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Kansas State vs. Texas Film Review (Oct. 24, 2015)

Ryan Bridges

Contributing Author
Joined
Aug 5, 2015
Messages
344
Tyrone Swoopes' touchdowns aren't as interesting as this one, so we'll start here. 

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What I like: It's Cover 0. I think the second-biggest reason the defense has been better the past two games is the move toward more man coverage. (The biggest reason for the improvement is the better play of the defensive line, some of which has to do with the scheme shift but there also seems to have been an attitude change.) Playing man lets Texas get the freshmen on the field — the fact that that's a good thing says a lot.

What I don't like: When the receivers are close together like this, the DBs can't align at the same depth. It makes it too easy to get a rub, just like this. With this alignment, it wouldn't matter who Texas had in at safety.

 
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Swoopes' first TD. 

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You can really see how K-State defended the 18 Wheeler package: They rushed like hell off the edges. The plays Texas has used from this formation are pretty slow developing, so the penetration can make things tough. 

But Caleb Bluiett and Kent Perkins do a nice job washing the defense inside, and Alex De La Torre pops another guy in the mouth. Also, Swoopes is running like a grown man this year.

One note — and obviously Texas didn't need it — but K-State basically paid zero attention to the eligible receivers. I'm pretty sure Andrew Beck could have walked into the flat and no one in white would have noticed. 

 
Texas actually left a man unblocked at the point of attack on the second touchdown.

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The previous play was Power; this one's Counter. Watch Patrick Vahe — if you can make them out, the blue line is where he should have gone, the red line is where he did go. At least he ends up blocking somebody (more on that later). 

And check out the other blocks. Sedrick Flowers' is very good, Connor Williams' is savage.

 
John Burt made some nice blocks later that I'll try to remember to point out, but this was bad. It's even more frustrating because I feel like this play also featured Daje Johnson's first block ever. 

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The play is inside zone read. The OL gets a good push, especially right tackle Perkins, whose displacement of the end helps D'Onta Foreman get outside. (KSU's #9 also missed the tackle — I've noticed him several times and never for good things.) This would have been a long gain if Burt had even gotten in the way of the corner.

 
I like this because it gives a glimpse into just how simple the rushing attack was. The formation on these next two plays is identical but they attack different spots in very different ways.

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Take note: Fullback and tailback on the same side, jet motion to that side. The safety has to come up and play force, and Marcus Johnson lights him up. I don't even care about #10; this was going to be a touchdown if Daje hadn't slipped. 

Now here's the counter.

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Same formation, same motion, but it comes back the other way. Really nice blocks by Perkins, Flowers and DLT. This is also one of the plays where the receivers put in work.

 
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Remove the motion and put the tailback and "fullback" on opposite sides and the play becomes QB Counter, which you may remember as the gotta-have-it play from the Oklahoma game.

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I circled #9 because he screwed up again and let Beck kick him out. Notice how Vahe and Beck play this: Because the end crashes down, Vahe seals him inside instead of kicking him out, and then Beck responds by wrapping around that block instead of cutting inside and leading through the hole. I mention this because we screwed it up a few times.

Oh, WR blocking alert: Marcus Johnson on the bottom of the screen.

 
One other thing that's probably obvious but interesting enough to mention just in case: This is the same play from a different formation that Texas runs with Swoopes at the goal line. I think they've only run Heard on QB Power like once all year, but both of them run Counter.

 
K-State ran this concept at least a couple of times, and it's not a coincidence they're targeting the same guy everyone else (or at least Notre Dame, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma) went after.

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I think I've mentioned before that Texas should add a third option to this read concept. 

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On a related note, remember the awesome triple option play Texas whipped out against Cal? Whatever happened to it? I haven't seen it since the long completion to Bluiett was called back for an illegal forward pass; that's a terrible reason to wipe it from the playbook. 

 
I lied. Texas also ran Power from that formation from earlier (fullback and tailback on the same side), but this is the only time I've seen it so far. 

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You can get a sense of how much Texas missed Perkins on this one. Flowers had a nice block as well, and the run speaks for itself.

 
This play really bugs me. 

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First, Williams gets beaten, which is just weird. Then you can see how much the pressure affects Heard — hopping and turning your back to the rush is not a recipe for success. Both receivers on that side are wide open and it's like he just decided to split the difference. I think he was targeting Marcus, though.

 
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I think maybe I think Burt is a better receiver than Heard does. This time he just didn't see the corner blitz (he never does). I'm also at the part of the breakdown where I'm getting frustrated by the plays that were missed — and it's almost 5 a.m. — so I'm complaining about stupid stuff.

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The complaint is a little more legitimate here. 

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OK, I'm calling it a night after this one. On one of the counter runs earlier we looked at how the pulling guard sealed the end inside and the H-back wrapped around. Beck didn't do it this time, opting to whisper in Flowers' ear instead. 

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Taylor Doyle wasn't able to reach the 3-technique either, but that's not an easy block.

And I almost forgot: Note the formation and the play. Nothing fancy.

 
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Tyrone Swoopes' touchdowns aren't as interesting as this one, so we'll start here. 

HonoredGrotesqueFritillarybutterfly.gif


What I like: It's Cover 0. I think the second-biggest reason the defense has been better the past two games is the move toward more man coverage. (The biggest reason for the improvement is the better play of the defensive line, some of which has to do with the scheme shift but there also seems to have been an attitude change.) Playing man lets Texas get the freshmen on the field — the fact that that's a good thing says a lot.

What I don't like: When the receivers are close together like this, the DBs can't align at the same depth. It makes it too easy to get a rub, just like this. With this alignment, it wouldn't matter who Texas had in at safety.
Exactly

If you're gonna play Cover 0, the DB's gotta crowd the line and press harder. To take it a step further - should Haines even be on the field in this situation? Maybe another CB is a better option?

 
I think maybe I think Burt is a better receiver than Heard does. This time he just didn't see the corner blitz (he never does). I'm also at the part of the breakdown where I'm getting frustrated by the plays that were missed — and it's almost 5 a.m. — so I'm complaining about stupid stuff.

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The complaint is a little more legitimate here. 

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Baylor throws a fade or go to the bottom receiver in this situation. Heard's gotta get better at reading defenses.

 
Here's Counter again (same formation, y'all). I just like showing these because you can see all the different ways a play can fail. In this case, Perkins doesn't make his block on the second level — everything else is terrific. 

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You can also get a good sense of how the motion affects the defense. 

 
Same formation, sweep to the field.

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Daje made this play work. Burt's out there blocking on the edge, at least. 

 
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