2 jet versus 200 jet 300 jet?? anyone?

Bremser

Walk-on
As best as I understand 2 jet is is a 5 step drop for the qb with a 6 man protection. Anyone know if that is true? Is 200 jet a 3 step drop with 6 man protection? Also what is the difference between 200 and 300? I tried to email Bill Callahan (honest I did, and yes I am a x and o geek) and his assistant (jerk) refused to forward the question to him citing national security concerns no less. Anyone have wco info that could help me understand the jargon. My main reference is the wco website which is not updated anymore as far as I can tell.

http://www.westcoastoffense.com/

Thanks

Matt

 
Jet can mean so many things in this wording. If it is indeed the drop, jet can mean 5 step and throw, no hitch or nothing. Once the QB hits that 5th step on his plant, he throws.

I've worked in offenses where jet means motion, a fly pattern and a drop.

Where did you get the play from?

 
I have been studying the wco mostly from information from here

westcoastoffense.com

I understand some of it but the wco guys assume their audience knows the basics and they don't explain alot of what they are talking about. I do understand the z drive, texas, and stick concepts and I find them very interesting.

 
One of the simpliest plays shown by Norvell at a coaches clinic was slot left, dice (double slant), Z split RT, TE Rt, Z runs a 12 yd. hook, TE runs a dragon route. HB runs a sit over the short middle.

In a cover three you look RT and let the CB decide what he's going to do. In Cover 2, go left to slants. Man, cover 1 or 0, look for the best matchup, probably with Herian go to the TE. Quarters look slants. In other words the QB's decision is made at the line, depending on what the defense appears to be in. This doesn't take into account tendancies, and blitzes.

This probably doesn't make a lot of sense, I wish I could draw it up for you.

 
Well watching us play Iowa st. it appeared to me that we occupied their interior backers with our receivers which allowed Ross to sneak behind them on those texas routes. I don't know what a dragon route is?

 
Well watching us play Iowa st. it appeared to me that we occupied their interior backers with our receivers which allowed Ross to sneak behind them on those texas routes. I don't know what a dragon route is?
A dragon route is a real quick "out" pattern. It's not the typical 8 yards back to 6 or a 90 degree cut and out. It's almost like a sloppy out, real flat, rounded out pattern. You'll see it on 3 and 2 with the tight end, or in trips or bunch formation. The inside receiver runs the dragon, while any outside receivers "clear" the area and then block. Clariification?

 
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