In 2012 with McGahee, he had 67.1% of his carries come from under center.bradshaw2ben wrote: ↑Sun Apr 11, 2021 1:52 amThing is, the game is going more towards the college game... where all of these stud RBs ran their whole careers out of shotgun.
I'm not convinced that running out of shotgun makes the RB's job "very difficult".
Look at Peyton Manning's late career. He had less mobility than Ben, they ran everything out of shotgun. Here are Denver's total offense numbers and their Rush rankings in those uyears:
2012: #2 OFF, 13th rush
2013: #1 OFF, 5th tush
2014: #3 OFF, 4th rush
2015: 24th, 16th rush
And it wasn't like they had studs at RB, either. In fact, they had a different journeyman/JAG in each of Manning's 4 Denver seasons:
2012: McGahee
2013: Moreno
2014: Anderson
2015: Hillman
In 2013 with Moreno he had 29.3% of his carries come from under center. They lost the Super Bowl.
In 2014, Anderson and Hillman were their 1-2 combo, their 1A, 1B if you will, they had 119 of their 285 carries under center, 41.8%, they lost in the playoffs the divisional game.
How exactly is this proof that this running from the shotgun is successful? Or that we should emulate it with Ben?
In 2015 Anderson started 10 games, Hillman 6 games, and the Broncos changed the running game. WTF??? How can that be Scunge? Well, they actually did this conservative, traditional thing with the running game by actually having their QB go back under center to help the running game!
Anderson and Hillman combined for 359 carries that year, and 209 of those carries came from under center, 58.2%.
The result that year? They won the damn Super Bowl. They tried that running from the shotgun in 2013-2014 and went back to running more under center in 2015, they came to their senses just as the Steelers must do as well.
We will probably never agree on this, and hey it is all good. I have had these thoughts on the running game and why it has gotten progressively worse as Ben has aged for a long time. This is not like it is something that is unique to Ben I think it happens to a lot of teams as their franchise QB starts to exert himself as a passer, becomes more dominant as a passer. To me it is very hard for one thing to ascend without some cost coming from another part of your offense.
But when your offense becomes lopsided and dependent on that shotgun too much, it becomes limiting. Is anybody going to sit here and argue with me that you can still effectively do play action in the shotgun?
What the Steelers are trying to do with this running from the shotgun is not really that common in the NFL, or at least to the extent that many of you believe it to be. Again, where is the proof? Where are these successful examples of it? To use Peyton Manning as proof?
I look back at his time in Indy, they weren't running from the shotgun! In 2006, they won the Super Bowl and their RB combo of Addai and Rhodes had 401 of their 413 carries come from under center, 97%.
When Peyton had Edgerrin James as his RB, as a rookie he had 98.9% of carries under center, and in his last year James had 96.9% of his carries come from under center.
No, to me, Manning, Ben, even Philip Rivers, teams start to implement this running from the shotgun because of their star QBs declining movement skills and ball handling and not because they think it is more effective then lining up under center.

