Here is some of the reason why high school quarterbacks might not be interested in coming to LSU. Here is how NFL offenses breakdown stat wise:
1. Teams used a no-huddle offense on 12.2 percent of offensive snaps.
The NFL no-huddle statistics are dominated by two teams, the Eagles and Broncos, which use the tactic so regularly that they distort the overall percentages. The Eagles used the no-huddle on 68 percent of their plays; take them out of the league totals, and the tactic is only used 10.4 percent of the time, not 12.2 percent. The Broncos use the no-huddle on 48 percent of snaps. The Ravens, Bills and Steelers were the only teams to use the no-huddle more than 20 percent of the time.
Use of the no-huddle can be highly situational, and many teams still only use it during two-minute drills or when trailing in the fourth quarter. Thirteen teams used the no-huddle less than five times in the first quarter last year, meaning that for over one-third of NFL teams, it is not a tactic to be used in non-desperate circumstances except in rare cases (preventing a challenge or hurrying for a fourth-and-inches sneak, perhaps). The Eagles and Broncos went no-huddle on 73 percent and 60 percent of first quarter plays, by contrast.
The Ravens are in for some no-huddle whiplash. Jim Caldwell used the tactic 37 percent of the time, including on 30 percent of first quarter snaps. Gary Kubiak used it zero times for the Texans in the first quarter, though of course they needed it at the end of many games. The change in pace will be more noticeable than any other change in Baltimore.
Pace is the final frontier of NFL strategy, and there is room to grow from the current 12.2 percent usage rate. Caldwell is bringing the no-huddle to Detroit, Frank Reich wants to use it in San Diego and the new Dolphins offensive coordinator is such a Chip Kelly disciple that his name is Lazor. The Patriots are fans of the tactic, though they geared down last year because of so many inexperienced receivers. The Eagles' 70 percent rates may never catch on, but a no-huddle that appears about 25 percent of the time may become as standard in the NFL as full-court ball-pushing tactics are in basketball.
http://www.sportsonearth.com/articl...camp-stats-no-huddle-shotgun-quarterback-runs
1. Teams used a no-huddle offense on 12.2 percent of offensive snaps.
The NFL no-huddle statistics are dominated by two teams, the Eagles and Broncos, which use the tactic so regularly that they distort the overall percentages. The Eagles used the no-huddle on 68 percent of their plays; take them out of the league totals, and the tactic is only used 10.4 percent of the time, not 12.2 percent. The Broncos use the no-huddle on 48 percent of snaps. The Ravens, Bills and Steelers were the only teams to use the no-huddle more than 20 percent of the time.
Use of the no-huddle can be highly situational, and many teams still only use it during two-minute drills or when trailing in the fourth quarter. Thirteen teams used the no-huddle less than five times in the first quarter last year, meaning that for over one-third of NFL teams, it is not a tactic to be used in non-desperate circumstances except in rare cases (preventing a challenge or hurrying for a fourth-and-inches sneak, perhaps). The Eagles and Broncos went no-huddle on 73 percent and 60 percent of first quarter plays, by contrast.
The Ravens are in for some no-huddle whiplash. Jim Caldwell used the tactic 37 percent of the time, including on 30 percent of first quarter snaps. Gary Kubiak used it zero times for the Texans in the first quarter, though of course they needed it at the end of many games. The change in pace will be more noticeable than any other change in Baltimore.
Pace is the final frontier of NFL strategy, and there is room to grow from the current 12.2 percent usage rate. Caldwell is bringing the no-huddle to Detroit, Frank Reich wants to use it in San Diego and the new Dolphins offensive coordinator is such a Chip Kelly disciple that his name is Lazor. The Patriots are fans of the tactic, though they geared down last year because of so many inexperienced receivers. The Eagles' 70 percent rates may never catch on, but a no-huddle that appears about 25 percent of the time may become as standard in the NFL as full-court ball-pushing tactics are in basketball.
- The shotgun formation is now used on over 58 percent of offensive plays. Three or more players are lined up as wide receivers on 56 percent of offensive plays.
http://www.sportsonearth.com/articl...camp-stats-no-huddle-shotgun-quarterback-runs