When is the last time you saw an NFL wide receiver or tight end run a button hook route?
I'm presuming that everyone here knows what a curl route is....a receiver runs 10 to 15 yards, stops abruptly and then runs back 3 or 4 yards for a catch.
You don't see it very often, why not?
If a wide receiver can stop on a dime, and run back towards a pass, one would think that a button hook/curl route would be the most difficult to defend.
So why isn't it used more often?
I'm presuming that everyone here knows what a curl route is....a receiver runs 10 to 15 yards, stops abruptly and then runs back 3 or 4 yards for a catch.
You don't see it very often, why not?
If a wide receiver can stop on a dime, and run back towards a pass, one would think that a button hook/curl route would be the most difficult to defend.
So why isn't it used more often?
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