Santa Fe New Mexican

Game-planning an elaborate exercise in art and science

Fordham finds early start allows time to configure plan of attack

- By Ralph D. Russo

NEW YORK — A big dry erase board hangs on the wall of one side of the meeting room. It has rows and rows of numbers and words handwritte­n in blue marker that only make sense to someone who speaks the language of football.

On the opposite wall sits another big white board, mostly empty with a few categories written in red marker: 3rd and 1-2; 3rd and 3-6; Red Zone; Goal Line.

The task for Fordham’s offensive staff, led by 33-year-old coach Andrew Breiner, on this muggy summer day in the Bronx is to mark up most of that board, and finish the second phase of the first run of game-planning for the Rams’ opening game of the season.

Putting together a game plan is an elaborate exercise in the art — and science — of analyzing an opponent’s tendencies and patterns, and determinin­g how best to exploit them. It’s mixing and matching. What do we like to do and when? What do they like to do and when? Throw out the stuff that won’t work, keep what should and then figure out what are (hopefully) the best plays to run in the upcoming game.

Breiner, considered one of the bright young offensive minds in college coaching, let The Associated Press sit in on a summer game-planning meeting, and then explained how he and his staff do it during the season.

Preparatio­n

During the season, the prep work starts the week before the week leading up to the game. While the coaches and players are practicing for Saturday’s game, graduate assistants are breaking down film for the following week’s opponent.

Breiner wants that completed by Friday afternoon so all that needs to be added Sunday is the game that was just played.

Monday

At Fordham, where the Rams have gone 40-11 the last four seasons, there is no practice Monday so coaches put in a long day of game-planning.

“The first thing we do when we sit down to start an opponent is we have the personnel discussion,” said Briener, who was promoted from offensive coordinato­r to head coach when Joe Moorhead left to become Penn State’s offensive coordinato­r.

Next is the work of coming up with plays to run on first and second down. Some of the work is simple process of eliminatio­n.

For example: Against a 4-3 defense, how the interior linemen line up — shaded left or right — helps narrow down the running plays.

Coverages determine what passing plays get thrown out, and some are obvious.

“So if you’re a cover-four team [basically, four players dropping deep], we’re probably not going to run play-action, four verticals at you because it’s not a good concept against cover-four,” Breiner said.

Breiner said for one opponent last season, he set up his call sheet completely based on distances. “Because I found a pattern within their defensive calls that I knew on these certain distances I was going to get certain things,” he said.

Tuesday

The results of Monday’s gameplanni­ng are implemente­d on the practice field Tuesday. That day’s game-plan meeting goes about two hours and is focused on third-down plays, sorted by distance needed for a first down.

Generally, this is when defenses mix things up and use distance as a defender. Breiner said it is important to avoid getting bogged down in looks that rarely show up on film.

He tells his staff: “Don’t chase ghosts.”

Wednesday

Tuesday’s work goes to the practice field on Wednesday, while coaches game-plan for special situations such as backed up against the goal line, 2-point plays and fourth down. It is also the last chance to tweak what is already in place.

Breiner prefers to go into a game with a relatively small list of plays. He would rather not say the exact number. Breiner’s offense is loaded with run-pass option plays, where the quarterbac­k reads the defense after the snap to determine whether to hand off or throw. Having multiple answers baked into one play means fewer total plays are necessary.

That means fewer for players to learn and more time for them to master what Breiner wants the Rams to do best.

Thursday

Wednesday’s work is installed at practice and players get the entire plan — printed out.

“I’m old school,” Breiner said.

Friday

The day before a game is mostly about studying up, with a walk-through in the afternoon or early evening and meetings for the players. Hopefully, they do some cramming before bed.

Saturday

Game day. Time to see if the plan worked.

Last year, Fordham averaged 6.63 yards per play (eighth-best in FCS) and 40.1 points per game (fourth in FCS). Usually, it worked quite well.

 ?? VINCENT DUSOVIC FORDHAM ATHLETICS VS AP ?? Fordham football coach Andrew Briener stands on the sideline in October during a game against Yale in New York. Breiner, considered one of the bright young offensive minds in college coaching, explained how he and his staff game-plan during the season.
VINCENT DUSOVIC FORDHAM ATHLETICS VS AP Fordham football coach Andrew Briener stands on the sideline in October during a game against Yale in New York. Breiner, considered one of the bright young offensive minds in college coaching, explained how he and his staff game-plan during the season.

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