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Forum > Pee Wee Leagues > pee wee offense builds
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stustu123
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it depends if your building your player just as a one season peewee wonder or weather your actually building it for a full career. If its just a one season peewee specialist, as an O-lineman which is what i build (Guards and Centers) by the end of the peewee season you should have both strength and blocking softcapped, vision in the 20's at least (avoid False Starts) then anything after that is speed and agility, of course if your building for a full career then you would build entirely differently
 
JDM998
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Also, TC has no pee-wee trophies or anything.
 
skipbertman
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Forget about building a PeeWee HB to carry the ball. Just build him like a blocking FB and run the wildcat. That's what teams that are winning are doing. It's pretty much making PeeWee competition lame. The Defensive AI responses don't compensate for a rushing QB very well.
 
Booth Inc.
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wtf are you doing putting points into carry for ? That is the least needed stat for a back in peewees
 
Time Trial
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Originally posted by skipbertman
Forget about building a PeeWee HB to carry the ball. Just build him like a blocking FB and run the wildcat. That's what teams that are winning are doing. It's pretty much making PeeWee competition lame. The Defensive AI responses don't compensate for a rushing QB very well.


If a team didn't have a HB threat, teams would just be able to put players in the outside to blitz, run flats, or QB spy all day and every play would result in a loss of yards.

BAD teams can't stop the QB.
 
skipbertman
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I was being sarcastic...

There's a little more to it than being a "BAD" team. Yes, you can compensate for the Wildcat, but the AI does not account for a rushing QB nearly as efficiently as a normal offense. Teams that run the Wildcat in PeeWee and lower levels have a big advantage.

If you pull the secondary up to plug the middle and cover the outside, one misread by a defender results in an untouched TD with safeties eating QB exhaust fumes. Sure, you can stop the QB sometimes, but when mixed in with an average/normal running attack, the Wildcat will yield huge gains on enough plays to make a difference in a game.

The Wildcat is very effective in the PeeWee leagues and it's mostly because of poor game mechanics rather than being a bad team.
Last edited Apr 25, 2009 03:26:02
 
Time Trial
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Have have specialists on my team built to stop the QB rollout. I give them normal playing time against regular teams, but they are in on almost every play versus rushing QBs. Even against a well built defense the rushing QB will be a success for the first half of the season, because rushing is just so dominant. By the time you need to start worrying about the pass, the rushing QB can be mostly neutralized, especially if you scout and figure out which formations and downs they are more likely to roll.
 
luxar
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Don't understand why a rushing QB formation is being called the Wildcat. My understanding is that the wildcat is putting a HB in at the QB spot and snapping directly to him, a la Darren McFadden at Arkansas, not snapping the QB the ball and telling him to go for it like Pat White at WVU.
 
Bromide
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it's called wildcat because

QB depth
1. throwing QB
2. rushing HB

TE2 depth
1.throwing QB
2._________

they signal a QB run and in the AI they make it so the throwing QB is playing at TE. Making the HB be in that play, so he takes the direct snap playing as a "QB" then runs with it.
 
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