Manuel Hot Pepper Lopez
cac this, cac that, c00n this c00n that
Every post from this nikka is golden.![]()

you must be either white or still in high school. Which one?
Every post from this nikka is golden.![]()
2) Brady, cuz of the rings, and being one of the masters of the West Coast offense who can sling the rock with the best
Neither. Y'all so over fixated race it's sick. I laugh at a joke and I gotta be white or in high school.
you must be either white or still in high school. Which one?
Pats don't run the West coast O. There O is based off the Ehardt-Perkins offence.
Not so fast my friend.
This is in contrast to the roles quarterbacks were required to perform in other systems, which were to be an adept game manager with a strong arm. Many people reasoned that Johnny Unitas, a strong-armed field general would not have fared well in being subservient to the offensive coordinator, and that his long but sometimes wobbly passes would not have worked in the West Coast system. The West Coast offense caused a split still evident today among quarterbacks; those who were more adept at the West Coast style: Joe Montana, Steve Young, Brett Favre, Tom Brady, Matt Hasselbeck; and those more in tune with the old style: Dan Marino, Jim Kelly, and Peyton Manning. Rich Gannon is a good example of a quarterback who fared better in one system than the other. Gannon struggled in the old style system but found great success with the Oakland Raiders and the West Coast system run by head coaches Jon Gruden and Bill Callahan.
Beli still implements West Coast into his playbook, which Brady has shown to execute flawlessly, especially in GW drives.
New England’s offense is a member of the NFL’s third offensive family, the Erhardt-Perkins system. The offense was named after the two men, Ron Erhardt and Ray Perkins, who developed it while working for the Patriots under head coach Chuck Fairbanks in the 1970s. According to Perkins, it was assembled in the same way most such systems are developed. “I don’t look at it as us inventing it,” he explained. “I look at it as a bunch of coaches sitting in rooms late at night organizing and getting things together to help players be successful.”
The backbone of the Erhardt-Perkins system is that plays — pass plays in particular — are not organized by a route tree or by calling a single receiver’s route, but by what coaches refer to as “concepts.” Each play has a name, and that name conjures up an image for both the quarterback and the other players on offense. And, most importantly, the concept can be called from almost any formation or set. Who does what changes, but the theory and tactics driving the play do not. “In essence, you’re running the same play,” said Perkins. “You’re just giving them some window-dressing to make it look different.”
interesting, Link?
But anyway Chris Brown breaks down the pats O here.
http://grantland.com/features/how-t...helped-maintain-dominance-tom-brady-patriots/