07-17-2012, 06:39 PM
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#3
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Rookie
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Re: INT's are too much.
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Originally Posted by Broncos86 |
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I had this same problem for my first few games. I had to adjust how I approached the passing game. I'm also playing on All-American, with default sliders. Throws that worked in the past may not, and throws that didn't work in the past do. if a DB is covering the flat and your WR runs an out route, you can throw the ball to that WR and the flats DB won't make a magical play on the ball.
One thing to consider is start throwing your WRs open. If your WR is running an in route, and the safety is on top of him, you can pull down on the stick and throw the ball to lead him back towards the line of scrimmage as he comes across. That will help him maintain body position. This works on posts, flags, etc. You can flatten out corner routes, lengthen them, etc. Try leading your WR inside the field on a go route when you have man coverage and the safety has left the center wide open.
Your pre-snap reads need to be keen as well. You need to take note of where the safeties are, where the blitz might come from, and any possible mismatches in alignment.
Lastly, start thinking about the routes you run. Stop running slants all day long. The CPU is going to adjust to what you're doing. If you run curls all day long, the CPU is going to start jumping those routes. Try running an out route or a go route and see how the DB reacts.
Once I adjusted how I threw the ball, I started to see routes open up that weren't open in NCAA 12. I went from throwing 4+ picks a game to solid passing numbers. Of course, your QB and WRs play a part in all this. If you WRs can't run routes, they won't fool the DBs.
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This is great advice to follow, I'm still getting some miracle picks that make me want to walk away but it's not so bad.
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