From Run-pass Options To The West Coast Offense: Breaking Down All 32 Offensive Schemes In The Nfl | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

From Run-pass Options To The West Coast Offense: Breaking Down All 32 Offensive Schemes In The Nfl

Superself

If you want to, we can supply you.
Club Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2002
Messages
6,504
Reaction score
2,407
Location
New Jersey
Interesting, and the link includes graphics of plays for each team.

Miami Dolphins
Coach Adam Gase is known for tailoring his offense to his personnel, so expect a different look from the Dolphins with Ryan Tannehill under center instead of Jay Cutler. Tannehill is excellent throwing on the run, so bootlegs and rollouts should be frequent, and Gase could look to add certain read-option and run-pass-option packages like he did when he was Tim Tebow's quarterbacks coach in Denver. But the running game will be equally important, and Miami’s base scheme will likely be inside zone runs out of the shotgun formation for Kenyan Drake (1). They can also operate a potent play-action passing attack from that formation.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/grap...?utm_source=reddit.com&utm_term=.747017b19888
 
Kinda like what I'm hoping for.

Thill is an athlete playing QB.

Use him accordingly!

Run Ryan run!

Remember you got hurt impersonating a pocket QB.
 
this O is going to stress the hell outta most every D it faces.

DC's won't have enough fingers to stick in the dyke if Gase's play calling is what it should be.
 
i didnt see mention of the wr screens. did i miss a presser? please excuse my igonorance but i still fully expect to see our 3rd and long offense throw short of the sticks.

I really don't understand the way we act like Gase is fascinated with screens. I think its just that we have a hard time separating the largely inept offense we saw last year from the Philbin years. Last year's team featured a QB who wasn't ever comfortable who was never good at dealing with pressure to begin with and was even worse after coming in late. Our offensive line actually provided less on the regular than some of Tannehill's early years, though our QB's didn't hold the ball quite as much as he used to. Our offense incorporated a lot more screens and things than normal because we weren't running Gase's offense, we were running whatever we could run with a bad QB and a bad line but good skill position players. In 2016 we had a lot of downfield action going on no matter who was at QB. This is what I see as Gase's offense.
 
Back
Top Bottom