Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Henderson's college system
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August 13, 2019 at 3:34 pm #103956znModerator
This came up earlier in a tweets thread.
Darrell Henderson has admitted difficulty adapting to a zone heavy Rams’ scheme after running mostly gap runs at Memphis.
i thought he ran in a zone scheme in college?
More on all that.
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===J. Moyer’s RSP NFL Lens: RB Darrell Henderson’s (Rams) Transition to Zone Blocking
Rams rookie Darrell Henderson is one of the most exciting backs from the 2019 NFL Draft, but J. Moyer explains why his transition from start collegian to complete runner won’t be immediate.Perhaps the draft’s most electric back, Darrell Henderson’s arrival in the Rams’ hyper-efficient rushing offense offers plenty of justifiable excitement. It never meant the transition from Memphis to L.A. would be seamless.
Henderson emerged from a Memphis offense centered on a diverse gap run scheme. When executing gap run plays, the offensive line uses an array of down blocks and pullers to create advantageous blocking angles, with the goal of opening a hole in a specific gap.
The back is told where to go, minimizing the reliance on vision, processing of post-snap change, lateral agility and controlled footwork. Instead, the best gap running backs are those like Henderson, who displays comfort navigating tight spaces, sudden acceleration, an aggressive running style and outstanding contact balance that helps him defeat tacklers in the open field.
The Rams’ rushing attack is built on two staple plays: Wide Zone and Duo. Wide Zone is designed to stretch the defense horizontally, while the running back reads defenders across several gaps before picking one and exploding through it upfield.
Duo is a down-blocking inside run that requires the back to read through double-teams on defensive linemen to the middle linebacker, then access the hole wherever it pops open. Both plays emphasize the runner’s vision, scheme awareness, processing of post-snap changes, lateral agility, and controlled footwork.
Early word from Sean McVay and Henderson himself is the lack of familiarity with the Rams’ bread-and-butter runs has caused Henderson to play with hesitation. Despite optimism that he had turned a corner heading into preseason week 1, we saw Henderson struggle to execute zone concepts against the Raiders.
While Henderson should improve with more repetitions, early signs are that it will not be a natural transition. Expect McVay to apply Henderson efficiently, prioritizing runs he is more comfortable executing and using him as a receiver to get him the ball in space. For now, Henderson’s struggles adapting to the base scheme will limit his opportunity to these change-of-pace situations.
The Chris Thompson-Lance Dunbar role as a satellite back is a far more accurate range of play that we’ll see from Henderson as a rookie.
August 13, 2019 at 8:32 pm #103969InvaderRamModeratorhmmm…
well pff says he ran outside zone.
henderson’s coaches said he ran outside zone.
https://theramswire.usatoday.com/2019/05/14/nfl-rams-darrell-henderson-college-coach-fit/amp/
August 13, 2019 at 8:45 pm #103970znModeratorhenderson’s coaches said he ran outside zone.
From the OC Register article:
But like the Rams, the Memphis offense subsisted on a heavy dose of outside zone runs, which asked backs to run off tackle while patiently reading the defense before cutting upfield.
The Rams ran more outside zone than any other team in the NFL last season. That scheme can be a difficult adjustment for some backs, but for the 5-foot-8 Henderson, it shouldn’t be an adjustment at all. Over the past two seasons, according to Pro Football Focus, he led all of college football with a staggering 10.7 yards per carry on such runs. Highlight reels offer endless examples of how Henderson’s extraordinary vision could translate to an NFL zone blocking scheme.
August 14, 2019 at 9:05 pm #103997znModeratorBut like the Rams, the Memphis offense subsisted on a heavy dose of outside zone runs, which asked backs to run off tackle while patiently reading the defense before cutting upfield.
Matt Waldman actually responds to that statement:
Matt Waldman@MattWaldman
The context that data like this fails to provide is the vital qualitative analysis that examines what is pro-level pacing and execution on these plays vs what’s simply being more athletic and getting away with behavior not optimal to running that scheme in the NFL.Coleman was inconsistent enough with OZ as a rookie, Kyle Shanahan actually installed gap plays for him, which doesn’t require the diagnosis and footwork of zone. It took him a couple of years to get it down.
At first, folks cited Coleman’s ISU scheme as a 1:1 fit with Atlanta but didn’t realize that high production in a scheme in college doesn’t always translate to NFL because the back can actually need work on the nuance of the scheme but win elite athletic skill. Where we are w/DH.
August 15, 2019 at 12:06 am #104000InvaderRamModeratoris that another way of saying he needs to adjust to the speed of the nfl game?
August 15, 2019 at 12:55 am #104001znModeratoris that another way of saying he needs to adjust to the speed of the nfl game?
It could be. I take it that it means he has to sharpen his technique and hone his vision. That in collge he could win with just sheet athletic superiority and in the pros he has to be more in tune with the basics.
But Waldman does a slight of hand.
The guy who said DH ran a gap system in college not a zone system works for Waldman.
Waldman responds by saying DH has to sharpen things, the details.
But he avoids the “gap v. zone system” issue entirely.
Which leaves that part murky.
August 15, 2019 at 10:34 pm #104021InvaderRamModeratori trust the articles that say he ran in a zone system. i remember mcvay and snead saying similar things. i think i even remember henderson saying similar things.
that guy says that mcvay and henderson both have said that he is struggling with the rams run concepts, but i have yet to see a direct quote from either that confirms this. i see more just getting the fine details down.
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