I LOVE football. I am a football geek and enjoy learning about the strategies and coaching philosophies.
I see how various coaching ideas have played out over the years-- for instance the evolution of the West Coast offense and the Tampa Two defence, the 3-4 defense, the 4-6 defense etc etc etc.
Anyway, I notice that the Miami Dolphins are now utilizing the `wildcat`offense formation in their games! This is a high-school formation that takes advantage of the agility of the quarterback-- the running back typically takes the snap and the quarterback is lined up in a wide variety of positions.
Here is a snippet analysis from Gregg Easterbrook from espn.com on page 2:
Miami ran the Wildcat with good results for the third straight week, and Atlanta also used the Wildcat, as this high school tactic -- tailback takes the snap -- begins to catch on in the NFL. On many of Miami's Wildcat snaps, quarterback Chad Pennington lines up as a wide receiver and is ignored; the defense figures he is only lined up this way to draw a defender outside. On Sunday Pennington lined up as a wide receiver; tailback Ronnie Brown took the snap; Brown handed off to tailback Ricky Williams running right, toward Pennington. Is the quarterback really a blocker on this play? Not likely. Pennington stepped back behind the line, Williams flipped him a lateral, and Pennington threw to uncovered tailback Patrick Cobbs for a 53-yard touchdown. Sweet high-school-style action, plus Miami had three tailbacks on the field for the play.
[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=easterbrook/ 081014&sportCat=nfl[/url]
Now views differ on the current use of the wildcat. Here are Warren Sapp`s comments:
[url]http://nfl.fanhouse.com/2008/10/09/warren-sapp-finds-the-dol phins-wildcat-offense-disrespectful/ [/url]
Of course, wikipedia has a somewhat sparse explanation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildcat_offense
Now my theory is that this will be the future of NFL play. People like Tebow are MADE for this type of offense. The thing is that I highly doubt that the Wildcat in the future will resemble what is being called the Wildcat right now. It will naturally evolve.
People are already talking that Tebow will fail at the NFL because he does not take snaps from centre and he runs an option offense-- not a quick pass and read defense NFL game. Just like the run and shoot was in vouge back in the early 90s, (but never really had a long history), the Wildcat will take off due to people like Tim Tebow!
There are always singular originators in the NFL who are not too popular with their radical philosophies (Mike Martz back in the day!), so the Wildcat may seem too silly at this point. But I beleive that some coach will utilize it AROUND a smart QB like Tebow and there will be plenty of copycats....
What do you guys thinkÉ
I see how various coaching ideas have played out over the years-- for instance the evolution of the West Coast offense and the Tampa Two defence, the 3-4 defense, the 4-6 defense etc etc etc.
Anyway, I notice that the Miami Dolphins are now utilizing the `wildcat`offense formation in their games! This is a high-school formation that takes advantage of the agility of the quarterback-- the running back typically takes the snap and the quarterback is lined up in a wide variety of positions.
Here is a snippet analysis from Gregg Easterbrook from espn.com on page 2:
Miami ran the Wildcat with good results for the third straight week, and Atlanta also used the Wildcat, as this high school tactic -- tailback takes the snap -- begins to catch on in the NFL. On many of Miami's Wildcat snaps, quarterback Chad Pennington lines up as a wide receiver and is ignored; the defense figures he is only lined up this way to draw a defender outside. On Sunday Pennington lined up as a wide receiver; tailback Ronnie Brown took the snap; Brown handed off to tailback Ricky Williams running right, toward Pennington. Is the quarterback really a blocker on this play? Not likely. Pennington stepped back behind the line, Williams flipped him a lateral, and Pennington threw to uncovered tailback Patrick Cobbs for a 53-yard touchdown. Sweet high-school-style action, plus Miami had three tailbacks on the field for the play.
[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=easterbrook/ 081014&sportCat=nfl[/url]
Now views differ on the current use of the wildcat. Here are Warren Sapp`s comments:
[url]http://nfl.fanhouse.com/2008/10/09/warren-sapp-finds-the-dol phins-wildcat-offense-disrespectful/ [/url]
Of course, wikipedia has a somewhat sparse explanation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildcat_offense
Now my theory is that this will be the future of NFL play. People like Tebow are MADE for this type of offense. The thing is that I highly doubt that the Wildcat in the future will resemble what is being called the Wildcat right now. It will naturally evolve.
People are already talking that Tebow will fail at the NFL because he does not take snaps from centre and he runs an option offense-- not a quick pass and read defense NFL game. Just like the run and shoot was in vouge back in the early 90s, (but never really had a long history), the Wildcat will take off due to people like Tim Tebow!
There are always singular originators in the NFL who are not too popular with their radical philosophies (Mike Martz back in the day!), so the Wildcat may seem too silly at this point. But I beleive that some coach will utilize it AROUND a smart QB like Tebow and there will be plenty of copycats....
What do you guys thinkÉ