

Plus, there could come a time when two-point conversions are an absolute must.

But for us, knew we wanted to go for two.” against Arkansas, we shifted back in and kicked it. Then you can always just shift back in and kick it. “They’ve got go to come down on a certain amount of people, and we have some options off of that, depending on how they line up. “For us, it was line up a certain way, use an unusual formation – (the opponent is) not really sure who’s eligible, who’s not eligible,” Beamer said. if they’re working on that, they’re spending less time on trying to block your extra-point or field goal.” Doesn’t mean we’re always going to, but for us, when you put something like that on tape, it means the other team has to spend time working on it. every week we want to be able to do things like that. “We lined up that way against Arkansas earlier this season, then we shifted back into it and kicked it. kind of an unusual formation, muddle-huddle-type thing. Against North Carolina in the bowl game, on the second touchdown, we did it. We did something very similar on the first touchdown and we did the same kind of snap, threw it out there to Nick Muse and (he) ran it in on a very similar play.
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“You go all the way back to the Eastern Illinois game last year. “Every week, we want to be able to do stuff like that,” Beamer said.

Traevon Kenion took the direct snap before going up and over Jakai Moore and a couple of Charlotte defenders. Last week, on the way to a 56-20 blowout win over Charlotte, South Carolina called a two-point play, to put the Gamecocks up two touchdowns with 10:25 left in the third quarter. In other words, they are always looking for opportunities to be aggressive in that phase of the game. South Carolina’s second-year coach, along with his special teams coordinator, has made that a point of emphasis this season. (Shane) Beamer Ball 2.0, version (Pete) Lembo wants to push the envelope.
