teams are finding that the spread offense is not a magic bullet. While the many variations of the spread ARE sound football, defenses are now built to stop them, and those offenses lack the novelty that once made them so difficult to defend.
Perhaps those defenses – built to stop the spread passing game and various zone running schemes – are now susceptible to a return to power running. The Stanford Cardinal under Jim Harbaugh and David Shaw, as well as the San Francisco 49ers under Harbaugh, have capitalized by building swift, powerful lines and incorporating complex run schemes and jumbo personnel packages. Once a staple, those schemes are now the novelty while the spread offense thrives. While mastering the execution of a run game complete with powers and counters and traps and whams and isolations can be difficult, it is more than possible with proper commitment.
The play:
Good stuff! I love the trap play — oh, I’m sure I’d hate it as the defender getting trapped, but the play itself is just one of the many reasons I love football. I also like how cyclical it is. One thing worked at one time, they “figured it out”…then it goes out of style, but often comes back with a vengence.
Also, this is a blast from the past for me — and anyone blocking Casillas or Bosworth is ok with me as a Nebraska fan!
One question — was “This does mean that concepts of the past have not been largely lost…” meant to say “have been largely lost?” I wasn’t positive.
Thanks for the comment! You are correct, one of the huge benefits of the play is making life difficult for a defender, and making his aggressiveness work against him. This, in turn, makes other plays more effective.
And thanks for catching that mistake! I’ve corrected the sentence to (hopefully) make more sense – and yes, I did mean to say that the concepts have been largely lost.
There are several coupons that might just be good over a given evening.