One thing about timing routes and a timed passing offense. Norv Turner once came up in a conversation about the evolving Turner WCO at Dallas after Norv had left for Washington. The new coach being interviewed said he could tell Norv had not been around for a while because when he wanted the recevier to run a seven yard route, it had to be a exactly seven yards, not 6.5 or 7.5, because as Norv would have said: "[T]hat's where the ball was going".
Many of Walsh's play calls were for option routes (remember Pass to Daylight, the derisive name given to the Lindy Infante system in Green Bay?), where the receiver could take one of three routes based on how the defense deployed in his area. Walsh used this too. The QB and WR had to be on the same page for this to work.
Favre talked about this on several occasions, and it even came up on his last pass for the Packers when he thought Driver was going to go with one route and he went another. Whether this instance is factual or just a cover for some other failure is immaterial; the expectation was that the receiver could change his route depending on what he read.
There was not the same receiver flexibility in Gillman's West Coast Offense as practiced by Coryell, Gibbs and Turner.
Many of Walsh's play calls were for option routes (remember Pass to Daylight, the derisive name given to the Lindy Infante system in Green Bay?), where the receiver could take one of three routes based on how the defense deployed in his area. Walsh used this too. The QB and WR had to be on the same page for this to work.
Favre talked about this on several occasions, and it even came up on his last pass for the Packers when he thought Driver was going to go with one route and he went another. Whether this instance is factual or just a cover for some other failure is immaterial; the expectation was that the receiver could change his route depending on what he read.
There was not the same receiver flexibility in Gillman's West Coast Offense as practiced by Coryell, Gibbs and Turner.

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