Football games are often won in the trenches. As Al Pacino's character in Any Given Sunday explains, it truly is a game of inches. Thus some of the most important plays ending up being the ones where you need one yard or fewer. Here's the play I've been using to convert those with great success in College Football 26.
The Wildcat formation has been giving defenses fits in real life and in sports games for years now. It places a running back at quarterback, opening up all sorts of explosive possibilities. Ole Miss' Wildcat Deuce Wing has an even crazier wrinkle, a setting which allows you to put a defensive tackle in at QB.
The play Blast out of Deuce Wing takes the ball straight up the middle with a 300 lb. plus defensive tackle. He is going to plow over just about anybody who tries to stop him in a short yardage situation. Sometimes I get five or six yards from this when I only needed a couple of inches.
As you can imagine, it's a great goal-line play as well. The reason the Tush Push works so well for the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles is that it effectively changes the rules of the game. They really only need nine yards to get a first down because anything one yard and under, they will convert automatically.
That's why other NFL teams, who have tried and failed to properly grab their signal callers by the buttocks and push them for a yard, are trying to get the move banned. But as of yet, I haven't heard anybody calling for that in CFB 26. Maybe people just don't know about it. I'm sorry in advance if I end up getting it banned, folks.