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Example of a real NFL Playbook (1 Viewer)

JayMan

Footballguy
At pigskinplanet.com are posted three NFL playbooks from the past:

1. The '87 Bears Defense;

2. The '98 Bucs Defense;

3. The '03 Pats Offense.

You can access these playbooks with the following LINK (at the bottom of the page).

I found it very interesting... from the way to set the huddle up - the play calling - the 2-minute offense - every formation broken down - the way the QB is calling the play in the huddle - the audibles...

Nice information, in my opinion, you see clearly see that no one is able to gather all of this information in the first few weeks...

Enjoy :)

 
I haven't read a playbook in a long time. I'm sure our playbook didn't cover the huddle and breaking it in so much detail. Thanks a bunch for reminding me about actual football.

 
Thanks!

I just finished reading the 94 pages of the Patroits playbook. I think I know how to stop Brady. All NFL head coaches please PM for details.

 
Never played organized football, so this is very interesting.

It is definitely a lot of info, but most of it seems like variations on a few major themes. So, i would think that once you got the main ideas down, its just about getting the details. With that said, I can see how some of these guys struggle to learn the offense, especially WRs

 
Just curious,

Is the playbook COMPLETELY rewritten each year, or do they keep a chunk of it from year to year...

This would be good info to get into BB's head no???

 
Just curious,Is the playbook COMPLETELY rewritten each year, or do they keep a chunk of it from year to year...This would be good info to get into BB's head no???
It is not rewritten completely every year - some plays are added / some at dropped... same goes for formations...I'm pretty sure that the Pats have felt that this information would not help any other NFL team by disclosing it - or else, it would surely not be on a website!Knowing how a team functions is one thing... to know what they will do/call/execute with that particular formation is another, in my opinion...and I would think that every NFL staff have guys that list all other teams offensive/defensive formations used anyway...
 
At pigskinplanet.com are posted three NFL playbooks from the past:

1. The '87 Bears Defense;

2. The '98 Bucs Defense;

3. The '03 Pats Offense.

You can access these playbooks with the following LINK (at the bottom of the page).

I found it very interesting... from the way to set the huddle up - the play calling - the 2-minute offense - every formation broken down - the way the QB is calling the play in the huddle - the audibles...

Nice information, in my opinion, you see clearly see that no one is able to gather all of this information in the first few weeks...

Enjoy :)
Awesome. :goodposting:

 
posts like this make this site well worth the $$$ (i know we don't have to pay to see the forums, but i would)

THANKS!!!

 
Everyone's ready?

(huddle)

"Hurry - Gun Spread RT 66 Tin Delay H Sneak On Two - Break"

(breaking out)

"Omaha"

(at the LOS)

"Orange - Check-Check45 - Disco - Hut!"

Now, if I can only find the open man... :P

 
Very, very cool!

I used to have the Chargers' 1994 offensive playbook. A friend lent it to me and I made a copy. Then he lost his, so I lent him my copy. Then he lost that, too. :rant: Easy come, easy go. If I still had it, I'd send it to the pigskinplanet.com guys so they could put it up as a pdf. Oh well. Anyway, I'm very interested in going through these later, so thanks for posting the link!

 
I found Paul Hackett's 2004 Jets playbook

Run off left guard

Run off right tackle

short screen

Punt

repeat

 
Maurile Tremblay said:
Very, very cool!I used to have the Chargers' 1994 offensive playbook. A friend lent it to me and I made a copy. Then he lost his, so I lent him my copy. Then he lost that, too. :rant: Easy come, easy go. If I still had it, I'd send it to the pigskinplanet.com guys so they could put it up as a pdf. Oh well. Anyway, I'm very interested in going through these later, so thanks for posting the link!
All running plays were titled "Natrone stomps a hole in everybody's ###". :football:
 
This is a very cool article regarding Al Saunders' offense and its roots in Don Coryell's system. I won't post the entire article, just the highlights here:

Saunders plans to use the whole book, depending on defenses and how much his own players evolve. Through the first two weeks of camp, he hadn't called the same play two days in a row.

"We'll go into a game with 250 to 300," he said. "It's what separates us from a lot of offenses."

Asked by a visitor how it's possible to keep that many plays simple enough for players to process quickly and execute under pressure, Saunders pulls the cap off a felt-tip marker and reaches for a notebook.

"This is about as basic as you can get," he says, smiling, "not giving anything away."

In an instant, the page is loaded with circles, lines and what could pass for a Russian code. Some are mere dashes that slant left, representing offensive linemen. Others, representing receivers, are drawn with sharp angles and dart down and out, down and in. A couple of sweeping strokes are running backs floating into the flat.

Queen Right Jet Right 940 F Corner Swing

"We've just told all 11 players everything they need to know," he says proudly.

Queen Right and Jet Right set the formation and tell the line how to slant its blocks. The 940 is only slightly more complicated. The Redskins label their receivers X, Y, and Z, depending on where they line up. The X receiver listens for the first number, the Y receiver for the second, the Z receiver for the third. Even-numbered routes break in; odd-numbered routes break out; the higher the number, the deeper the pattern. F Swing tells the fullback to run a short corner.

"We don't even have to mention 'H,' " Saunders says, meaning the halfback. "He knows he's always last."

Suddenly, he's drawing again; same play, different words.

Brown Right 2 Jet Flanker Drive

"Bill Walsh's West Coast version," he explains, hoping the visitor will recognize the difference. He doesn't.

"He's told the flanker what to do, but no one else; they have to memorize their routes," Saunders explained. "We tell everybody what to do on every play, yet our verbiage is short and simple."

That simplicity enables Saunders to change formations on every down if he desires. He'll switch from two backs to two tight ends to three receivers to four receivers, hoping to create mismatches. It makes halftime adjustments easier, too. Basic formations stay the same, but overbearing defenses can be compromised just by changing a route number.

Where it gets tricky is that there are virtually no audibles: The quarterback and receivers must read the defense quickly and make pre-assigned adjustments.

At their best, Saunders' offenses never take what the defense gives; they take what they want.

"Sid Gillman and Don Coryell set the standard for aggressive offensive coaches," Saunders said. "They were my mentors. I was like a sponge soaking up information. Don was so creative, so open to new things. When it came to offense, he was a visionary."

He had to be. As coach at San Diego State from 1961-72, Coryell had the thankless task of competing for players with a slew of high-profile programs in California and neighboring states. One of his first tactical decisions was to heavily recruit junior-college players. That's how he came across Gibbs, a tight end from Cerritos College.

But JUCOs often entered school late; some showed up unannounced. They were eligible to play, but there was little time to teach them.

"Coryell figured if a guy could count from 1 to 9, and he knew 9 was a real deep route, and 8s were posts, 4s broke in... he could tell that guy what to do," Saunders said. "They might not run the right distances, but he could get him out there and work on that later in practice. So he'd tell guys, 'Just remember one number, and we'll be fine.' "

It worked so well that in 12 seasons at San Diego State, Coryell went undefeated three times. When he got to the Chargers, the old Aztec offense got a new, glitzier name: "Air Coryell."

Saunders' message today is much the same as Coryell delivered 45 years ago. He wants to play fast-break football, the kind he fell in love with as a kid in California. You'll love it, too, he'll tell you, if you just trust in him.
 
Anyone know what the protocol is for protecting the team's playbook?

I would think that if a smart guy who gets cut could share that with another team quite easily.

 
Anyone know what the protocol is for protecting the team's playbook?I would think that if a smart guy who gets cut could share that with another team quite easily.
I'm not all that sure what good it would do. Probably 85% of the plays in each team's playbooks are in every playbook, and the remaining 15% are probably well known based upon film review. What changes year to year are play calls based upon personnel changes. What would be valuable would be a team's game plan, but the chances of getting that would be nil.
 
Love to see the Mike Martz playbook
"Low Memory Alert - Your system does not have enough memory to run the desired application."
I saw the Martz playbook last year or so, it was on a site like this one, I can't remember. Anyway, he was really big on exactly where everyone lined up and getting in and out of the huddle, etc. Things like the WR lining up exactly on the zero on the yard marker. It was great stuff.
 
That is awesome. For years, I've been hearing Brady call out "Omaha" at the line -- now I know it means playclock is running down, and all motion or shifts called in the huddle are off.

Of course, I also now know that the snap is on one whenever Brady calls out Omaha, so I'm guessing that everyone else knows it, which means he won't be calling out Omaha anymore.

 

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