After watching the game some other notables about the offensive play calling.
We know that we are a run first team, but the Miami game was especially so.
Of the 71 total offensive plays, 58 were called runs, or 82%.
Of the runs, 37 were power/lead running plays, mainly out of 2 RB sets, or 64% of total runs. Power/lead runs gained 167 rushing yards, 4.5 per.
16 of the power runs were for the QB*. 76 yards, 4.8 per.
Only 11 total runs were options, or 11%. And 2 of those were counter trey type runs off of zone read action, but those are basically power running game in spread formations. The 9 true option plays gained 61 yards, 6.8 per.
Of the 13 pass calls (1 scramble and 1 sack, thus 11 attempts), 9 were true drop back passes, 2 were bubble/slant looks, and 2 were play action. Drop back passing (including the scramble and sack) gained 91 yards, 13.0 per. Bubble/bubble slant gained 21 yards, 10.5 per. And play action gained 102 yards, or 51.0 per. Lockett's long gain was a bubble route, but it was off of QB lead run action. The other big play action was the throw to Trujillo, though motion/formation aided a bunch in that play also. (both will be featured in frame by frame breakdowns later this week.)
*Notable here, many people, including the commentators often call these "draws". IMO when you are leading with a back and/or pulling offensive linemen these are not true QB draws. We only ran 2 of those, and both came from empty backfield sets. A true QB draw is a designed run, but the offensive line sets up in pass protection. Most of our QB runs the offensive line is using true run blocking technique, downhill power blocking, or in our case often inside zone run block technique. FWIW, the 2 draws Klein ran gained 28 yards, 14.0 per.