PDA

View Full Version : Lexington 24 Orrville 10


crackerman
09-21-2007, 11:32 PM
Lex jumps out 17-0 at half and wins 24-10 at Orrville. First time Lex has beaten Orrville in 5 years. Lex is 4-1.

1600TigerFan
09-21-2007, 11:36 PM
Keep up the good work !

xtiger
09-22-2007, 01:29 AM
Great job! See what a little tiger spirirt will do!

pigskinmccarthy
09-22-2007, 01:25 PM
good job boys. keep workin hard, this was the only team i had any amount of respect for at Mt. Union for team camp. They showed alot of class and they're definitely heading in the right direction.

Kamd50
09-22-2007, 11:10 PM
Congrats on your recent win, Lexington. Keep it going:rockon:

longtimefirsttime
09-23-2007, 01:14 AM
If Payne and staff can lead the team to the playoffs, that would be quite an accomplishment.

massillon catholic
09-23-2007, 11:53 AM
How do you defend the "spread" offense?

crackerman
09-23-2007, 01:30 PM
MC........depends on what type of spread it is and what they do out of it and what their tendencies are. A lot of it is based on the type of defense you run as well as you defend it differently depending on if you run a 50, a 4-3, a 30 stack, or a 4-2-5. I will hand it over to Slobby and blackswarm on this one.

Mass6
09-24-2007, 06:57 PM
How do you defend the "spread" offense?

You defend a spread offense by putting athletes on athletes. This doesn't mean that you go man 2 man, but if you have 4 WR's on the field at a time and only 3 are covered by DB's you don't have them all covered. While at Mount we played JCU when they had Arth and very rarely were we in a regular 4-3 defense. 90% of the game we were either in Nickle (5DB's) Dime (6DB's) or our Dollar package(7DB's). Yes in Dime and Dollar you give up a little to the run, but with fast DB's reading (hildreth) at a linebacker spot and other DB's lining up against the slot receivers you have a better chance. This also allows for more speed when applying pressure so the QB doesn't have all day. When we rushed Tanski he didn't look as confident. The inside slot receiver was open all day as he just found holes behind the backers and in front of the DB's. If we line up in Nickle or Dime we have DB's dropping to zones and reading receivers instead of LB's checking run first and then trying to drop. There is a lot more that needs to be done like reading keys, but you have to put athletes on athletes and take a chance on DB's being fast enough to react and get off blocks against the run.