Slow it Down: A Cadillac Bus?
When you think of Carnell Williams you surely don't think of a big, powerful back. Williams has great vision and some quick steps, but is 5-11, 215. In this weeks slow-motion rewind you will get a glimpse while even after 2 knee surgeries Williams remains as the starter of the Bucs.
We look at a 2nd and 5 from about the 8 yard line (in High Quality, Slow Motion. Enjoy).
Pre-Snap: The Bucs line up in their most used set (from observation, not from facts) 3 WR SingleBack Formation. One of the tip-offs that this is probably a run to the right hand side is that John Gilmore is in. Clayton is lined up-top to the short-side with Stroughter and Stovall at the bottom of your screen.
On the other side of the ball, the 'Fins are lined up in a 4-3 (I believe they run a base 3-4) with Jason Taylor at RDE. In this set they have shifted Crowder to the Mike, brought Yeremiah Bell up as the Sam and shifted Reggie Torbor over to Will. They have a LB shift on to the wide-side of the field, mainly because Tyron Culver shades the open area. They are in a soft man coverage from what I can tell.
Play: Remember the philosophies of zone-schemes? There is no hole that Williams is going towards. Instead he is using his excellent vision to figure out what the defense is giving him. While the line does a good job, Williams is at an extreme disadvantage. They crashed the zone he was looking to use. Davin Joesph and Jeremy Trueblood put a great double team on Randy Starks who does everything in his power to get off of it. Faine squares up to his left and seals off Phillip Merling. Zuttah pulls and finds the first man, Channing Crowder. This may look routine, but it is a very heads up move by Zuttah. He could have easily continued on and gotten to Bell, who looked as if he had the best chance to make the play. He understands though that Bell is coming from the backside and will have to get his entire body on Williams if he wants to make the play. In slow-motion you can almost see Zuttah's thought process. He looks towards Bell and quickly cuts back up into the hole. Donald Penn is 1 on 1 with Jason Taylor, which he completely shuts down. If you want a Buccaneer to vote into the pro-bowl, Penn is the guy. He is absolutely dominant this year in the pass-blocking and the Bucs rank 5th running the ball off the Left Tackle. Penn is an absolute stud.
Williams goes to the only opening he sees without bouncing it (which is staying disciplined. Not something you see often in running backs). I have pointed this out before, but watch the fundamentals of Williams. He knows he's going to get hit so he get's low. "Low-Man wins." He puts his shoulder pads right into the chin of Tyron Culver and absolutely demolishes him. It helps that Faine stays with his block and essentially tackles his man into Culver (If you watch closely I am pretty sure Starks wraps up the legs of Culver, possibly thinking it was Williams. Regardless, Williams knows how to win those physical battles. He also knew that he had about 3 yards to finish the play, and he stretches for the end-zone, but not before taking another shot from Vontae Davis. I don't recall this play being reviewed, which is probably a good thing. Williams was a yard short, but who cares.
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8 comments
Comments
These would be awesome if you could put some of the analysis into the video.
its hard to read and watch the video at the same time.
by kurby on Nov 21, 2009 1:13 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Yeah, I hear ya.
Thanks for the suggestion. Niko puts together the videos and I analyze them. We’ll talk and see if we can come up with anything.
"I have come that you may have life, and life to the max"
by UNFNOLE on Nov 21, 2009 1:32 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Nice play and correctly called as he was down short.
Penn handles Taylor well and the play doesn’t come his way, but he takes care of his guy. Faine turns and gets a pretty good seal on Merling. Zuttah leads the way, but I’m not sure Joseph does much here. He initially gets on the double team with Trueblood, but he almost misses and ends up helping Zuttah. The end result is good, but I’m not sure Joseph really contributed much. Not specific to this play, he’s been a little disappointing in run blocking this year. Just a personal opinion.
I won’t say much about Cadillac, but he does an excellent job. This is a great example showing that if you give him (or Ward) a tiny crease, they will produce.
Something small that doesnt affect much, but watch Clayton come all the way across the field and try to lay a block. Say what you want about his receiving skills, but he’s out there playing hard, particularly in the run game.
Last note, I like the play call. All options are available, the goal is to score, obviously, but run as much clock as possibe. The handoff with the dummy play being the slot screen worked well.
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by Buc Wild on Nov 21, 2009 1:16 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Agreed.
Zone Schemes are designed to get double teams, but then to have one guy shave off and move to the next level (which makes it successful). Joesph does what he is supposed to…but this is one of times were discretion could be used. If he stays on that block, the play is easier for Williams. He gets the jam, and then moves on to a guy who is already out of the play and being blocked, not to mention another DL.
There isn’t a ton to break down on this play, but I loved it because it shows how hard Williams can run.
"I have come that you may have life, and life to the max"
by UNFNOLE on Nov 21, 2009 1:36 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I thought the same thing after watching the video about Gilmore and Clayton tipping the play as a run
before I read your pre-snap comments. Very good point.
Nonetheless, the Dolphins did go with a four-man front nickel package (I say nickel package, because it looks like DB Nate Jones is lined up on slot receiver and shades over in coverage on the snap) there, expecting us to throw the ball. It may have been a simple run, but it was a heck of a call. Having the defense expect a passing play is one of the advantages about running out of the 3-WR, single back set.
Cannons... fire them.
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by Craig T on Nov 21, 2009 1:16 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I would be real curious
to see how often we throw with Gilmore in the game. Only if I could steal an opposing teams scouting report.
"I have come that you may have life, and life to the max"
by UNFNOLE on Nov 21, 2009 1:37 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
I'd imagine Gilmore gets a fair amount of time on the field during both play types
Especially in play action.
by NewLogic on Nov 21, 2009 10:38 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
...Maybe. Something to watch from here out I guess.
"I have come that you may have life, and life to the max"
by UNFNOLE on Nov 22, 2009 9:37 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs

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