Skip to Main Navigation

The Buffalo News

Web Search
by YAHOO! SEARCH

Bills' offense suffering from oversimplification

Published:October 18, 2009, 8:43 PM

Font Size:
  • E-mail
  • Share
  • Print

Updated: August 21, 2010, 8:53 AM

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The Buffalo Bills are expected to unveil a huddle at least some of the time today.

The bigger question for the Bills' offense, however, is what kind of changes will accompany

the huddling?

So far the Bills have been about as simple as an NFL team can get in terms of offensive

formations.

The results have been a disaster.

Buffalo (1-4) ranks 25th in the NFL in yardage and has produced just one offensive

touchdown in the past three games.

The Bills face a huge challenge today against a New York Jets defense that ranks ninth and

boasts one of the more complex schemes in the league.

The Bills' success may depend on how much variation they have added to the attack in the

past week.

Week Six Preview: Bills at Jets

Through five games, the Bills have relied on two basic formations.

They have lined up with three receivers, with one wideout in the slot, one runner in the

backfield and the tight end in the traditional spot on 43.5 percent of their plays through

five games, according to News statistics.

They have lined up with one back and two tight ends lined up in a tight formation (next to

each of the tackles or both outside one of the tackles) on 43.9 percent of the plays.

The problems with such a lack of multiplicity:

They almost never use motion before the snap, so the defense does not have to make

any changes. The defense doesn't even have to communicate before the snap much of the time.

Lee Evans never leaves the "X" position, outside to the weak side (opposite the

tight end side). If a defense is double-teaming him, it never has to adjust its coverage.

Running back Fred Jackson rarely has been shifted out to a slot or wide receiver

position. The Bills did it twice xleg

out of a two-back set against Tampa Bay. They ran empty backfield plays eight times against

Tampa and four against New Orleans, but not since.

The tight end rarely has lined up split out from the offensive line, in a slot

position. The Bills did this against Tampa on a TD pass to Evans, but not since.

The four-wide set has been used on only six plays all year. The Bills have two good

slot receivers in Josh Reed and Roscoe Parrish, and they have a promising young guy in Steve

Johnson. But the double slot-receiver look has been absent.

Why so basic?

The big reason is coach Dick Jauron has demanded a simplified attack so that the Bills

might more effectively run the no-huddle at a fast pace. The no-huddle can't run fast if there

is a big package of plays and formations. It's too hard to communicate.

If a team has great weapons, gets good quarterbacking and operates efficiently, the

benefits of the no-huddle can outweigh its inherent restrictions. Indianapolis runs most plays

out of the same personnel grouping with QB Peyton Manning.

The Bills, however, have been anything but efficient, and the no-huddle gamble has been a

bust.

"We'll look at different things, we'll look at different formations and we'll see what we

can do to help our guys perform on Sunday," Jauron said in a national radio interview last

week.

"But clearly we've got to score points. We're just not scoring any points, not giving

ourselves a chance to win games."

Offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt was asked Wednesday about the coaches' main message to

the offensive players this week. It didn't sound like major schematic changes were coming.

"The things we talked about this morning were to simplify, execute and make the plays when

they're there," Van Pelt said.

Asked if the Bills would put Evans and Terrell Owens in motion or leave them in their spots

before the snap, Van Pelt said:

"It's what we're doing right now. We're stagnant. We're standing there right now. Is it

something down the road we can maybe get to as we grow in the system? Possibly, yeah."

The Bills' offensive line situation has played a factor in restricting empty-backfield

sets, four-wide sets and even the shifting of a tight end to the slot in a two-tight end

alignment. The Bills have been forced to keep an extra blocker or two in on pass plays to help

the offensive line protect quarterback Trent Edwards.

That situation may not improve this week. Right tackle Jonathan Scott is out with a sore

ankle. Rookie Jamon Meredith, plucked off the Green Bay practice squad four weeks ago, will

make his NFL debut as the starting right tackle.

So the Bills will start four offensive linemen who never had taken an NFL snap before this

season.

The group faces a Jets defense that has been revitalized under coach Rex Ryan. New York

ranked 16th on defense last season. This year they added Pro Bowl linebacker Bart Scott,

veteran cornerback Lito Sheppard, starting defensive end Marques Douglas and starting strong

safety Jim Leonhard. Pro Bowler Kris Jenkins, their mammoth defensive tackle, anchors the

Comments

There are no comments on this story.

Blogs

Prep Talk

PrepTalkTV: Big night for St. Joe's on court & ice, plus more highlights & a look at hoops' final week

Campus Watch

Niagara-Siena Game Analysis

Sports, Ink

This Day in Buffalo Sports History: Quirk of fate

Sports Updates

Sports Wire

The Feed / What’s Happening Now

Latest Updates
Most Commented
Most Viewed
Sabres & NHL

Sabres show some gumption in beating Bruins

Courts

White firefighters are awarded $2.7 million in bias case

Batavia/Genesee County

Woman, 24, found dead in car

East Side

Police raids target massive drug ring

Bills & NFL

Bills hire a quarterback mechanic in Lee

Student illnesses in Le Roy

Answers to the many questions in Le Roy

Bucky Gleason

Sabres find the missing ingredients

Rod Watson

Lady Justice’s blindfold gets thrown away

Sabres & NHL

Ruff to remain in press box for awhile

Buffalo Marketplace

Marketplace videos

Watch the latest offers, products and services from our advertisers.

Browse our print ads

It's the ultimate advantage for Buffalo consumers. Never miss another ad again!

Buffalo Savers: coupons

Buffalo coupons at your fingertips.
Just click and print. It's Easy!

close

Browse our print adsclose

Special Sections

Buffalo Saversclose

Local coupons

Featured coupon