A look at how Todd Monken’s first quarter mesh play opened Georgia’s offense up against Tennessee.
No. 1 Georgia (10-0, 8-0 SEC) totaled 487 yards in its 41-17 victory at Tennessee (5-5, 3-4 SEC) Saturday.
Georgia’s offense totaled 84 yards in the first quarter and was able to utilize its personnel with motion for a balanced attack starting during the middle part of the first quarter.
With seven minutes, 39 seconds remaining in the first quarter, Georgia’s offense changed its trajectory for the remainder of the contest against Tennessee.
A play highlighted by Tennessee’s Mathew Butler with an eight-yard sack, was a design to loosen the Vols’ defense for the remainder of the contest.
Todd Monken is in his second season as Georgia’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Monken, with an air raid background, ran a mesh play that resulted in Butler’s sack in the backfield.
The play, however, loosened up the middle of the field for Georgia’s offense going forward.
Allan Bridgford played for Monken at Southern Miss in 2013 after transferring from California. During a preview for the Tennessee-Georgia game, Bridgford highlighted Monken’s mesh plays that strategically open various elements of Georgia’s offense with prostyle philosophies under Kirby Smart.
“Our offense at Southern Miss, when I was there, was pure air raid,” Bridgford said on the show “Football Two-A-Days” of Monken’s offense ahead of Georgia playing Tennessee. “I say about 90 percent of the time we had four receivers, maybe one tight end as a hybrid receiver, and then one running back sets. That is what our strong suit was when I was there based off our personnel, but he has a whole different choice of options at Georgia just because I don’t think he’s had the positioning to recruit like he’s able to now and get the talent he has at Georgia. He did not have that luxury at Southern Miss. Now, there are a ton of studs that I played with at Southern Miss, but Georgia versus Southern Miss, as far as recruiting battles goes, I don’t think Southern Miss has had a better recruiting class than Georgia, right?
“He is going to cater that offense to what their strong suits are. He might have come from an air raid background, it is not like he has not coached in the league and has been around prostyle systems, and it is also not like the concepts are not generally the same. There is a very limited number of passing plays that you run, lots of teams probably have 1-12 favorite passing plays, they just do it from 15-20 different formations. He is strategic in how he does it and how he gets the matchups.”
Below is a look at Monken’s mesh play that set up Georgia’s offensive success for the remainder of the first half and the duration of the game. Following the Bulldogs’ mesh play, it created opportunities to showcase motion, allowing for timely run plays, opening the passing game, while Tennessee had to honor Monken’s ability for mesh going forward.
Below are first half highlights of Monken’s offense following its mid-first quarter mesh play.
Inside the pocket of Georgia’s offense with former Todd Monken quarterback Allan Bridgford.
Tennessee (5-4, 3-3 SEC) will host No. 1 Georgia (9-0, 7-0 SEC) Saturday at Neyland Stadium.
Kickoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. EST and CBS will televise the Southeastern Conference East division matchup.
Todd Monken is in his second season as Georgia’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.
Allan Bridgford played for Monken at Southern Miss in 2013 after transferring from California.
Ahead of the Tennessee-Georgia game, Bridgford joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” and discussed Monken’s offense this season.
Monken has featured his air raid concepts within prostyle sets, featuring 3×1 sets disguising one vertical with outside and inside posts, a running back wheel route off play-action, hot routes to the outside, 10-personnel with an H-back in 2×1 sets, quarterback half-rolls with comeback routes to the Z-receiver, inside posts over the middle to the tight end, and goaline trips left with pulling guards in wildcat formation.
“Our offense at Southern Miss, when I was there, was pure air raid,” Bridgford said of Monken’s offense. “I say about 90 percent of the time we had four receivers, maybe one tight end as a hybrid receiver, and then one running back sets. That is what our strong suit was when I was there based off our personnel, but he has a whole different choice of options at Georgia just because I don’t think he’s had the positioning to recruit like he’s able to now and get the talent he has at Georgia. He did not have that luxury at Southern Miss. Now, there are a ton of studs that I played with at Southern Miss, but Georgia versus Southern Miss, as far as recruiting battles goes, I don’t think Southern Miss has had a better recruiting class than Georgia, right?
“He is going to cater that offense to what their strong suits are. He might have come from an air raid background, it is not like he has not coached in the league and has been around prostyle systems, and it is also not like the concepts are not generally the same. There is a very limited number of passing plays that you run, lots of teams probably have 1-12 favorite passing plays, they just do it from 15-20 different formations. He is strategic in how he does it and how he gets the matchups.”
The entire show with Bridgford discussing Georgia and Monken’s offense can be listened to here or below.
Tosh Lupoi joining Vols’ staff would take an offer he cannot refuse.
Tennessee will fill its open defensive line coaching position following the 2020 season.
Third-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt relieved defensive line coach Jimmy Brumbaugh of his duties following a Week 4 loss to Kentucky. Pruitt is overseeing the unit for the remainder of the season.
Tosh Lupoi served as outside linebackers coach at Alabama from 2016-17 when Pruitt was the Crimson Tide’s defensive coordinator.
Lupoi is currently coaching the Atlanta Falcons’ defensive line in 2020 and is part of a staff in which head coach Dan Quinn was fired after five games. His tenure with the Falcons after this season is uncertain.
Allan Bridgford was recruited and played for Lupoi at California (2009-12). He discussed what it would take for Pruitt to hire Lupoi to his coaching staff following the conclusion of the 2020 season.
“I don’t see Tosh coming back to college unless he is a defensive coordinator at a SEC or a top-tier school, or a head coach at a reputable program,” Bridgford told Vols Wire. “He is not going to leave the NFL unless it is an offer he cannot refuse.”
Lupoi has served as a defensive line coach at California, Washington, the Cleveland Browns and Atlanta Falcons.
A title and job responsibilities of being a defensive coordinator and defensive line coach, along with higher compensation, would be a negotiating standpoint in Pruitt reuniting with Lupoi at Tennessee.
The Bulldogs are in its first season with offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Todd Monken. Monken has a background in coaching and teaching the Air Raid offense.
Ahead of playing No. 12 Tennessee (2-0, 2-0 SEC) Saturday, Georgia head coach Kirby Smart discussed in a press conference his thoughts on offensive execution of Monken’s system through two games.
“It’s still coming,” Smart said of Georgia’s offense still learning to execute under Monken. “We didn’t execute perfectly on Saturday, and I don’t know that you ever will execute perfectly, but we have to do it at a much higher rate.
“If that’s 70 perfect clean, we have to be 85 perfect clean, we have to be 95 perfect clean. We have to be able to function with everybody on the same page in terms of alignment and assignment.”
“Monken did not come in to blow things up, he came in to add bits and pieces to make it better,” Bridgford said on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.” “They have had tremendous success running the ball the past few years with pro-style concepts. They are only going to get better when they are adding these spread-type concepts that Monken brings in.”
“There are so many details that go into the execution of an offense, and we don’t have those details mastered yet. We have some young players. We have some guys playing for the first time still and they’re growing. They just have to grow faster. Todd [Monken] does a great job of teaching the ins and outs of why you do it, how you do it. The reason for why you do- it’s not like he’s trying to trick somebody. You out execute people and you maybe do it better than they do it.” — Georgia head coach Kirby Smart.
Propst mentioned “the key to the game is how well Jeremy Pruitt defends Georgia.”
“It’s a chess match,” Propst said. “It’s a chess match between Todd Monken and Jeremy Pruitt, Derrick Ansley and his staff. Then there is a chess match going on with Dan Lanning, Kirby Smart and Jim Chaney that it is going to be fun and kickback and watch it.”
The Bulldogs have continued to have a strong presence in the running game this season. Georgia totaled 202 yards on 45 attempts in its 27-6 win against Auburn last week.
During the offseason, Georgia had a pair of quarterbacks transfer into its program in JT Daniels (USC) and Jamie Newman (Wake Forest). Ahead of the season, Newman opted out and will not play, while Daniels is still recovering from an ACL injury taking place at USC last year.
Not having Daniels or Newman playing has paved a way for 5-foot-11, 190-pound Stetson Bennett to become Georgia’s signal-caller. In wins against Arkansas and Auburn, Bennett is 37-of-57 for 451 passing yards, three touchdowns and one interception. He has been sacked twice.
Through the first two games, Monken has been able to run Air Raid concepts with Bennett, while maintaining a physical ground game. Monken has featured Y-Cross off play-action instead of in a straight drop back, along with mesh early on this season.
“In the system, whether it be Y-Cross or Y-Sail, it starts with that guy,” Propst said of Air Raid concepts and the signal-caller. “So what they did against Auburn, they did a lot of that off play-action to protect the quarterback and they were wide open. When Auburn had to sell out to stop the run, it left the play-action.
“The scheme stays the same, whether you are in the gun, taking a three-step drop, playing 90-game, or you are under center and play-action — the concepts are not going to change a lot. I did see mesh in a third down deal. There are about seven or eight concepts in the 90-game which is a three-step drop out of shotgun and then it is 60 protection which is quick game stuff. There are tons of things he can do out of that to get the ball out to the wide receivers very fast.”
Safety play is critical when defending Air Raid concepts as they determine if it is needed to come over the top, crash or play down.
In the Air Raid, wide receivers have the ability to post in a direction they feel a safety is not headed. There is a lot of freedom within the Air Raid offense to make these decisions, placing a large burden on defenders as they need to be able to cover in open space.
Freedom in route-running for Georgia’s wide receivers were on display against Auburn last week to go along with the Bulldogs’ running attack.
“Monken did not come in to blow things up, he came in to add bits and pieces to make it better,” Bridgford said. “They have had tremendous success running the ball the past few years with pro-style concepts. They are only going to get better when they are adding these spread-type concepts that Monken brings in.
“Every quarterback loves play-action. There is nothing better than making a play-fake then looking down the field and seeing all of the linebackers that have been brought up from that play-fake because there is actually a threat there. You just have guys that are on crossers, dig routes and running naked because you can just throw the ball in there without having to maneuver around anybody. The spread concepts can still remain with a pro-style-type set under center with play-action – you can still run Y-Cross and Y-Sail. I think it is a good combination for Georgia.”
“Monken has a strong background in coaching wide receivers. He is as good as it gets when it comes to coaching receivers. He obviously played quarterback, so he has that perspective and quarterbacks know what they like. Certain guys give certain indicators better for when they run their routes than others. The best thing he does is teach.” — Allan Bridgford on the freedom wide receivers have under Todd Monken
Part of the Tennessee-Georgia matchup is Jim Chaney being in his second season as the Vols’ offensive coordinator. Chaney served in the same capacity at Georgia from 2016-18 under Smart.
Since Chaney’s departure from Georgia, Smart has been searching for an answer for his replacement.
After one season without Chaney, Propst viewed Georgia’s offense last year as one that “needed freshening up” with someone like Monken coming in.
“He is a smart guy and knows how to sort of integrate it into what they are doing,” Propst said of Monken arriving at Georgia. “It needed freshening up. I really think Georgia is going to make it very difficult on people to defend them.”
Propst is familiar with both Monken and Pruitt and views Saturday’s matchup as one where Tennessee will have their “work cut out this week” in preparation, as UT “is going to have to determine what Bennett can do in this Air Raid offense that can affect him.”
Pruitt served as defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach at Hoover High School from 2004-06 under Propst. Propst has ran Air Raid principles since his Hoover days, allowing for Pruitt to coach against the scheme before it was widespread throughout the sport.
Propst’s offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey at Hoover (2007) coached under Monken at Southern Miss from 2014-15.
“You take Jeremy Pruitt, I know what defensive strategist he is, he has his work cut out this week,” Propst said of Tennessee preparing for Monken and Georgia. “He is going to have to defend, not only the throw game in the Air Raid stuff that he knows — Jeremy knows it because he went against it in practice, against me, everyday. He knows what hurts it, where you are vulnerable in certain coverages, certain things, how to blitz it, how not to blitz it, whether to drop eight and rush three, whether to rush four, what coverages hurt certain things, but now you have to get all of that stuff taught with run fits.
“There is only a certain amount of time during practice that you can spend on run fits, plus all of the other stuff, as far as whether you are zone blitzing it or man blitzing it, or whatever Jeremy brings. It has only loaded his plate double the amount. Jeremy is not a dummy, I promise you that. He has been knowing this quite sometime when Todd was hired.”
The entire show with Bridgford and Propst can be listened to here or below.
Tennessee travels to Georgia on Oct. 10, a week before the Bulldogs play at Alabama.
Georgia enters the season as the three-time defending SEC East champions.
During the offseason, Kirby Smart hired Todd Monken as the Bulldogs’ offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Monken is bringing an Air Raid attack to Smart’s program.
Georgia’s change will create an interesting matchup between Monken’s Air Raid offense and Jeremy Pruitt’s predominantly split safety coverage defensive scheme, whether it be Cover-4, Cover-2, or any variation in between.
Vertical attacks and post routes are two areas that give Pruitt’s split safety coverage looks in CONNIE calls a difficult time to defend.
In Cover-4, both safeties in a split safety look are tasked with keying the inside receiver, while still being responsible for their deep quadrant of the field (along with the two corners). Many spread concepts, such as Monken’s, look to attack the safeties in that very predicament by putting the inside receiver on a route in front of them while sending and outside receiver on a post route behind them to exploit the coverage.
In a Cover-2 look, there are five defenders covering the field underneath, with only two safeties being responsible for an entire half of the football field, generally, which leaves three holes for the offense to exploit on the deep left — between the corner and safety — middle between the safeties and the linebackers, and deep right between the corner and the safety.
Part of the Air Raid offense is the 6 concept where all four wide receivers are going downfield. The point of the Air Raid 6 is to go get six points where all four wide receivers stretch the field, while exploiting the weaknesses of the split safety looks described above.
The 6 concept, also known as 4 verticals, has both outside receivers — the X and Z — running vertical go routes, while taking an outside release to stretch the defense, yet still leaving space between their bodies and the sideline to shield a defender in the event they need to make an over the shoulder catch with room to spare. The inside receivers are taught to take their vertical release and end up at their landmark, which is typically two yards outside of the college hash marks. If the defense moves to a 1-high safety look, the inside receivers will remain +2 yards outside the hash to make that safety cover more ground. However, if the defense is in the split safety, a 2-high look that Pruitt runs, the inside receivers will bend their route inside of the safety in front of them.
Against a Cover-4 look, the purpose is to act as a decoy where they attract the safety down and open the post route behind them for a home run shot. Quarterbacks will give a hand-signal on 4-verticals to the outside receiver to change their route to a post when they see a defense in a pre-snap Cover-4 look.
Against a Cover-2 look, the bend by the inside receiver becomes a primary, unless the safety decides to not split the inside and outside receiver on their half of the field, the bend route typically gets the ball. Lastly, the running back will check down in front of the linebackers to prevent them from dropping so deep in a split safety look that they can cover the inside receivers. In all of these scenarios, the 6 concept puts a defense in a bind.
Safety play is critical against the Air Raid 6 as the quarterback (right-handed) reads the defense pre-snap to select which side of the defense he will attack. Quarterbacks are taught to attack the lower of the two safeties in a Cover-4 look, in hopes of hitting the post over the top, and versus a Cover-2 look the quarterback attacks either the widest safety pre-snap in hopes of hitting the inside receiver streaking down the middle or they will choose his best matchup. There are several other factors that go into the totality of selecting a side to work, such as knowing tendencies of your opponents or the specific chemistry you have with certain receivers. With four receivers running the defense deep, check downs often become a great option, as well.
A quarterback’s progression can change if a tag is made, for instance, if the X-receiver has a cornerback that is playing off the ball and not in tight coverage. If a quarterback tags SMASH on the weak-side, the tag being on the right-side, a tag trumps the progression because the quarterback’s goal is to take the easy 6 yard completion.
The option route is another area of the Air Raid 6.
In an option route, each wide receiver will have landmarks to dictate their way into getting open. The X-receiver will continue with a go-route. The H will run 8-10 yards, the Y-receiver will go 12-14 yards, while the Z-receiver will be 16-18 yards in their route. Different landmarks provide each receiver to be on different levels. The progression coincides with the break in the receivers, creating space to get open. A quarterback would typically scan the full field from a go-route, usually deciding pre-snap if he has a chance, to the H’s option, the Y’s option and then outside to the Z’s route.
Safety play is again critical as they determine if it is needed to come over the top, crashes or plays down. In the Air Raid, wide receivers have the ability to post in a direction that they feel a safety is not headed. There is a lot of freedom within the Air Raid offense to make these decisions. There is a large burden on defenders as they need to be able to cover in open space.
For Tennessee’s sake, the WILL in Henry To’o To’o can cover the H if he stays short, and cornerback Bryce Thompson can play tight coverage on the X-receiver, providing Trevon Flowers and Jaylen McCollough to play the ball deep against other receivers in essentially a no-fly zone.
The 5-foot-11, 195-pound Flowers has the ball skills to defend Georgia’s new offensive attack. Flowers’ high school head coach Lamar Bryan says Tennessee’s strong safety has “great ball skills” playing against the Air Raid offense.
“He does a great job,” Bryan told Vols Wire of Flowers. “He can really run and covers ground well. He has tremendous ball skills, so he does really well in those situations.”
Allan Bridgford played for Monken at Southern Miss in 2013. Bridgford understands what Monken will bring to Georgia’s offense this season as the Bulldogs are all-in to revolutionize its offense and attack split safety coverage schemes.
With spring practices being canceled in March due to the coronavirus pandemic, Georgia did not have the traditional amount of time to implement the Air Raid offense during the offseason.
“Team’s may start out a little slower, maybe the older teams will benefit more,” Bridgford told Vols Wire. “I think towards the end of their SEC season, football is going to be a lot better due to live reps, just like any other season.
“What makes the Air Raid is how simple you keep it and how well you do it. There are half field reads where you are looking pre-snap at what the coverage is and what side of the field you are going to work. Let’s say you have a two-high beater to the left and a one-high beater to the right, there is a certain look you could get and you choose that side. Then you have full field scans where you are basically just counting numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, to the running back for a checkdown. Monken is just really good at teaching progressions and what you are looking for. He is really good at disecting defensive tendencies and how to identify them — he helps you play fast.”
Bridgford also discussed Georgia attacking Tennessee’s split safety coverage.
“You have to take the top off these coverages and work underneath,” he said. “The Air Raid has an answer to everything. There are so many nuances and only a handful of plays.
“You can have four verticals where there are two different types of four vertical calls. You have all-go, which is just 4-verticals, where the inside guys bend versus 2-high and the quarterback has the ability to put an outside receiver on a deep post versus Cover-4. Then you also have a streak variation, where if the chemistry between the quarterback and inside receivers is there, the inside receivers can either hook up, run inside, run outside, continue straight and basically just find the open hole in the defense based off their defender’s leverage. That takes chemistry, reps and practice. Every quarterback Monken has coached for an extended period of time has had that with his receivers.”
The matchup between Georgia and Tennessee will come before the Bulldogs’ much anticipated contest against the Crimson Tide, and will be one that is somewhat of a different ideology with Saban favoring a STUBBIE call within a split safety coverage compared to Pruitt.
Saban is known to not want to play STUMP because cornerbacks play a lot press coverage, causing him to think his players do not execute when playing off coverage. Saban likes to play STUBBIE to play tighter coverage.
This makes for the Tennessee-Georgia matchup being one of the most anticipated games within the 2020 SEC schedule.