Basics of the Split Back Veer Offense Including Inside Veer and Outside Veer

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • Basics of coaching the the split back veer against the under front defense. This is designed to be a very high level overview of the basics of inside and outside veer. This is a football coaching video published by Strong Football by CoachCP. Visit us at StrongFootballCoach.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 23

  • @abender06
    @abender06 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for the tutorial! I'm doing my research on this offense right now and I bought a book on running the split back veer. The book describes the blocking scheme as the center taking the player closest to the midline (in this case the nose tackle), the guard taking the next closest (ILB) and the tackle tacking the next closest (DE) with the TE arc releasing. The main difference is no double team on the LOS. Is this realistic or is it too much to ask especially of the center to snap the ball and neutralize the slanting nose tackle?

  • @ajknutson7322
    @ajknutson7322 3 роки тому

    That is absolutely perfect good job! We run inside and outside veer out of gun.

  • @happyman42
    @happyman42 5 років тому +1

    Really good job Coach! I am a spread guy but I LOVE wing-T and veer football and so I have been trying to learn more of what Baylor did with the Veer & Shoot offense so this is huge! I love midline, veer, power read/inverted veer, and toss read so anything I can find where we read unblocked men Im a happy camper haha! Thanks again!

  • @LarryRickenbacker
    @LarryRickenbacker 12 років тому

    Love the Houston Veer! Talk about an under-rated approach for moving the ball..

  • @LarryRickenbacker
    @LarryRickenbacker 6 років тому

    I like the outside veer against the diagrammed defense. I managed to have Bill Yeoman give me a one-on-one clinic on his offense in the Summer of '03 at UH. He was so supportive and helpful to a guy from Beaumont who was coaching at the grade 7-9th level.

  • @calronwashington1547
    @calronwashington1547 9 років тому

    Great job explaining

  • @coachcp
    @coachcp  12 років тому +1

    We've always optioned the 9 tech on Outside veer vs the Under, and I think it's easier than any interior linemen. You have more time to make the read, IMO as you step down the line. We run this from the I, so the FB is the dive and the TB is the pitchman. We will combo the 5 straight up to the Mike vs the Under and read the EMOLOS (end man on the line of scrimmage). Who would you suggest reading on OSV if you are not reading the 9? If you read the 5 it's ISV.

  • @mfriedrich2012
    @mfriedrich2012 9 років тому +1

    I think the success of Bill Yeoman at Houston made the split back veer trendy in the 1970s. Texas ran split back veer in 1979 with Ham and Lam Jones after Earl Campbell graduated. Back then DC's were coaching kids to read the helmet ear holes of backs to figure out where the option play was headed. There is a game on UA-cam where Texas is running split back veer. On one option play left! All three three backs ( QB, hb, hb) would spin around 360 to throw defenses off. Seems like by the late 1970s though option offenses were starting to die off in favor of West Coast and more pass centric offenses. But Oklahoma, Nebraska, SMU and others carried the option series into the 1980s. I think Houston ran veer until Yeomans final year.

    • @franciscocasillas6824
      @franciscocasillas6824 8 років тому

      Yessir, after Bill Yeoman was forced to retire in 86 Jack Pardee came along with the Run and Shoot offense. A high flying air-raid offense.

  • @j-rich
    @j-rich 5 років тому

    We used to run midline to the 3 technique all day that was a day 1 install for my college

  • @inappropriatelobster964
    @inappropriatelobster964 9 років тому

    So My coach told me to go check out how to do a split back Veer offense and I learned alot thanks to this video. Thank you very much, but I have one question, the line is unbalanced right?

  • @PioneerRock
    @PioneerRock 11 років тому

    We run this for my team's offense, and our quarterback gave such a good fake on an inside veer, that when the back who suposedly got the ball was tackled, the refs blew the whistle while the quarterback was in the open feild with nobody chasing him...

  • @theomartinez58
    @theomartinez58 10 років тому

    We ran the veer in high school, as well as the wishbone, but we had the backs to do it.

  • @PhillyEaglesFanatic
    @PhillyEaglesFanatic 11 років тому

    Coach,
    Who would you read on Inside Veer if you are facing a 5-3 with 1 safety? I run a 4WR base set, so the SLB and WLB will be out of the box.
    Who would you read on Outside Veer (Same situation as above)?

  • @10secs2lovetffl
    @10secs2lovetffl 8 років тому

    What school do you or did you coach for in regards to the logo on your shirt in this video? Thanks? Is that for Grambling?

    • @coachcp
      @coachcp  8 років тому +1

      No not Grambling. At the time of this recording, I coached at Glenbard North HS in Illinois.

    • @10secs2lovetffl
      @10secs2lovetffl 8 років тому

      Oh ok, thanks for getting back to me on that...
      On an entirely different note I want to ask your professional honest to goodness opinion on a theory of mine.
      I believe this so called belief or notion that the NFL is a, "Passing League," is an utter and complete myth. Now hear me out on this please...?
      The Titans, Bills, Cowboys (possibly going back to the formula of 2014) Rams,Seahawks (Even minus Marshawn Lynch), Broncos, Ravens and 49ers to some extent are going to be running teams, or at least run to setup the Play-Action to throw it over the top of the defense getting to run defend happy...
      Granted that's ONLY 1/4th of the league. My point is a lot of those teams have former DCs as HCs now. Back in the day those types of coaches would play tough, hard nosed defense, play very solid special teams and run the heck out of the ball and use play action to help a "Game Manager" type QB do just enough without turning the ball over to win games with defense and special teams.
      I also forgot to mention I honestly believe that Bill Belichick (whether or not he and Bill Parcells are BFFs or not) Belichick's coaching roots go back to what I just described above. Former DC, now HC who has a young, inexperienced QB (at least for the first 4 games of the 2016 NFL season). I believe the Pats are going to be a fairly heavy run team to help protect their defense from being exposed and to also serve to protect Jimmy G. Yes, I realize they went out and in free agency and brought in another talented Tight End.
      Question for you coach. (Sorry for being long winded, my bad)/
      Do you see the NFL slowly going back to the NFC style of football ala the 1980s; which was Run the Ball & Stop the Run?
      Another angle to look at this question from is this... With DCs no longer really using a 3-4 or 4-3. Instead going with some sort of DB in place of one of his Linebackers. A lot of teams have searched long and hard to find the "Tweener," Safety/Linebacker to match-up against such players as Rob Gronkowski and the other really big, fast and athletic TEs in the game like Jimmy Graham of the Seahawks. But with that being the case when and where it is. Is it not logically at least assume that most QBs are going to read the numbers keys within a given play at the LoS and run the back against a 6 man box with the defense in some sort of sub-package defensive alignment?
      Thanks Coach!

  • @teehanley1331
    @teehanley1331 7 років тому

    hey Curtis would be great on any leads on info on the split back

  • @theomartinez58
    @theomartinez58 10 років тому

    Oklahoma was very good at using the dive for play action and then they'd hit Keith Jackson for the long ball.

  • @gt5mhansen
    @gt5mhansen 10 років тому

    Good stuff! subscribed... I have seen the PSTE arc release on an OLB, or in the case you drew up the ILB. Have you seen that, or just a vertical double

    • @coachcp
      @coachcp  10 років тому +1

      Yep, seen both. That puts the defensive end in a bind really. Can't tell if it's run or pass. Easy to build a great play action concept off of that.

  • @mikiloveist
    @mikiloveist 11 років тому

    do you know the the running plays for veer?