mykc14 wrote:Pretty cool article put together by ESPN about how the Hawks use the jet sweep. Nothing mind blowing as it has been around forever. I used it when I played football and have used it as a coach and coached against it. I have also seen other NFL teams doing it a little this year, but not nearly as crisp as the Hawks. A good example was last night as the Steelers tried to run it with Brown, the timing, the mesh, Ben's ball handling all looked bad and telegraphed who was going to get the ball. Anyway, nobody in the NFL runs it like the Hawks and I think ET sums up why in the article:
"Nobody does it quite like us because we have the dynamic three with Russ, Marshawn and Percy," Seahawks safety Earl Thomas said. "You don't know who's getting the ball. And we have the timing down right. I noticed most of those other teams don't. With Russ, everything is right on time. But with the other teams, it looks kind of shaky."
It is clear they have spent a lot of time on the timing. Rus getting the snap at he exact moment is key. It is nice to be able to do it from the shotgun. It will be interesting to see how close the timing is when they are on the road, as getting the snap at the exact right time may be a little hard in a loud environment.
http://espn.go.com/espn/feature/story/_ ... -opponents
kalibane wrote:No one is saying this is a new thing. The jet/fly sweep has been around for ages. That being said Ted Ginn is not Percy Harvin or Corderralle Patterson which is why no one cared about it in 2011.
Futureite wrote:[The article on NFL.Com did have a general tenure which made this seem like a new trend. In reality Harvin carried the ball 52 times at Minn in 2011 and other teams were using it with their own WRs that yr as well (SF, Philly).
True, Ginn is not Harvin, but he did make a huge impact on STs. His skillset was equally suited for this play, which requires only pure speed to be run sucessfully. The net result with Ginn has been about the same as with Harvin. It's good on average for about 8-10 yds, with a couple chunk plays pulling up the average. It is a good change up and I am not surprised that Seattle is running it. A couple months ago I speculated that they'd use Harvin, Michael, Lynch and Wilson in some form in a multiple option set, which I thought coud be a nightmare to defend. It just makes sense when you have that many guys who are so good in space.
RiverDog wrote:I've heard it referred to as the fly sweep, I assume that they are one and the same, no?
The play happens so quickly that I don't think there's enough time for a blitz between the tackles to get into the backfield quick enough to blow it up so long as our OL are smart enough to drop their blocking assignment and get a piece of the blitzing LB. I'd be worried about a corner blitz or something coming from the outside, but since it seems like we run it in non passing situations, like on first down, getting it blown up by a blitz is less of a concern.
Unless I've been inobservant, we haven't run this play for less than 10 yards since Harvin became part of the offense. It's a great play to keep as an ace in the hole, use it only a few times a game, and run other options off it.
HumanCockroach wrote:I could be wrong, a lot of times terms become mixed up and changed based on what staff is using the term, but when I was coaching a "fly sweep" was a slot receiver coming across and a "jet" was the outside y or z receiver. I'm not sure that is the difference, but that is how they ran it. Typically the FB or RB is an option with a ball fake going to them either on a trap or dive.
The offensive team had a bunch of variations, but the "jet" was always the outside receiver, and the "fly" was always the slot ( there was also if I remember correctly always a TE to the Jet side, but not to the fly side, but that could have just been coaches preference, I didn't spend a lot of time attempting to understand it LOL).
kalibane wrote:It's all semantics. It's essentially the same thing though. Some places the difference is the alignment of the WR going in motion like HC is talking about. Some places the difference is whether the QB is under center or in the shotgun. It really could be anything or no difference at all. It pretty much boils down to the verbiage a particular coach chooses to use which we all know varies.
And yeah the End Around is a completely different play.
kalibane wrote:Rest assured Future we get it.
You don't like the Seahawks getting this shine and you want the 49ers to get credit for this "innovation" because the 49ers ran it as a gadget play a couple time back in 2011. If it makes you feel any better I remember Eric Metcalf running the same play a few times 20 years ago and they didn't mention him either. Does that soothe your wounded ego?
As usual your inferiority complex is causing you to miss the mark. The Seahawks didn't break out the plaly as a gadget a couple of times over the course of the season. They ran the Jet sweep action more times in one game than Ginn has run it in his NFL career. They built off the original play design to open up plays in the passing game and to make holes for Lynch. They are forcing teams to make a decision on trying to contain three gifted runners.
Ginn was not as effective as Percy Harvin (or Patterson) and if he was he'd still be wearing a Miami Dolphins uniform, and never would have even played for the 49ers. Harvin and Patterson as threats running the ball are in a completely different league than Ginn.
How about you devote some of this energy that you are using whining about the jet sweep to owning up to how wrong you were about the Seahawks screen game?
kalibane wrote:Considering other teams are using it with more frequency after Seattle started unveiled it in the Super Bowl it's by definition a trend. But your commitment to the truth is brittle at best. I don't think that makes Seattle some kind of trailblazer, after all the play has been used for decades. There is no doubt that Bevell cribbed this from college/high school offenses. You are the one who felt the need to talk about SF using it first.
And you are also just continuing to lie. The fly sweep has been used as a gadget in the past. The 49ers did not in any way shape or form use it in the way Seattle is using it now. And again I couldn't care less if they had. Roman has done some very inventive things but expanded use of the fly sweep just isn't one of them. Not at Stanford and not in SF. It really doesn't matter who started using if first. This is about you once again telling obvious unnecessary lies. You're like an 8 year old with chocolate on your face telling their mother they weren't the one who ate the cookies.
You talked just as confidently about how often Seattle throws screens only to be proven definitively wrong (which I will continue to remind you about until you own up), but it's becoming more and more apparent that you just talk. You don't really pay attention to football at all.
Old but Slow wrote:The only fear I have about the play, is that because the ball must be snapped when Percey is is near Russell, the defense can anticipate the snap, and blow up the play. It has not happened, yet,that I have seen, but it could become a problem.
I watch 16 49er games per yr and you do not.
Not for nothing, but Ginn ran the ball a total of 9 times after Harbaugh arrived .
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