Patriots offensive snag concept
Interesting playbook breakdown of the “snag” concept.
An Independent Patriots Blog
Patriots offensive snag concept
Interesting playbook breakdown of the “snag” concept.
While no team exclusively runs the Erhardt-Perkins offensive, many teams use its philosophy as the basis for creating the playbook. Bill Parcells, Bill Belichick, Josh McDaniels, Charlie Weis, Jeff Davidson, Bill Cowher, Marty Schottenheimer, and Chan Gailey-led teams typically base their attacks on ball control and/or running the ball.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/while-no-team-exclusively-runs-the-erhardt-perkins/
Weis states in his autobiography “No Excuses” that the first play that he called in Super Bowl XXXVI was: Zero Flood Slot Hat, Seventy-eight Shout Tosser. Zero is the base formation. Flood Slot Hat further modifies this formation to a set with one back in motion, two tight ends and two wide receivers (which is to say five potential receivers in total). Seventy-eight is the base play number, a three step drop play. Shout tells the three potential receivers on one side of the quarterback what routes they should run, while Tosser tells the other two potential receivers their patterns. During the actual game, Tom Brady threw the ball to Troy Brown for a twenty-one yard gain, seventeen of it after the catch.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/weis-states-in-his-autobiography-no-excuses-that/
Last month we had a lot of fun doing a week of morning posts about the Fairbanks-Bullough defensive system that the Patriots run. So it only seems fair that this week we’re looking at the other side of the ball and the Erhardt-Perkins offense.
The most interesting thing about the two systems (Erhardt-Perkins offense, Fairbanks-Bullough defense) that the Patriots run derivatives of today, both have their roots back to the Patriots teams of the 70s.
If you look back at the 1976 Patriots, the first really good Patriots team in franchise history at least as far as the regular season goes, you’ll find the following on the coaching staff:
So let’s start with the basics on the Erhardt-Perkins Offense (via Wikipedia):
This Erhardt – Perkins system is noted for its multiple formation and personnel grouping variations on a core number of base plays. Under this system, each formation and each play are separately numbered. Additional word descriptions further modify each play.
The system has at times had a reputation (whether or not earned) of being a traditional smash mouth offense that maximizes a team’s time of possession and does not as frequently call upon its running backs to serve as receivers. Erhardt was famous for his adage, “throw to score, run to win.” This system is thought to be particularly well suited for teams playing in harsh outdoor weather conditions of the northeast of the United States.
This offense often uses “the run to set up the pass” via play-action passing, faking the run in order to throw deep downfield when the defense is least expecting it. Despite its reputation, this system is not always a run first offense. Erhardt commonly ran the system in his later years spread wide open with multiple receivers (earning the moniker “Air Erhardt”), as NFL rules evolved to benefit the passing game. As a result of this influence, the Patriots will frequently run this offense with five potential receivers and an empty backfield should a favorable matchup present itself or as a function of available personnel.
Throughout the rest of the week we’ll have more articles and linkage about the Fairbanks-Perkins offense. With tidbits on it’s evolution as well as the touches that Josh McDaniels and Charlie Weis had on the system.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogVFJ1bfj
Welcome to the recurring nightmare of my off-season…
https://www.patspropaganda.com/welcome-to-the-recurring-nightmare-of-my/
Coming this week it’s an Erhardt-Perkins offense spectacular! We’ll dive in head first to break down this offensive system that was the grandaddy of what the Pats run today.
https://www.patspropaganda.com/coming-this-week-its-an-erhardt-perkins-offense/
Statistical storylines will loom over every team in 2012 season – Kerry J. Byrne – SI.com New England’s formula for winning Super Bowls was rock solid: pair a meat-and-potatoes but highly efficient offense with a ball-hawking opportunistic defense that repeatedly made big plays in big games. It wasn’t pretty or glamorous. But it yielded three […]