A stalemate for me is a win. If no leverage is gained on either side in a pass play that blocker did a good job in my eyes. However if it is a run play and the blocker say needs to open a hole but doesn't he will 9 times out of 10 get a negative due to the running back having to find another hole or break it to the outside. As for second level blocks I pay very close attention to these as most of them do not result in a good block. Tyler Polumbus is the worst at this as he never gets his man at all. Not even a piece. As for movement I expect the blocker to get to lets say a streaking corner or an outside backer on the play design. I have seen Montgomery do this quite a bit with so so success. If they can put a hat on the guy that they are expected to block and either hold him up or take him out of the play entirely he will get a positive. This is where a lot of the missed cutbacks come into play because right side of the line just isnt quick enough to set that outside edge and they wind up failing miserably. Now as for the Qb drop back I also watch that very closely. I know a lot of plays are designed for say 3, 5, or 7 but usually you will come to see that the blocker either has it at that point (the block) or he simply gives up on the play such as Chester has been doing so in other words if they are being lazy they will get a negative for it. And really its the best I can do as a viewer to come to a logical decision on the block because the camera angles only show so much on any given play.
And do not get me wrong with the running game. Of course they use a lot of double teams but its just not to a crazy extent. A lot of them will be a chip block and the zone scheme is taking the rest. It is really interesting to watch them do this because you can tell which guys heads are on a swivel and who have no clue whats going on around them. I will probably extend it eventually to the te and rb blocking but this is the best I can do for now given the time it takes for the review itself. And I appreciate all of the positive comments for this thread and I think I may even include a pancake number with it as well to see which guys are putting their guy on the ground. Might shed a little more light on leverage and strength of our line.



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