Even though it is now in its second year, many Penn State fans remain ignorant about what an RPO-based offense is, and what it isn’t.
Comments about “not controlling the line of scrimmage”, or “not blowing people off of the ball” are the byproduct of this ignorance of the system.
If you are waiting to see the Penn State offensive line “blow people off of the ball”, you might as well take a long nap, because it is not going to be happening any time soon.
There are many pluses and minuses to an RPO style of attack, and some people may like the RPO system and some may not. But in an RPO system one thing you simply cannot see is an offensive line “blowing people off of the ball”, no matter how talented the offensive line may be.
Blowing people off of the ball, getting out to the second level of the opposing defense, simply cannot happen in an RPO – because it would result in a penalty (illegal man downfield) every time the Quarterback made his read and opted to utilize the P part of the RPO.
The RPO is more of a "hit 'em where they ain't" system - by getting into the ideal option, rather than a "knock them on their butts" system.
FWIW, the handful of times Penn State has actually run a pure “run” play (which has not been very often) the offensive line was very effective at getting off the ball and creating seams to the second level or to the outside edge.
What people have been commenting about with respect to Penn State’s run game difficulties with the offensive line is not a problem with the offensive line. It is inherent to the the option selected when executing the RPO.
Any defense – whether it be Alabama, Pitt, or even Georgia State - if they want to, can take away the Inside Zone part of the RPO package, easily.
That is exactly what Pitt and Georgia State did, essentially saying “We are not going to let Barkley beat us, as a runner”. They did this by simply shooting both of their inside linebackers aggressively up into the Center-Guard gaps.
There is no way to effectively block the inside zone – out of the RPO – against that defensive scheme. And that is both simply obvious and not a secret.
That does not mean the RPO is a bad system. The way to counter that defense, within the RPO, is to have the Quarterback read that action, and then pull the ball out of the Tailback’s belly,and exploit that vacated middle of the defense with a quick pop pass to the TE running a seam route, or to a slot receiver running a slant, or some other exploitation of that vacated middle. We have seen just that numerous times over the last year and a half.
You can also attack that scheme by running the R part of the RPO as an outside zone or a toss sweep – which Penn State has done from time to time – or even a wheel route. Which effectively can get the tailback outside of those shooting inside linebackers, who are now all tied up in the traffic in the middle of the line - and get the tailback, or other receiver/ball-carrier, out into unfettered open space.
Thus far, Penn State has not shifted dramatically away from the inside zone as the primary R option in the RPO. Maybe they should have, but they have not thus far. But I am sure that Moorhead is more than bright enough to know that option is a bullet he will have at his disposal when needed.
FWIW, Iowa has never been a defense that likes to shoot their inside linebackers. Narduzzi, on the other hand, has always favored that scheme – even against non-RPO teams - and the Georgia State coaches did the same things Pitt did.
If Iowa stays with what they are most familiar with, which is a much less aggressive read-and-flow defense with their linebackers staying behind the screens created by their defensive linemen, Penn State will likely have more consistent success with their inside zone. At least being able to get Barkley through the Line of Scrimmage.
If Iowa does adopt the “Pitt” scheme on defense, it will be up to either McSorley to make the quick read and exploit the belly of the defense with the P option, or for Moorhead to adjust his play calls to a more outside zone / sweep / counter heavy scheme for the R option.
In either case, the issue that many people think they are seeing, an inability for the offensive line to “control the line of scrimmage”, or "blow people off of the ball" in the run game, is simply misguided. It simply isn't an option in an RPO scheme.
That doesn't mean the offensive line has been perfect, or even outstanding - there certainly have been occasional breakdowns - but the things mentioned in most of the criticisms are simply ignorance of the system. A system that is very different from anything Penn State fans became accustomed to seeing over the last 20 years.
Really some very reasonable points here, but I think it's tough to blame the system when Bates gets beat like a whip resulting in a sack for mcsorley. And I'm sorry, then I guess I don't favor a system in which third and short is unattainable or our all world halfback gets his head taken off 6 yards behind the LOS. I understand we score points....in big bunches with this system and it's been great for us. But the idea that giving up sacks and hurries of our QB and accepting our runningback is going to get stuffed 6 times a game.....and our third down percentage is going to suck thus stressing our defense. It just makes me think is "there another way within the confines of this offensive scheme?"
You could win every game by 100 points and people will still find faults.....just the way it is.So Penn State is tied for 9th in sacks allowed and you choose to focus on the one time Bates got beat. Barkley is getting stuffed 6 times a game while maintaining 8.1 yards per carry and we've scored over 30 points per game the last 10 games but, you're not happy. LOL
So Penn State is tied for 9th in sacks allowed and you choose to focus on the one time Bates got beat. Barkley is getting stuffed 6 times a game while maintaining 8.1 yards per carry and we've scored over 30 points per game the last 10 games but, you're not happy. LOL
FWIW - The time when Bates was beaten in pass protection, it was not an RPO play.
And Penn State has been sacked twice in 104 attempts (once for McSorley, once for Stevens). Which, I believe, is a rate even a bit lower than what the vaunted 1994 Penn State offense allowed, and among the ten best rates in the country thus far in 2017.
As far as third downs are concerned, and the only thing that matters with regard to third downs - namely how many times do you fail to convert - and how many times you prevent the opposition from converting:
Penn State's Offense fails to convert 6.3 third downs per game, the 12th best mark in the nation
Penn State's Defense, on the other hand, stops opponents on third down 11.7 times per game, the 8th best mark among defenses nationally.
That is an incredible advantage - nearly 5 and 1/2 more stops per game as a team. I would not be surprised if that is the best combined (offense and defense) third down efficacy in the country.
This may be another of those "numbers" that many fans view through an obsolete prism - namely, "what is your conversion percentage" - which is a meaningless stat, because it ignores the obvious, that you "convert" every third down that you avoid on offense (by gaining ten or more yards on first and/or second down), and you "allow" every third down conversion on defense that you don't get to (by allowing ten or more yards on first and/or second down).
On both offense and defense, Penn State has been very effective - avoiding 3rd downs on offense, and getting to them on defense. And, when they do get there, they are converted - or stopping - more than enough to rank among the most effective in the country on both sides of the ball.
So Penn State is tied for 9th in sacks allowed and you choose to focus on the one time Bates got beat. Barkley is getting stuffed 6 times a game while maintaining 8.1 yards per carry and we've scored over 30 points per game the last 10 games but, you're not happy. LOL
Even though it is now in its second year, many Penn State fans remain ignorant about what an RPO-based offense is, and what it isn’t.
Comments about “not controlling the line of scrimmage”, or “not blowing people off of the ball” are the byproduct of this ignorance of the system.
If you are waiting to see the Penn State offensive line “blow people off of the ball”, you might as well take a long nap, because it is not going to be happening any time soon.
There are many pluses and minuses to an RPO style of attack, and some people may like the RPO system and some may not. But in an RPO system one thing you simply cannot see is an offensive line “blowing people off of the ball”, no matter how talented the offensive line may be.
Blowing people off of the ball, getting out to the second level of the opposing defense, simply cannot happen in an RPO – because it would result in a penalty (illegal man downfield) every time the Quarterback made his read and opted to utilize the P part of the RPO. So fans need to adjust their thought processes and expectations - or they will never understand the philosophy of the RPO.
The RPO is more of a "hit 'em where they ain't" system - by getting into the ideal option, rather than a "knock them on their butts" system.
FWIW, the handful of times Penn State has actually run a pure “run” play (which has not been very often) the offensive line was very effective at getting off the ball and creating seams to the second level or to the outside edge.
What people have been commenting about with respect to Penn State’s run game difficulties with the offensive line is not a problem with the offensive line. It is inherent to the the option selected when executing the RPO.
Any defense – whether it be Alabama, Pitt, or even Georgia State - if they want to, can take away the Inside Zone part of the RPO package, easily.
That is exactly what Pitt and Georgia State did, essentially saying “We are not going to let Barkley beat us, as a runner”. They did this by simply shooting both of their inside linebackers aggressively up into the Center-Guard gaps.
There is no way to effectively block the inside zone – out of the RPO – against that defensive scheme. And that is both simply obvious and not a secret.
You can run the inside-zone against that scheme - but only if your linemen are firing off of the ball and into the second level of the defense, to take on the linebackers before they get up into the line of scrimmage. Which - obviously - you can not do in an RPO.
That does not mean the RPO is a bad system. The way to counter that defense, within the RPO, is to have the Quarterback read that action, and then pull the ball out of the Tailback’s belly,and exploit that vacated middle of the defense with a quick pop pass to the TE running a seam route, or to a slot receiver running a slant, or some other exploitation of that vacated middle. We have seen just that numerous times over the last year and a half.
You can also attack that scheme by running the R part of the RPO as an outside zone or a toss sweep – which Penn State has done from time to time – or even a wheel route. Which effectively can get the tailback outside of those shooting inside linebackers, who are now all tied up in the traffic in the middle of the line - and get the tailback, or other receiver/ball-carrier, out into unfettered open space.
Thus far, Penn State has not shifted dramatically away from the inside zone as the primary R option in the RPO. Maybe they should have, but they have not thus far. But I am sure that Moorhead is more than bright enough to know that option is a bullet he will have at his disposal when needed.
FWIW, Iowa has never been a defense that likes to shoot their inside linebackers. Narduzzi, on the other hand, has always favored that scheme – even against non-RPO teams - and the Georgia State coaches did the same things Pitt did.
If Iowa stays with what they are most familiar with, which is a much less aggressive read-and-flow defense with their linebackers staying behind the screens created by their defensive linemen, Penn State will likely have more consistent success with their inside zone. At least being able to get Barkley through the Line of Scrimmage.
If Iowa does adopt the “Pitt” scheme on defense, it will be up to either McSorley to make the quick read and exploit the belly of the defense with the P option, or for Moorhead to adjust his play calls to a more outside zone / sweep / counter heavy scheme for the R option.
In either case, the issue that many people think they are seeing, an inability for the offensive line to “control the line of scrimmage”, or "blow people off of the ball" in the run game, is simply misguided. It simply isn't an option in an RPO scheme.
That doesn't mean the offensive line has been perfect, or even outstanding - there certainly have been occasional breakdowns - but the things mentioned in most of the criticisms are simply ignorance of the system. A system that is very different from anything Penn State fans became accustomed to seeing over the last 20 years.
Akron, Pitt, Georgia State. I wouldn't want to try to settle any argument with statistics from the pre-season. The Big Ten will be totally different. Sure, PSU is favored in this game for a reason, but it will be nothing like the first three games.
We should be winning by 101!You could win every game by 100 points and people will still find faults.....just the way it is.
You're looking at my post out of context. He calls out Bates for the "one" time he got beat. Everyone gets beat at some point. I was just pointing out that Bates and the Oline in general haven't been beat very often. Barkley only averaged 5 yards per carry in our first 3 games last year and ended the year at 5.5 per carry. I've watched this Oline carefully the first 3 games and it is my opinion that they are already better than last year and they will continue to get better.
Even though it is now in its second year, many Penn State fans remain ignorant about what an RPO-based offense is, and what it isn’t.
4 d linemen plus 2 box LB=6. 5 O lineman can not block 6==someone is always unblocked---there are times that unblocked player makes a tackle---there are lots of other times the Option read--pass or run-- works...scoring as many points as the O is,I think we're OKI would suspect that they do. I would be very, very surprised to learn that they didn't - at least on most play calls.
But it is easier said than done - and requires quite a bit from the Quarterback.
Just looking at one play call, the RPO that starts out with the Inside Zone read as the R option - which is Penn State's most bread-and-butter call.
Post-snap, the Quarterback has to:
Take the snap, get the ball into Barkley's belly, read the outside contain man on defense (typically either the Defensive End or the Outside Linebacker), determine whether that man is crashing down too tight - and McSorley should take the ball and get outside - or whether the contain man is staying home, and the R option is the give to Barkley.
Now, if this is all post-snap read, he also has to detect if the defense has shot the inside linebackers, taking away the inside zone for Barkley, and if they have, McSorley has to pull the ball and find/hit his P option that is best positioned to take advantage of that scheme (normally some seam or slant route into the middle of the defensive backfield)
On some occasions, there may not be a good P option - depending on the play call - and sometimes you just have to make the best of a bad situation and tip your hat to the other guy for "out-guessing" you.
That is an awful lot to do post-snap.
I am not privy to how Penn State teaches their Quarterbacks to go through all of the RPO reads, but I would suspect that they try to accomplish a lot of the P option decision making through pre-snap reads - by trying to read alignment and see how the defense reacts to any motion. But that is just a guess on my part (I would guess that is probably part of what is taking place with the looks to the sideline once the Offense gets aligned at the line of scrimmage).
In either event, it is a lot to properly execute in a very compressed time frame, and no Quarterback is going to accomplish that on every snap - especially since the opposing defense is aware of what they are trying to do, and is going to try to confuse and disguise their intents.
This Saturday's game will likely be a very different challenge for the offense. Unless Ferentz breaks with 20 years of tradition, Iowa will be playing primarily a lot more of a contain and control type of defense - two high safeties, three and four deep pass coverages, and only occasional blitzes (and few line stunts) than either Pitt of Georgia State. That is just what they are comfortable doing - and they generally do it very well. A lot like Tom Bradley's old defenses.
That should make some of the reads a lot easier - but will also make it tougher to execute (especially to execute "big plays" - since it should be a lot more difficult to create open spaces) than Penn State's opponents have presented thus far.
You're looking at my post out of context. He calls out Bates for the "one" time he got beat. Everyone gets beat at some point. I was just pointing out that Bates and the Oline in general haven't been beat very often. Barkley only averaged 5 yards per carry in our first 3 games last year and ended the year at 5.5 per carry. I've watched this Oline carefully the first 3 games and it is my opinion that they are already better than last year and they will continue to get better.
Even though it is now in its second year, many Penn State fans remain ignorant about what an RPO-based offense is, and what it isn’t.
Comments about “not controlling the line of scrimmage”, or “not blowing people off of the ball” are the byproduct of this ignorance of the system.
If you are waiting to see the Penn State offensive line “blow people off of the ball”, you might as well take a long nap, because it is not going to be happening any time soon.
There are many pluses and minuses to an RPO style of attack, and some people may like the RPO system and some may not. But in an RPO system one thing you simply cannot see is an offensive line “blowing people off of the ball”, no matter how talented the offensive line may be.
Blowing people off of the ball, getting out to the second level of the opposing defense, simply cannot happen in an RPO – because it would result in a penalty (illegal man downfield) every time the Quarterback made his read and opted to utilize the P part of the RPO. So fans need to adjust their thought processes and expectations - or they will never understand the philosophy of the RPO.
The RPO is more of a "hit 'em where they ain't" system - by getting into the ideal option, rather than a "knock them on their butts" system.
FWIW, the handful of times Penn State has actually run a pure “run” play (which has not been very often) the offensive line was very effective at getting off the ball and creating seams to the second level or to the outside edge.
What people have been commenting about with respect to Penn State’s run game difficulties with the offensive line is not a problem with the offensive line. It is inherent to the the option selected when executing the RPO.
Any defense – whether it be Alabama, Pitt, or even Georgia State - if they want to, can take away the Inside Zone part of the RPO package, easily.
That is exactly what Pitt and Georgia State did, essentially saying “We are not going to let Barkley beat us, as a runner”. They did this by simply shooting both of their inside linebackers aggressively up into the Center-Guard gaps.
There is no way to effectively block the inside zone – out of the RPO – against that defensive scheme. And that is both simply obvious and not a secret.
You can run the inside-zone against that scheme - but only if your linemen are firing off of the ball and into the second level of the defense, to take on the linebackers before they get up into the line of scrimmage. Which - obviously - you can not do in an RPO.
That does not mean the RPO is a bad system. The way to counter that defense, within the RPO, is to have the Quarterback read that action, and then pull the ball out of the Tailback’s belly,and exploit that vacated middle of the defense with a quick pop pass to the TE running a seam route, or to a slot receiver running a slant, or some other exploitation of that vacated middle. We have seen just that numerous times over the last year and a half.
You can also attack that scheme by running the R part of the RPO as an outside zone or a toss sweep – which Penn State has done from time to time – or even a wheel route. Which effectively can get the tailback outside of those shooting inside linebackers, who are now all tied up in the traffic in the middle of the line - and get the tailback, or other receiver/ball-carrier, out into unfettered open space.
Thus far, Penn State has not shifted dramatically away from the inside zone as the primary R option in the RPO. Maybe they should have, but they have not thus far. But I am sure that Moorhead is more than bright enough to know that option is a bullet he will have at his disposal when needed.
FWIW, Iowa has never been a defense that likes to shoot their inside linebackers. Narduzzi, on the other hand, has always favored that scheme – even against non-RPO teams - and the Georgia State coaches did the same things Pitt did.
If Iowa stays with what they are most familiar with, which is a much less aggressive read-and-flow defense with their linebackers staying behind the screens created by their defensive linemen, Penn State will likely have more consistent success with their inside zone. At least being able to get Barkley through the Line of Scrimmage.
If Iowa does adopt the “Pitt” scheme on defense, it will be up to either McSorley to make the quick read and exploit the belly of the defense with the P option, or for Moorhead to adjust his play calls to a more outside zone / sweep / counter heavy scheme for the R option.
In either case, the issue that many people think they are seeing, an inability for the offensive line to “control the line of scrimmage”, or "blow people off of the ball" in the run game, is simply misguided. It simply isn't an option in an RPO scheme.
That doesn't mean the offensive line has been perfect, or even outstanding - there certainly have been occasional breakdowns - but the things mentioned in most of the criticisms are simply ignorance of the system. A system that is very different from anything Penn State fans became accustomed to seeing over the last 20 years.
Even though it is now in its second year, many Penn State fans remain ignorant about what an RPO-based offense is, and what it isn’t.
Comments about “not controlling the line of scrimmage”, or “not blowing people off of the ball” are the byproduct of this ignorance of the system.
If you are waiting to see the Penn State offensive line “blow people off of the ball”, you might as well take a long nap, because it is not going to be happening any time soon.
There are many pluses and minuses to an RPO style of attack, and some people may like the RPO system and some may not. But in an RPO system one thing you simply cannot see is an offensive line “blowing people off of the ball”, no matter how talented the offensive line may be.
Blowing people off of the ball, getting out to the second level of the opposing defense, simply cannot happen in an RPO – because it would result in a penalty (illegal man downfield) every time the Quarterback made his read and opted to utilize the P part of the RPO. So fans need to adjust their thought processes and expectations - or they will never understand the philosophy of the RPO.
The RPO is more of a "hit 'em where they ain't" system - by getting into the ideal option, rather than a "knock them on their butts" system.
FWIW, the handful of times Penn State has actually run a pure “run” play (which has not been very often) the offensive line was very effective at getting off the ball and creating seams to the second level or to the outside edge.
What people have been commenting about with respect to Penn State’s run game difficulties with the offensive line is not a problem with the offensive line. It is inherent to the the option selected when executing the RPO.
Any defense – whether it be Alabama, Pitt, or even Georgia State - if they want to, can take away the Inside Zone part of the RPO package, easily.
That is exactly what Pitt and Georgia State did, essentially saying “We are not going to let Barkley beat us, as a runner”. They did this by simply shooting both of their inside linebackers aggressively up into the Center-Guard gaps.
There is no way to effectively block the inside zone – out of the RPO – against that defensive scheme. And that is both simply obvious and not a secret.
You can run the inside-zone against that scheme - but only if your linemen are firing off of the ball and into the second level of the defense, to take on the linebackers before they get up into the line of scrimmage. Which - obviously - you can not do in an RPO.
That does not mean the RPO is a bad system. The way to counter that defense, within the RPO, is to have the Quarterback read that action, and then pull the ball out of the Tailback’s belly,and exploit that vacated middle of the defense with a quick pop pass to the TE running a seam route, or to a slot receiver running a slant, or some other exploitation of that vacated middle. We have seen just that numerous times over the last year and a half.
You can also attack that scheme by running the R part of the RPO as an outside zone or a toss sweep – which Penn State has done from time to time – or even a wheel route. Which effectively can get the tailback outside of those shooting inside linebackers, who are now all tied up in the traffic in the middle of the line - and get the tailback, or other receiver/ball-carrier, out into unfettered open space.
Thus far, Penn State has not shifted dramatically away from the inside zone as the primary R option in the RPO. Maybe they should have, but they have not thus far. But I am sure that Moorhead is more than bright enough to know that option is a bullet he will have at his disposal when needed.
FWIW, Iowa has never been a defense that likes to shoot their inside linebackers. Narduzzi, on the other hand, has always favored that scheme – even against non-RPO teams - and the Georgia State coaches did the same things Pitt did.
If Iowa stays with what they are most familiar with, which is a much less aggressive read-and-flow defense with their linebackers staying behind the screens created by their defensive linemen, Penn State will likely have more consistent success with their inside zone. At least being able to get Barkley through the Line of Scrimmage.
If Iowa does adopt the “Pitt” scheme on defense, it will be up to either McSorley to make the quick read and exploit the belly of the defense with the P option, or for Moorhead to adjust his play calls to a more outside zone / sweep / counter heavy scheme for the R option.
In either case, the issue that many people think they are seeing, an inability for the offensive line to “control the line of scrimmage”, or "blow people off of the ball" in the run game, is simply misguided. It simply isn't an option in an RPO scheme.
That doesn't mean the offensive line has been perfect, or even outstanding - there certainly have been occasional breakdowns - but the things mentioned in most of the criticisms are simply ignorance of the system. A system that is very different from anything Penn State fans became accustomed to seeing over the last 20 years.
that was a comprehensive analysis. the only thing i would add is a key part of the RPO is for the QB to take the option to keep it and run. if the QB never does this, then their is way too much pressure on the TB. if Trace runs 10-12 times per game, that will keep the DEF honest
You forgot the TE and you forgot the guy away from the play and you forgot that if we get them all blocked, if our Rb s can't beat a DE LB etc one on one we shouldn't have recruited them4 d linemen plus 2 box LB=6. 5 O lineman can not block 6==someone is always unblocked---there are times that unblocked player makes a tackle---there are lots of other times the Option read--pass or run-- works...scoring as many points as the O is,I think we're OK
Check out where 77 was on the TE dump pass to 88 vs Pitt for the TD Thank god he was engagedOL are allow to be downfield on an RPO albeit close to the LOS if they are engaged with a Defensive player. So they can push an DL to a LB and engage the LBer and the QB can still throw the ball beyond the LOS. They rule may state a 2-3 yard area but the key is "engaged with a defender." This is what makes it so tough on Defenses because Safeties are taught to read through the OL to see Run / Pass.
FWIW - The time when Bates was beaten in pass protection, it was not an RPO play.
And Penn State has been sacked twice in 104 attempts (once for McSorley, once for Stevens). Which, I believe, is a rate even a bit lower than what the vaunted 1994 Penn State offense allowed, and among the ten best rates in the country thus far in 2017.
As far as third downs are concerned, and the only thing that matters with regard to third downs - namely how many times do you fail to convert - and how many times you prevent the opposition from converting:
Penn State's Offense fails to convert 6.3 third downs per game, the 12th best mark in the nation
Penn State's Defense, on the other hand, stops opponents on third down 11.7 times per game, the 8th best mark among defenses nationally.
That is an incredible advantage - nearly 5 and 1/2 more stops per game as a team. I would not be surprised if that is the best combined (offense and defense) third down efficacy in the country.
This may be another of those "numbers" that many fans view through an obsolete prism - namely, "what is your conversion percentage" - which is a meaningless stat, because it ignores the obvious, that you "convert" every third down that you avoid on offense (by gaining ten or more yards on first and/or second down), and you "allow" every third down conversion on defense that you don't get to (by allowing ten or more yards on first and/or second down).
On both offense and defense, Penn State has been very effective - avoiding 3rd downs on offense, and getting to them on defense. And, when they do get there, they are converted - or stopping - more than enough to rank among the most effective in the country on both sides of the ball.
Love your analysis, I am not an x's and o's guy and have never played the game at an organized level, but I have watched a lot of Penn State football. I may be heading into get off my lawn territory because strategies can change significantly over time, but I've been watching Penn State football since the late 60s and my recollection is that the current Penn State offense is the type of offense that Penn State usually feasted on from the late 60s through the 80s. This offense seems to depend on speed, deception and the big play. When we played that type of offense, and the talent was equal, usually by the fourth quarter the time of possession was so far to the advantage of Penn State that we could run off 6 yard run after 6 yard run and impose our will on the opponent.I would suspect that they do. I would be very, very surprised to learn that they didn't - at least on most play calls.
But it is easier said than done - and requires quite a bit from the Quarterback.
Just looking at one play call, the RPO that starts out with the Inside Zone read as the R option - which is Penn State's most bread-and-butter call.
Post-snap, the Quarterback has to:
Take the snap, get the ball into Barkley's belly, read the outside contain man on defense (typically either the Defensive End or the Outside Linebacker), determine whether that man is crashing down too tight - and McSorley should take the ball and get outside - or whether the contain man is staying home, and the R option is the give to Barkley.
Now, if this is all post-snap read, he also has to detect if the defense has shot the inside linebackers, taking away the inside zone for Barkley, and if they have, McSorley has to pull the ball and find/hit his P option that is best positioned to take advantage of that scheme (normally some seam or slant route into the middle of the defensive backfield)
On some occasions, there may not be a good P option - depending on the play call - and sometimes you just have to make the best of a bad situation and tip your hat to the other guy for "out-guessing" you.
That is an awful lot to do post-snap.
I am not privy to how Penn State teaches their Quarterbacks to go through all of the RPO reads, but I would suspect that they try to accomplish a lot of the P option decision making through pre-snap reads - by trying to read alignment and see how the defense reacts to any motion. But that is just a guess on my part (I would guess that is probably part of what is taking place with the looks to the sideline once the Offense gets aligned at the line of scrimmage).
In either event, it is a lot to properly execute in a very compressed time frame, and no Quarterback is going to accomplish that on every snap - especially since the opposing defense is aware of what they are trying to do, and is going to try to confuse and disguise their intents.
This Saturday's game will likely be a very different challenge for the offense. Unless Ferentz breaks with 20 years of tradition, Iowa will be playing primarily a lot more of a contain and control type of defense - two high safeties, three and four deep pass coverages, and only occasional blitzes (and few line stunts) than either Pitt of Georgia State. That is just what they are comfortable doing - and they generally do it very well. A lot like Tom Bradley's old defenses.
That should make some of the reads a lot easier - but will also make it tougher to execute (especially to execute "big plays" - since it should be a lot more difficult to create open spaces) than Penn State's opponents have presented thus far.
Did not forget any of that---simply pointing out that ANY option system leaves an unblocked defender---there are times that defender blows up a playYou forgot the TE and you forgot the guy away from the play and you forgot that if we get them all blocked, if our Rb s can't beat a DE LB etc one on one we shouldn't have recruited them