They caught us one time.  It was the play where they scored their second
td.  

The thing about lining up is that it stops the defense from
substituting.  We figured out how to do that though.  

We also seemed to be able to predict what type of offense they were
running.  3rd and long was pretty easy to defend, nor had they been in
that situation very often during the season.

Our last drive consumed over 6 minutes.  That would also keep them from
running a lot of offensive plays.  :-)

 

 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

Real Estate Broker

Halo Realty, LLC

700 E. Main St.

Hendersonville TN 37075

[email protected]

office: 615-822-3509

fax: 615-822-7741

mobile: 615-972-4239

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of John Vega
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2009 10:46 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] [SUN]: 5 biggest plays of the BCS
Championship Game (Andreu)

 

Having watched the game again, I can pretty confidently state that the
biggest play of the game was not a play at all.

 

Oklahoma does not run a true no-huddle. It lines up quickly and, if the
defense is not prepared, runs an immediate play. If the defense is
properly aligned, then Bradford backs off center, looks to the sideline
to signal in a play, and then signals the play to his WRs.

 

In a true no-huddle, either several plays are called in advance when no
time can run off the clock (such as after an incomplete pass) and are
run consecutively, or the plays are called by the QB as he approaches
the line and signalled by him to his WRs as he approaches.

 

A true no-huddle also appears to have a wider complement of plays, the
Oklahoma offense seemed to just have a few "quick-hit" plays it would
revert to if the defense had not yet lined up.

 

So, the key to me was Strong recognizing this and making certain that
the defense was aware enough (and conditioned enough) to be in a proper
alignment before Oklahoma was ready to snap the ball. As a result,
Bradford was continually walking away from center. I will count the
number of times when I watch the game a third time, but I believe that
this happened almost 2/3rds of the time.

 

Receiving the play from the sideline and then signalling the new play to
the WRs took almost every second of the 35 second clock for Bradford,
dramatically reducing the number of plays that Oklahoma could run. I had
read that Oklahoma had been averaging 88 offensive plays, it may have
had half of that against us.

 

Who would have thought that the key to controlling the tempo of the game
against Oklahoma was as simple as the defense lining up quickly and
properly? None of the analysts (even after the game), but apparently our
coaches figured it out.

 

-Zeb

 

 

 

On Jan 11, 2009, at 10:13 PM, Shane Ford wrote:






5 biggest plays of the BCS Championship Game



By Robbie Andreu
Gainesville Sun Staff writer

Published: Sunday, January 11, 2009 at 1:43 p.m. 
Last Modified: Sunday, January 11, 2009 at 1:43 p.m.

 

Ahmad Black's interception

Major Wright at the right spot

Torrey Davis comes crashing through

 Percy's big run

        

        Tebow to Nelson

         





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