Yes, it ultimately comes down to execution, however, the scheme in and of itself rocks the defense back on its heels because it forces them to pick a lane or a man. The bad part about “committing” is it leaves a void elsewhere, which we expose by diagnosing coverages, flooding zones/layers, and just simply outmanning our opponent with grit and athleticism. Even though we don’t use our TEs and RBs much in the passing game, they are what really makes it tick. We use them exceptionally well to freeze corners in cover 2 and move LBs laterally, leaving each deep 1/3 with 2-3 guys deciding how to cover 3-4 WRs.