Blocking 7 System

CFB 26offenseblitzgeneral

TL;DR

The Blocking 7 system counters blitz spam by using Gunwing Trips PA Slants from Arkansas State's playbook - remove the PA, block your halfback, and drag the slot receiver for seven blockers protecting three man-beating routes. Use this against mid blitz zero spam and heavy man pressure where they're bringing 6+ rushers. Simple math: seven blockers beats their blitz, and your spaced routes give multiple open options no matter where their user goes.

What is the Blocking 7 System?

The Blocking 7 system is your answer to those annoying blitz spammers who think they're good at the game. Instead of panicking when you see mid blitz zero or other heavy pressure — you're gonna send SEVEN blockers and three routes that all beat man coverage.

Here's the setup that works: Gunwing Trips out of the Arkansas State offensive playbook, calling PA Slants. But listen — this is a CONCEPT. You can steal this and apply it to any playbook you want.

The three steps are stupid simple:

  • Step 1: Get rid of the PA (play action)
  • Step 2: Block your halfback
  • Step 3: Drag your slot wide receiver

Now you've got seven blockers protecting you and three routes that beat man coverage. Your opponent can't user cover everything, and you should have all day to throw.

When to Use Blocking 7 Protection

Use this when you're facing crazy pass rush — guys who are sending the dogs every play and getting instant sheds. You know the type. They think blitzing makes them good at football.

Perfect situations for Blocking 7:

  • Mid blitz zero spam
  • Any heavy man blitz where they're bringing 6+ rushers
  • When their pass rush is getting insta sheds
  • Against players who can't stop themselves from blitzing every down

This works on Heisman difficulty with no sliders. If it works there, it'll work anywhere.

Why the Blocking 7 System Dominates Blitzes

Math is simple — if you're blocking seven people, you SHOULD block their blitz. End of story.

Your route combo is well spaced. If their user is covering one receiver, the other two are gonna be open. User covers the RB? Hit the comeback. User covers the outside? Dump it to the RB.

The routes all beat man coverage:

  • Dragged slot receiver — creates separation against man
  • Outside comeback — breaks away from man coverage
  • RB checkdown — always there as your safety valve

Most players aren't willing to commit this many blockers. That's exactly why it works.

How to Execute Blocking 7 Step-by-Step

Formation: Gunwing Trips (Arkansas State playbook)

Base Play: PA Slants

Pre-Snap Adjustments

  1. Remove the play action fake
  2. Set your halfback to block protection
  3. Put your slot receiver on a drag route
  4. Optional: Change outside receiver to comeback instead of slant

Post-Snap Execution

Read your three routes from quickest to slowest developing:

  1. Drag route — should be open quickly against man
  2. Outside route — comeback or slant depending on coverage
  3. RB checkdown — always your safety valve

Don't stare at one receiver. Look at the AREAS where your routes are going and progress through them.

How to Mix Up Your Route Combinations

NEVER run the same exact play over and over — even this one. That's how you get predictable.

Easy variations to keep them guessing:

  • Change the outside receiver to a comeback instead of slant
  • Run the concept from different formations
  • Mix in different plays between your Blocking 7 calls
  • Use this concept with other base plays — doesn't have to be PA Slants

The key is keeping the same protection scheme (7 blockers) while changing up the route combinations. This way you're protected but not predictable.

What Counters the Blocking 7 System

Smart opponents will adjust once they see you're not panicking against their blitz spam:

Zone Coverage Adjustments

If they switch to zone coverage, your three-route combo might not be enough. That's when you need to add more routes and use fewer blockers.

Coverage Disguise

Good players will show blitz but drop into coverage. Your blocking scheme still works, but you might be wasting blockers.

Counter-Strategy

When you see zone coverage, switch to concepts with more routes like Baby Dots or horizontal route combinations that attack different levels.

Common Blocking 7 Mistakes

Using it every play: Don't get lazy. Mix it up or they'll adjust.

Not reading the routes: You have three good options — don't force it to one receiver.

Panicking in the pocket: You have seven blockers. Trust the protection and let routes develop.

Wrong situations: Don't use this against obvious zone coverage. Save it for when they're actually blitzing.

The Blocking 7 system is perfect for shutting down blitz-happy opponents who think pressure equals skill. Seven blockers, three routes, and you're scoring touchdowns while they're scratching their heads wondering why their cheese defense stopped working.

C

Civil (Kenny Cox)

Former Pro Madden Player & Founder of Civil.GG

203-15 record. 100K YouTube subscribers. 3,000+ active members.

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