Sunday, May 29, 2011

The West Coast Offense: Timing-Based Passing

Original story by rufio, sbnation.com
 
One common misunderstanding about West Coast offenses is that they only throw short or that they utilize the 3-step drop most often in the passing game. In fact, Bill Walsh's bread and butter was 5-step drop, timing-based passes.

The genius of Bill Walsh was that everything he did in the 49ers organization was coordinated and extremely detailed, and it all worked to put the team in the best possible position to win. That theme remains true in the passing game, especially in the 5-step passing game.
Timed patterns coordinate the drops of the Quarterback with his reads, the receivers' routes and the pass protection within the context of the individual play. If done well, these 5-step timing patterns could also be coordinated within the more macro context of playcalling as well.

Two of the major advantages receivers have over pass defenders are that the receivers know
  1. Where they are going
  2. When they are going there
Walsh saw these advantages as necessary to the success of an offense that wasn't counting on having superior talent to win. When teams are evenly matched or when the defense is slightly better than the offense, receivers can exploit these advantages in order to get open. Timing is essential to accomplishing this.
As Walsh once noted:
Too often in college football, either the quarterback is standing there waiting for the receiver, or the receiver has broken before the quarterback can throw the ball. These are the biggest flaws you will see in the forward pass. Now when the receiver breaks before the ball can be thrown, the defensive back can adjust to the receiver. Any time the quarterback holds the ball waiting for the receiver to break, the defensive back sees it and breaks on the receiver.

Timing: making use of offensive suddenness

The Quarterback must make the read of the FS and then whichever other progression above by the time he hits the fifth step in his drop. That's the level of complexity and detail Bill Walsh incorporated into his offense. One-two-three-four-five and the ball needs to be out.
The WRs run a speed out at precisely 12 yards deep (a "speed" out is rounded, not square). The WR takes seven steps in his route to get that deep, and the ball is thrown before the WR can see it leave the QB's hand. The QB's drop should take under 1.2 seconds, and the ball should be out in under 1.8 seconds. 
The QB should try to throw "through the earhole" of the WR to ensure a completion, to place the ball where the WR can naturally catch it and turn upfield, to put the trajectory of the ball higher to avoid underneath defenders, and to put the ball at eye-level so the WR can turn and find it easily.
When thrown correctly, the WR makes a break and catches the ball before the CB can break on it. This gives him a chance to make some YAC, and timing this route with the QB's drop means the risk of a sack is minimized. This fully utilizes the receiver's advantage of knowing when he will make his move.


Cohesiveness: making use of offensive possibility

In order to maximize the receivers advantage of knowing where he will go, the offense needs to present a number of viable threats off of the same look so that the defense must respect many different route options and cannot begin to jump routes. If the defense jumps routes anyway, the offense must capitalize.
The following are some plays what would all look the same to the defense at first, but present differences later.
Slide14_medium
Slide15_medium
Slide16_medium
...you get the idea. You can draw up just about anything from the initial stems of this play. A cohesive offense will have other looks set up off of this specific play. For example, you might know how the opposing team schemes it's run fits and be able to run a draw off of this split flow action by the backs. Any team running this play would almost definitely include a version of an Out-n-up route:
Slide13_medium
If you can effectively run different plays from these stems, defenses will not be able to afford to guess which of the  plays the offense is running on this down. The offense will have retained the advantage of knowing where it's receivers will go.
Walsh wanted to eliminate the QB standing in the pocket with nowhere to throw, and he wanted to eliminate receivers getting open only for corners to recover within seconds, preventing completions. He accomplished this by coordinating the receivers' breaks with the QB's drop and reads, as well as the protection for the play (more on protection later). This created a coordinated, cohesive set of plays as the bread and butter of "The" West Coast offense.

No comments:

Post a Comment