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Blog / Mastering Route Depths in CFB 26: How Proper Field Spacing Keeps Defenses Honest

August 05, 2025

Mastering Route Depths in CFB 26: How Proper Field Spacing Keeps Defenses Honest Layered pass concepts—like drag, dig, and post routes—force defenders into tough choices and open your offense up

We advise against stacking routes that break at the same depth in College Football 26, as these patterns make your offense predictable and easy to defend. Instead, mixing short, mid, and deep routes creates a dynamic spacing strategy defenses struggle to cover.

🧭 Why Spacing Matters

Routes clustered at the same level—like two drags or slants—are easy to defend with a single zone or user defender. Spacing helps:

  • Break defenders' focus
  • Reduce risk of picks or traffic
  • Stretch zones vertically and horizontally

🏈 How to Layer Effectively

Try this classic spacing trio:

  • Drag (~5 yards)
  • Dig (10 yards)
  • Post (15+ yards)

Use hot-route assignments:

  • Drag: Generic receiver icon + Right Stick ←
  • Dig: Generic receiver icon + Right Stick →
  • Post: Generic receiver icon + Right Stick ↑

⏱️ Timing Is As Important As Placement

Route timing often matters more than alignment:

  • Send a drag early to attract underneath defenders
  • Follow with a dig from the slot or crossing route
  • Finish with a delayed post or corner on the weak side
    This kind of staggered timing creates windows of opportunity across the field.

🌪️ Pro Concepts to Search For

  • Flood: Flat, corner, and streak on the same side. Breaks zones vertically.
  • Levels: Layered routes across the middle of the field at varying depths. Forces defenders to choose coverage levels.

Access these under: Play Type > Concepts > Flood / Levels.

🎯 Offensive Outcomes of Clean Spacing

  • Stretch defenders out of position and force wrong coverage reads
  • Isolate receivers against single defenders in zone systems
  • Make pre-snap reads clearer for better QB decisions

✅ TL;DR

  • Avoid overlapping routes at the same depth to prevent zone stacking.
  • Use layered combinations like drag + dig + post for optimal spacing.
  • Timing your route release prevents defenders from jumping passes.
  • Flood and Levels playbook concepts are must-practice formations for structured spacing.
  • Good spacing leads to cleaner reads, higher completion rates, and more explosive plays.

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