Inside the Pylon and Mark Schofield are proud to present First Sound: Jared Goff Anticipation, another video in the series that resides at our YouTube Channel. Future topics will include animated diagrams, player breakdowns, film study, and some special guests.
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In this edition of First Sound former college quarterback and film connoisseur Mark Schofield examines California quarterback Jared Goff’s anticipation:
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Mark Schofield has always loved football. He breaks down film, scouts prospects, and explains the passing game for Inside the Pylon.
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Great explanation here. My one question is it a sign of trust between Goff and his TE when it comes Goff knowing which way the TE will break? Did Goff anticipate because he saw the TE plant his feet and knew he was cutting then? Or did he just kind of guess?
Typically on these underneath option routes, the receiver will open/pivot to one side or the other each time. So the TE will always open toward the left, and either sit down or break to that side. So Goff knew that he would be breaking/turning to that side. The trust and anticipation come in because Goff expects the break to come at the precise moment and yardage/depth that it does, sowhen he starts to throw he puts the football in a good spot, where he trusts the TE will be once the ball arrives. Time, feel, trust and repetition all come into play.
Thanks for watching/reading!