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Jimbo Fisher and the WR Jailbreak screen
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:38 pm
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:38 pm
The WR would run forward and towards the sidelines a bit, then turn in to the middle of the field and catch it behind some blockers and make plays.
I loved this play. Seemed like when LSU had to have some yards the WRs would run this and get it every time.
I loved this play. Seemed like when LSU had to have some yards the WRs would run this and get it every time.
This post was edited on 8/22/10 at 3:13 pm
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:40 pm to BrutusRex
Oregon State uses similar blocking for the Rogers brothers.
I saw a game a year or two ago, in which Oregon State pounded the snot out of USCw with that blocking.
I didnt realize that was a Fisher specialty. I kept wanting to see it last season, for LSU.
I saw a game a year or two ago, in which Oregon State pounded the snot out of USCw with that blocking.
I didnt realize that was a Fisher specialty. I kept wanting to see it last season, for LSU.
This post was edited on 8/22/10 at 2:42 pm
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:41 pm to BrutusRex
Oh you mean like the one ran against ole miss and Penn st and everybody complained. We run it every game.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:42 pm to ottothewise
got a video link to it? i tried LSU screen/doucet/bowe on youtube and could not find a good example.
its a short pass and I think our guys can do it easily.
its a short pass and I think our guys can do it easily.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:42 pm to BrutusRex
early used to eat that shite up. bowe too
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:51 pm to im4LSU
Reminds me of the Bowe-Davis-Early combo. You are right I have not seen it run like you said since Jimbo was OC.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:52 pm to TigerMan02
seems like we used to run it w/ Clayton all the time
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:54 pm to Coater
It was a money play for us. Come on. LSU is known for some things and one of them is physical WRs and WRs than can block.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:57 pm to BrutusRex
bowe caught one vs arkansas in 06 and broke like 5 tackles, awesome
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:57 pm to BrutusRex
Crowton is the king of the bubble screen. IMO that is why JJ's completion % is high but yds/catch are low. It is not about running the screen, it is about execution of it. with no running game or threat of long passing that play is useless. They will put 8-9 men in the box and stop both the run and the bubble screen. you have to get it past the LB's to make it successful. we were not able to to do that much the last 2 yesrs.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:57 pm to BrutusRex
used to run it all the time to Green.
We don't run it, or any screens enough. Don't think anybody does anymore.
When we do run it you sure won't here me whining about it.
We don't run it, or any screens enough. Don't think anybody does anymore.
When we do run it you sure won't here me whining about it.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:57 pm to BrutusRex
Y'all have bitched about the bubble screen for 3 years on here.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 2:59 pm to BamaScoop
No, we bitch about the short side option. The WR bubble screen works.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:00 pm to BamaScoop
youtube link to Clayton highlights
2:22 and 2:50 are a couple examples. Man, I loved this guy.
2:22 and 2:50 are a couple examples. Man, I loved this guy.
This post was edited on 8/23/10 at 2:49 pm
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:03 pm to BrutusRex
Isn't the play your talking about the slip-screen/ jail-break screen?
Doesn't the bubble screen go towards the sideline?
Doesn't the bubble screen go towards the sideline?
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:08 pm to KingofthePoint
per wiki
Screens come in many forms. A screen to a running back to either the strong or short side of the field in the flats is often just called a screen. Screens to wide receivers come in four forms: The bubble screen, middle screen, slot screen, and slip screen.
The bubble screen was essentially created by Don Read when he was coach of the Montana Grizzlies. Lou Holtz, head coach of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, brought the play into prominence after calling Read and asking for the play. The bubble screen involves a receiver taking a step forward, then darting toward the quarterback to receive the ball while the linemen release to clear a path for the receiver. The benefit of the bubble screen is it works against zone or man coverage. A downside is that it is dependent on proper timing; a zone blitz or defensive end dropping into coverage can disrupt the timing, and may result in the quarterback being sacked.
The middle screen is like the bubble screen, except instead of being executed to one side of the field or another, the receiver continues his route to the middle of the field. The linemen release up the middle of the field in front of the receiver.
Screens come in many forms. A screen to a running back to either the strong or short side of the field in the flats is often just called a screen. Screens to wide receivers come in four forms: The bubble screen, middle screen, slot screen, and slip screen.
The bubble screen was essentially created by Don Read when he was coach of the Montana Grizzlies. Lou Holtz, head coach of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, brought the play into prominence after calling Read and asking for the play. The bubble screen involves a receiver taking a step forward, then darting toward the quarterback to receive the ball while the linemen release to clear a path for the receiver. The benefit of the bubble screen is it works against zone or man coverage. A downside is that it is dependent on proper timing; a zone blitz or defensive end dropping into coverage can disrupt the timing, and may result in the quarterback being sacked.
The middle screen is like the bubble screen, except instead of being executed to one side of the field or another, the receiver continues his route to the middle of the field. The linemen release up the middle of the field in front of the receiver.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:08 pm to Coater
Well the thing that people complain about is the bubble screen where ya pretty much just have the WR step back, throw the ball to him, the other WRs stalk block for him and he must make people miss.
The play that Jimbo ran quite a bit and that was our bread-and-butter during the 07 run is the jailbreak screen. It involves OL releasing and the WR coming back towards the middle of the field. Here's a link of Texas Tech running it with Crabtree.
It is an awesome play and something Crowton has gone away from as he phased Jimbo's playbook out.
Jailbreak Screen
The play that Jimbo ran quite a bit and that was our bread-and-butter during the 07 run is the jailbreak screen. It involves OL releasing and the WR coming back towards the middle of the field. Here's a link of Texas Tech running it with Crabtree.
It is an awesome play and something Crowton has gone away from as he phased Jimbo's playbook out.
Jailbreak Screen
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:12 pm to FootballNostradamus
YES!!! that is it!
Jailbreak screen then. Do it!
Jailbreak screen then. Do it!
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:13 pm to BrutusRex
The jail-break screen is my favorite play that we have run over the years. Perfect play for Shepard to do damage.
Posted on 8/22/10 at 3:25 pm to KingofthePoint
quote:
The jail-break screen is my favorite play that we have run over the years. Perfect play for Shepard to do damage.
YOU ARE CORRECT! it is all about timing and blocking. your linemen have to release and those WR's have to block.
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