Purple and Blue Zones
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Re: Purple and Blue Zones
As posted on another site....
Defenders who you place in a purple zone will play it as they are instructed to in the NFL which is to drop to about 10-12 yards in order to cover the curl first and then proceed to cover the flat after they lock up anything at the deeper depth.
light blue = flat
purple = curl flat
yellow = hook
dark blue = deep zoneALL THINGS DALLAS
NFL: Dallas Cowboys
NHL: Dallas Stars
NBA: Dallas Mavericks
MLB: Texas Rangers
NCAA: Baylor
Producer/Graphic Artist/Animator-CBS -
Re: Purple and Blue Zones
Light blue zones cover the flats. The flats are any area right on the line of scrimmage to about 5-7 yrds above. Purple zones are for stopping outs towards the sidelines and curls greater than about 10 yards. So If someone is abusing the flare pass to a RB then you would but a flat zone up to stop it. If someone is abusing deep outs, curls and comebacks, you'd use a purple zoneComment
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Re: Purple and Blue Zones
Wouldnt it be nice if they actually worked like that. Sadly the purples will get sucked down by a flat route leaving curls, outs and corners wide open. If they worked preperly the purple would ignore the flat for the deeper routes.Light blue zones cover the flats. The flats are any area right on the line of scrimmage to about 5-7 yrds above. Purple zones are for stopping outs towards the sidelines and curls greater than about 10 yards. So If someone is abusing the flare pass to a RB then you would but a flat zone up to stop it. If someone is abusing deep outs, curls and comebacks, you'd use a purple zoneComment
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