Harry
ASFN Consultant and Senior Writer
Andy Reid, a previous Bidwill attempted hiring failure, showed on offense what Kingsbury lacked in play design. I’m not sure, of course, Reid designed these personally. However, 2 simple designs stood out to me. They both contained creative motion, whose absence several of us on the board mentioned about Kingsbury’s attack. First the Chiefs used Kelce in unusually short moves to disrupt the Eagle’s pass coverage. Second, the Chief’s twice started a receiver in motion who then reversed his field. This worked well because the Eagle’s used a man defense that required the defender to, in most cases, negotiate his way through the traffic of his own defense. Since defensive players often move before the ball is snapped, that defender had to watch both the moving receiver and the potentially repositioning defensive players. It’s not surprising the Eagle’s pass defender couldn’t as efficiently reverse his field the way the pass receiver could. These calls resulted in 2 easy touchdowns. BTW that failure to adjust after the first TD may negatively impact Gannon’s HC hopes.