hawkfan2679
Well-Known Member
Jake is fine and is going to keep getting better..he looked better to me out there on Saturday than he did last year. Sure, he missed a few shots but as Kirk said, UNI plays a deep three-deep zone...not all that dissimilar to what Iowa tries to do; keep things in front of you and force teams to make a lot of plays to score.
He showed command and accuracy that I don't recall seeing as consistently last year.
I only have a slight issue with the lack of shots taken, and that is that even if you don't take the deep shots, if a team is playing 3 deep, you should have a decent amount of space to work in the intermediate space (10-15 yards). If you rush 4 and play 3 deep, that only leaves 4 players to cover the width of the field in that area and there are lots of concepts that can be utilized ("safe" concepts, i.e. one player reads) to hit those areas.
For example, I know I saw this one at least twice:
.............................................F
............C.......................................................C
...............................W....M..........S..........$
..............................E....N......T...E
............X.................T..G..C..G..T.................Z
..................................................Y..............H
...............................S......Q
One high signifies either C1 or C3 (usually), so you check the leverage of the corners and immediate post-snap movement for either 1 or 3. If it's 3, you work the trips side. If it's one, you go backside. We always seemed to get C3. At the snap, H (Hillyer, in most cases) would run a wheel route, pulling the $ to the flats with him. Y (Hamilton or any one of our TE's) would run a route towards the flat, pulling the Sam backer. Z (KMM) released vertically, eyed the Sam, got on top of him and then cut inside him and sat down while the Sam continued outward with Y. Rudock took a quick 5 (I think) and hit KMM twice for about 15 yards apiece because there was nobody home in the intermediate middle of the zone (typical with C3). If UNI would have taken this away with the Mike (spacing was too good to do so on Saturday, but if they really wanted to overstretch to take this play), it opens up a fair share of cover 3 beaters to the backside as well.
All in all, though, the short stuff kept drives moving. If we could get our running game to keep us on schedule (something that didn't happen frequently enough on Saturday), those short passes put us in 3rd and short or 1st down situations. As we move through the season, however, teams are going to lock that down and hopefully we can capitalize by inserting some verticality into the passing game.