It's not that simple. There were many plays where they showed blitz but didn't bring everyone they showed. They also at times brought pressure from the secondary and dropped a DL into coverage - overloading one side while an o-lineman sat with no one to block on the other side. When you have that much talent and experience on defense it isn't as simple and formulaic as you present it here. Not many NCAA defenses have a D-lineman who can be regularly successful in downfield coverage, but they do.3rd and 6 "grounding play" where the game completely turned.
Pre-snap (OSU showing that they are bringing 7 guys).....
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They do bring all 7.... but all 4 of our receiving targets are running longish routes that take forever to develop. By the time Purdy needs to get rid of it, all the receivers aren't even close to finishing their routes yet......
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I don't know enough to say for sure (maybe someone else does?), but I have to think this might be on Purdy when he comes to the line of scrimmage and sees how OSU looks to be bringing the house that he can check the play down to something else quicker hitting?
Either that, or there needs to be a "hot read" that automatically happens between the QB and one of the receivers where if they bring everyone that it's an automatic thing where one of the receivers cuts their route off and runs a quick slant over the middle where Purdy can dump it off to them??
But something has to occur pre-snap to avoid this from happening. You can't have all your targets running long developing routes, and Purdy sitting like a dead man in the pocket while OSU is bringing 7 (blitzing at least 3). And OSU didn't even disguise what they were doing. Everyone could see they were bringing everyone.
This is simple stuff that just cannot happen. Ultimately it's on CMC and Manning to have "hot reads" designed, or to allow Purdy to check to something different. This play had ZERO chance before the ball was even snapped.
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