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Read option is here to stay


Deebo

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This is not a wrinkle that will be figured out. The Wildcat was and is nothing like the read option. If I were a braggart I would mention that I wrote about this very thing in 2010 as Cam was going through the draft process.

When I or others said that Cam could revolutionize the QB position, we were mainly talking about how scouts view QBs in the evaluation process. Before Cam's rookie year, being very mobile was considered either negligible benefit or even a hindrance.

The truth is, that the prototypical straight drop back QB is on the verge of extinction in college and high school. There will always be a premium on great passers. But what we have seen over the last 10 or so years is that prototypical QBs have become over valued in the scouting process. Basically, if you ran a pro style offense in college and could be even moderately competent you would get an automatic top two round grade.

I said then and I still believe now that the NFL is on the verge of a major change. Mainly because the athletic QB has become so commonplace in college that the NFL will have to adjust in order to expand the options at QB that are available.

And with the remarkable success of our offense (which is better than you guys act like it is), SF, Seattle, and Washington, NFL coaches are beginning to make this transition and will continue to do so unless college reverts back to more traditional offenses.

Of course, when I said this two years ago most on here laughed at me.

At the same time, it is too early to be too braggadocios, because the NFL defenses will continue to make adjustments. But in my opinion, it doesn't really matter what defenses do. If the QB can pass as well as run, it is virtually undefendable.

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If the read option is a gimmick, so is the forward pass. Read option has been around longer.

Not the way its being played now from the shotgun. Its out on the edge now as opposed to the old wishbone where the QB ran down the line and got blown up by the DE in the pros.

I agree its here to stay. With a lack of quality drop back QBs teams may draft a bunch of read option guys and start treating the QB position like they do running backs. The rookie salary cap makes it doable.

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At the same time, it is too early to be too braggadocios, because the NFL defenses will continue to make adjustments. But in my opinion, it doesn't really matter what defenses do. If the QB can pass as well as run, it is virtually undefendable.

I think what they will start doing is blitzing the merge point, and hitting the QB no matter what. Teams that use it a lot will need 2 QBs who can run it.

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The read option may be here to stay indeed.

However, I still would like Cam and the Panthers to play the way they did at the end of 2012 (and in 2011), where Cam sits mostly in the pocket and only runs when the pocket collapses/he has to, and/or on 2-5 called run plays during the game. That's it. Cam, and the offense has been most effective so far doing it just like that.

Just the threat of him running, is good enough to open up the RB runs and passing game.

Of course, a lot of this centers on what the defense gives Cam to work with of course. But based off prior success, that should be the base game plan for him and the offense.

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Guest BlueBoy

It will eventually be figured out, just like the wildcat was.

It's just a good wrinkle to have in the playbook, not as a base offense. Also the niners dont use it as a base its just sprinkled in here and there where its most effective.

Just because the QB doesn't keep all the time doesn't mean it's not being used. They defended Kaep so Gore gutted them. Either way you gonna get gutted. here to stay.

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Guest BlueBoy

Teams have already figured out how to stop the read option. Its really not that challenging, unless you're the packers of course. It really just falls on the execution of the defenders. Its good to throw in the game at some point.

What team have figured it out? You mean the Failcon game? Figuring out doesn't mean letting the RB gut you all day long by only defending the QB.

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I think what they will start doing is blitzing the merge point, and hitting the QB no matter what. Teams that use it a lot will need 2 QBs who can run it.

In order to even try to do that you would have to know exactly when the team is going to run the read option and what side it is being run to. That likely won't happen.

Also if you try to do that then the offensive coordinator will probably pull a guard and fullback to that side and just run power off tackle and shred the huge holes that will open up when the DE is over pursuing and leaves a gaping hole on that side leaving a running back running through a gaping hole with two lead blockers, Big run and likely TD city.

The third thing is the screen game and slant routes will blow that look up if you try to blitz constantly to take away the read option.

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