Air Raid Route Concepts
Air Raid Route Concepts
History
The Air Raid story starts in Provo, Utah, at Brigham Young University in the late 1980s. Coach
LaVell Edwards’s BYU Cougars were racking up wins and collegiate passing records at an
astonishing pace with the help of future NFL quarterbacks Steve Young, Jim McMahon, and Ty
Detmer. The offense Edwards used was very similar to the West Coast offensive scheme the
dominant San Francisco 49ers and legendary coach Bill Walsh used at the time. It utilized crisp
timing routes by backs and receivers to put the defense in a bind. Most of the yards from Edwards
and Walsh’s schemes were from backs and receivers adding yards after the catch. BYU and Edwards
used a trimmed-down version for his college players.
Edwards’s success drew interest from the Valdosta State coaching staff led by Hal Mumme, Mike
Leach, and Tony Franklin. They were looking for ways to make their passing game more productive,
and Edwards seemed to have had an answer. Mumme, Leach, and company stripped down Edward’s
complex scheme into a few core passing concepts and a small handful of running plays. The passing
concepts included Mesh, All-Curl, Y-Corner, Y-Stick, All Vertical, and Shallow Cross. They also
backed the quarterback up into the shotgun to help the timing of the routes. What followed still
reverberates around college football. In its original form, the Air Raid started from a two back (H, F)
set with a tight end (Y), similar to most formations teams used at the time. For a detailed version of
what Valdosta State and Kentucky ran then, see Valdosta’s playbook from 2000 here.
For our purposes in describing an offense we will see the Jayhawks run this season, we will use a
modern, spread version. Kentucky used some spread concepts with the Air Raid starting with Tim
Couch in the late 1990s. The spread really took off when Mike Leach became the head coach at
Texas Tech University in 2000. He regularly used four wide receivers and wide line splits in order to
make the defense defend the entire field horizontally. Notable Red Raiders such as Kliff Kingsbury
(now head coach at Texas Tech), Graham Harrell, Michael Crabtree, and Wes Welker put up eye-
popping stats for Leach’s high-powered passing attack on the way to a bowl game every season.
Core concepts
Mesh
The Mesh concept is what we traditionally think of when we talk about the Air Raid. It is a concept
that has lasted from the original Mumme-Leach days, and Kevin Sumlin at Texas A&M, Dana
Holgerson at West Virginia, Art Briles at Baylor and other coaches from the Air Raid tree still run it
with great success. The play is simple, and if executed properly, can be deadly against many
coverages, even with less-talented athletes. At its core, Mesh seeks to create a rub between the slot
receiver Y and flanker X. The mesh point should be so precise as to allow the receivers to slap each
other’s hands as they run past each other. The receivers settle in a soft spot versus zone coverage and
run to open grass against man coverage. However, the quarterback should not focus strictly on the
mesh. If it is there, he should hit Z on the corner route.
A&M also uses “packaged plays,” a relatively new phenomenon in college football. Packaged plays
use run blocking by offensive lineman and with quick routes by receivers to put the defense in a huge
conflict. This is because the quarterback has the option to hand the ball off to a running back or
throw a quick pass. This could be a talent equalizer for the Jayhawks this season, as packaged plays
are effective at creating space for backs and receivers because the defense has to hesitate and wait for
the quarterback’s decision before committing to playing the run or pass. See an example of an Air
Raid style packaged play here via Grantland. These are several wrinkles Jayhawk football fans
should watch for in David Beaty and Rob Likens’ Air Raid this upcoming season.