tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2544267494643079726.post7470193717051211926..comments2023-07-06T11:41:56.909-04:00Comments on Breakdown Sports: Inside the Playbook: Purdue's Weakside Flood and the QB Keep ConceptSpace Coyotehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11525412240793969593noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2544267494643079726.post-77669039580609946422019-01-16T13:09:26.669-05:002019-01-16T13:09:26.669-05:00Purdue ran a gap scheme to simulate their zone run...Purdue ran a gap scheme to simulate their zone run off of play action which left the backside EMOL unblocked.<br /><br />I've personally never been a huge fan of leaving the EMOL unblocked because it can disrupt the play timing even with a hot read, so my preference would either pull the frontside OG (frontside in terms of OG in the direction the RB is going) back to account for the EMOL or, if you run split zone, utilize a H-back/FB to account for that guy. Can also lock on the backside with the BST, but that's not as clean of a look to pull the defense in the direction of flow.Space Coyotehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11525412240793969593noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2544267494643079726.post-68548369553115144072019-01-13T15:32:47.935-05:002019-01-13T15:32:47.935-05:00How do you suggest the OL block the first diagram?...How do you suggest the OL block the first diagram?sparkeyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09652365039913909736noreply@blogger.com