An example of using the short passing game to advance the ball in an efficient and risk-averse manner, is the spacing concept. As these examples will illustrate, many teams, such as the New Orleans Saints, rely on this concept (as well as screens) in place of a run game. The obvious advantage is, a multiple area attack that can horizontally stretch underneath defenders.
Essentially, just like Y stick, the receivers look to attack the defenders and work to gain horizontal separation. Multiple shallow receivers dispersed along the same plane, puts underneath players (such as linebackers) into a 'pickle' scenario. Choosing one receiver, only opens another.
These pictorials show the contraction and expansion of this route combo. All the receivers set their 'stick' or plant aiming at underneath defender seams.
As the two inside breaking routes put the MLB in conflict, it also draws the OLBs inside the hashes (carrying the route). As this first illustration shows, bunching all the defenders inside creates a chasm for flaring backs.
Here, we see a crucial short-yardage, mid-field conversion down and we see the spacing concept relied upon (especially by the Saints) as a bread-and-butter stallwart in their offense.
To see this particular game in action;
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