My belief re C2 is based on this -- you only have 2 DBs with eyes on the backfield. Your corners, obviously, turn and run with WRs. In that regard, they are easily taken out of the play on any run. Moreover, it can create huge scrambling lanes. What happens is it leaves your LBs 1v1 to make the play on the QB or RB with maybe 1 safety to help -- maybe -- even though they have eyes in the backfield, they still have to get deep for pass.
Whereas in a C4, you have 4 DBs with eyes ont he backfield keeping everything in front of them. The safeties are responsible for less ground and typically less "deep" threat type WRs, so they can play a bit closer to the box and be more aggressive on the run. In a base C4, the defense can fairly quickly outman the run the play. In a C2 it seems like runs are typically even numbers at best.
Alabama, when they play spread teams, will run versions of the C4. I guarantee you that would be Saban's approach to playing Oregon (it was also Heacock's). With a very good running QB, I think you start with an approach that makes that part of the offense difficult to execute and then try to keep the pass game to "soft" gains. The C2 approach seems to work in the opposite direction, which doesn't make much sense to me -- and why I call it assinine.
I will let Hoss and others weigh in. I have to admit, my true "Xs and Os" era of my life was many years ago -- well before the proliferation of the spread and C4 reaction, so I may be misstating things.
Whereas in a C4, you have 4 DBs with eyes ont he backfield keeping everything in front of them. The safeties are responsible for less ground and typically less "deep" threat type WRs, so they can play a bit closer to the box and be more aggressive on the run. In a base C4, the defense can fairly quickly outman the run the play. In a C2 it seems like runs are typically even numbers at best.
Alabama, when they play spread teams, will run versions of the C4. I guarantee you that would be Saban's approach to playing Oregon (it was also Heacock's). With a very good running QB, I think you start with an approach that makes that part of the offense difficult to execute and then try to keep the pass game to "soft" gains. The C2 approach seems to work in the opposite direction, which doesn't make much sense to me -- and why I call it assinine.
I will let Hoss and others weigh in. I have to admit, my true "Xs and Os" era of my life was many years ago -- well before the proliferation of the spread and C4 reaction, so I may be misstating things.
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