Ball Carrier

One of the options you have in PSF is the ability to change your ball carrier or primary receiver on the fly, without changing anything else if you don’t want. For example, you could call a Reverse four straight plays, changing your ball carrier each time (an end or flanker in that case)

To do that in other games, you’d have to have four different plays in your playbook, and you’d have to find them. With PSF, you just change your ball carrier, whether you want to stick with short passes, but mix them around, or keep running up the middle but want to keep the defense guessing as to which back is getting the ball.

The ratings you see here are

  • Quickness. Used in counters, sweeps, and pass patterns such as hooks and comebacks.
  • Strength. Important in most plays, but particularly in runs up the middle.
  • Speed. Increases chances of long gains or catching deep balls.
  • Hands. You want good hands, or look for dropped passes.
  • Fumble Percentage. How often does this man fumble?

Offensive Formations | Pass Patterns

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