Duck hunt

October 30, 2007

dixon.jpg

By dominating Cal in the second half of a 31-20 win, the ASU Sun Devils have set a date with the Oregon Ducks that will have Rose Bowl and possibly national championship implications. This Saturday, the Devils will travel to Eugene for a second consecutive matchup between top-10 teams in Autzen (only the second in history).

According to Stewart Mandel, Oregon is still the team to beat in the Pac-10 despite ASU’s unbeaten and conference-leading status. If the team is to come out of Autzen unscathed, Erickson should take note of USC’s miscues last week, and follow my strategy on beating the Ducks.

Oregon runs the option better than any team in the country. Like Pat White and Steve Slaton at West Virginia, the Ducks boast a fantastic quarterback/running back combo in Dennis Dixon and Jonathan Stewart. Both run the ball extremely well and Dixon isn’t too bad of a passer as well.

To beat Oregon, ASU will have to try and contain the running game and force Dixon to rely on his injured receiving corps. The spread option running attack is based largely on a series of fakes; the quarterback will either fake the handoff to the running back, or hand the ball off and run the opposite direction as a decoy. This attack makes it extremely difficult for the defense to get any sort of pressure on the quarterback because it’s predicated on speed and making quick decisions.

The best defense against this type of running attack is to hit Dixon on every running play, even if he hands the ball off to Stewart. Oregon’s offense runs through Dixon; he calls the plays at the line after reading the defense in a no-huddle setup. Hitting Dixon will do two things: 1) it’ll wear him down physically as the game goes on, and 2) it’ll wear him down mentally as the game goes on.

If you put him on the turf enough times, Dixon will make mistakes. He’ll start getting rid of the ball early and will likely hesitate when running. Just knowing that he’s going to get hit is going to affect his play, and the Devils can’t be penalized for it because of the nature of the Oregon run game. I’m not saying I want him to get hurt, but he’ll think twice the next time he runs up the middle.

One Response to “Duck hunt”

  1. cn2007 Says:

    Hi! (This is Cassandra, from class)

    I really love the quality of your picture here. And thanks for the recap. I think football is great, but I can be a bit of a dunce when it comes to the ins and outs of the game. This wasn’t as complicated as the recaps I’m used to reading/hearing… I normally tune out during those.

    Anyway, great blog. :)


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