Football Toolbox

  • Home
  • Special Teams
  • Defense
  • Offense
  • Training & Conditioning
  • Intangibles
  • Program Building
  • Safety
  • Archives

How Shotgun Triple Option Forces Defenses Into Impossible Decisions (Gap Dive Breakdown)

January 23, 2026 by

Brian Flinn, WR Coach, Princeton

This video was originally posted on Glazier Connect.

It is a segment of a content video from Glazier Drive.

See why 33,000+ coaches from schools across the nation trust Glazier Drive to help their program succeed.

Glazier Drive has 2,000+ Curated Videos from Top Coaches, 40 Complete Coaching Systems, and Exclusive Content from Top Coaches in the Industry.

Start your free trial by signing up here GlazierDrive.com

A summary of the transcript is available below the video.

TRIPLE OPTION CONCEPTS WITHOUT TRADITIONAL TRIPLE OPTION

This coaching clinic focuses on incorporating triple option principles into modern spread offenses using RPO (Run-Pass Option) elements, specifically bubble screens and smoke routes as the “pitch” phase.

CORE PHILOSOPHY

The system creates a four-option progression: pre-snap read (bubble/smoke), dive at snap, quarterback keep after the read, or coming back to the pitch late. The primary goal is to hand off the ball inside for productive runs by using outside threats to confuse and lighten the box.

KEY TECHNICAL POINTS

The bubble/smoke receiver is coached similarly to a traditional pitch back but must stay behind the line of scrimmage. The offense blocks five defenders, reads the sixth (typically the 4i technique), and options the seventh. The quarterback uses standard read keys – if the defender’s helmet and shoulder are visible downfield, pull it; if he squares up, give it.

SPACING AND ALIGNMENT

The pitch player maintains a “five by one” relationship with the quarterback – five yards away and one yard behind. This relationship continues downfield if the play extends, creating potential for late pitches past the alley defender for explosive plays.

PRACTICAL APPLICATION

Most teams already run some version of this through RPO bubbles. The main additions are refined ball handling technique and consistent daily practice. The instructor emphasizes being decisive – when in doubt, hand off to the running back. The statistical breakdown shows approximately 75% of plays result in inside handoffs, with the outside elements serving primarily to create defensive confusion and gap integrity problems.

Filed Under: Offense

  • Home
  • Special Teams
  • Defense
  • Offense
  • Training & Conditioning
  • Intangibles
  • Program Building
  • Safety
  • Archives

© Copyright 2026 Athletic Performance Toolbox

Design by BuzzworthyBasketballMarketing.com

Privacy Policy