
The main reason we draw up plays to attack these windows is that it forces one defender to make a decision and from an offensive stand point that defender can never be right. A little disclaimer here, when I say draw up plays; I have to admit to plagiarizing the master of the west coast offense -- Bill Walsh. It goes without saying that west coast concepts appear in every level of the game and in every type of offense including the spread.
The smash concept increased in popularity
at the same time as cover-two defenses. With a hard corner taking the underneath route (hitch), the safety is left one on one with a receiver who has a two way go. To make his job more difficult, we have our receivers run a post-corner. We count on our number two receiver beating the safety on his corner route and making the catch behind the corner. If the corner drops underneath the corner route, the quarterback hits the hitch and we take the gain.
When you think about it, there are so many ways in different formations to set up this same scenario. I will ask players to think of how many different routes attack the flat window. Instead of a hitch, you can run - bubble or tunnel screen, flat, quick out or swing route. In order to attack the area behind a hard corner you can run- vertical (forced outside release), curl, deep out or sail route. Here are some of those combinations and the terminology we use for each:
- Smash = Hitch (#1) and Post-Corner (#2)
- China = Spot (#1) and Post-Corner (#2)
- Basic = Vertical (#1) and Speed Out (#2)
- Flag = Out (#1) and Corner (#2)
- Bench = Stem Corner (#1) and Flat (#2)
- Curl/Flat = Curl (#1) and Flat (#2)