PF works on certain routes.
It needs to be lowered QUICKLY.
There are 3-4 plays that it kicks in quite regularly.
Not all are streak plays. But usually they affect the LB ( who I imagine has low vision) and also some plays with WR, but some are streaks and some are slants.
Having said that, you must be careful.
It is early season.
A WR that has the speed to get 5 yards on his CB does not usually have much in catching.
Then you must realise that by the time the QB spots him he is still running down field....has the QB the strength to get the ball to him.
Unless you have the play called to throw quickly to the WR whether he is open or not, then 75% + you won;t make the catch.
On slants, I have noticed that if the CB has high agility and can get back to the WR he can often either tackle him saving the Td or knock the ball out, so no pass is made.
It is not easy at this level to catch on a cross route.
If the pass is a bullet, he WILL be open, but it is difficult to catch. The timing must be right and what I see is that most do not have a QB and a WR with the SPs to make this a certainty.
YES he will be open on SOME plays when PF kicks in, but again I would say 75% of the time he will drop the ball.
There are one or two other plays that are 75+ certainties, but you need to have a good QB, a TE/HB that can catch and then have the play called when the pass will go max ( 15 or LESS yards).
I have seen this kick in on a few TE plays and a few HB plays.
But my argument is that usually the man covering is built for run defense and not pass defense.
Having sadi that, I return to what I said in the beginning. It still needs to be cut quickly. I think once a player is PFaked twice, he should have an over-ride to stop him being Pfaked again that game.
Is it realistic to see a player PF-ed on the same play 3-4 times a game??!
It needs to be lowered QUICKLY.
There are 3-4 plays that it kicks in quite regularly.
Not all are streak plays. But usually they affect the LB ( who I imagine has low vision) and also some plays with WR, but some are streaks and some are slants.
Having said that, you must be careful.
It is early season.
A WR that has the speed to get 5 yards on his CB does not usually have much in catching.
Then you must realise that by the time the QB spots him he is still running down field....has the QB the strength to get the ball to him.
Unless you have the play called to throw quickly to the WR whether he is open or not, then 75% + you won;t make the catch.
On slants, I have noticed that if the CB has high agility and can get back to the WR he can often either tackle him saving the Td or knock the ball out, so no pass is made.
It is not easy at this level to catch on a cross route.
If the pass is a bullet, he WILL be open, but it is difficult to catch. The timing must be right and what I see is that most do not have a QB and a WR with the SPs to make this a certainty.
YES he will be open on SOME plays when PF kicks in, but again I would say 75% of the time he will drop the ball.
There are one or two other plays that are 75+ certainties, but you need to have a good QB, a TE/HB that can catch and then have the play called when the pass will go max ( 15 or LESS yards).
I have seen this kick in on a few TE plays and a few HB plays.
But my argument is that usually the man covering is built for run defense and not pass defense.
Having sadi that, I return to what I said in the beginning. It still needs to be cut quickly. I think once a player is PFaked twice, he should have an over-ride to stop him being Pfaked again that game.
Is it realistic to see a player PF-ed on the same play 3-4 times a game??!