How the lions deceived the bears on this TD of 44 yokes by Jameson Williams at a big opening: Watch the video

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Have you seen Jameson Williams mark an intact touch of 44 yards against the Bears on Sunday?
How did it happen?
The Williams score was a long time of the Lions offensive – a trend break game they have set up during the game.
Let’s take a look at a few games from the first half. The first comes with three minutes to play at the first quarter.
Amon-Ra St. Brown and Sam Laporta are aligned with each other tightly on the left side of the formation. Laporta takes off and crosses the terrain on a road, occupying the middle of the field under the defender, while St. Brown takes his route in the void created by the Laporta transparency road.
It is a basic concept and a philosophy for the Lions offensive: erase the middle of the field and let Jared Goff tear it away.
Goff does exactly that and sticks the ball in St. Brown’s chest for easy completion.
Fast advance until the beginning of the second quarter, and we will see the lions try something similar, this time on the right side of the training.
St. Brown and Williams align in a stack of lag on the right side to this third and 10, St. Brown serving again as an external receiver. Williams travels a real vertical transport route in sewing, keeping high security and pulling the defender below in the seam to create a unique window for St. Brown.
The opening is there, in theory, but carries the corner half Jaylon Johnson anticipates the excavation of St. Brown and undermines the route. Just a sick game from the defender – these guys are paid too!
Finally, the touch Williams – the big gain.
The Lions have passed the whole game, and really the whole Goff era, conditioning the teams to anticipate and break on the routes in the middle. On the touch of Williams, they abuse that to their advantage.
Just before the Snap, the Lions Motion Kalif Raymond from the outside is the new inner receiver, making Williams the external receiver. Rather than working in the middle, however, the Lions perform a double post concept: a perfect drummer to cover the Bears districts.
Raymond’s less deep post office occupies security on the hash, keeping it in the cover. This gives Williams its 1 against 1 with the nahshon Wright corner half, which, at this stage of the game, must wait for a stopping route or an upcoming itinerary. Williams continues rather the trucking in front of him and directly in the completely intact goals area.
NFL shooting games consist of drinking defenses to anticipate the bad game and hit them with something else. The Lions superimposed this concept to Williams in addition not only years of trends, but a value of cinema in the first half. This is exactly how you realize in the NFL, and the Lions have not wasted their opportunity to hit the big one.
(Photo: Nic Antaya / Getty Images)



