If you have been paying attention to NFL play calling this season, you might’ve noticed a rather new — and powerful — way that some teams are utilizing their blazing-fast players: the jet sweep.

The play basically begins like any other in which a receiver (typically a WR/KR with elite NFL speed) is sent in motion — only the snap is timed so that the ball is handed off directly by the quarterback as the motion man passes by. The idea is that the jet sweep gives receivers (read: ball carriers) the same type of “downhill” head-start on the defense that returners rely upon during kickoff returns. NFL.com analyst Bucky Brooks has an excellent breakdown some of the nuances of the play, and its twin, the fly sweep, here.

But woe to the team who puts their star WR/KR in motion, but for jet sweeps only. The beautiful thing about having an offensive weapon this dynamic is that defenses are prone assume, before the snap, that the jet sweep is coming. By running a decoy jet sweep, offenses have been able to leverage other players’ ability to gain extremely large chunks of yardage — primarily because the WR/KR man ended up on the opposite side of the field, attracting all sorts of defenders along the way.

Here are three teams that aren’t just running effective jet sweeps; they’re also running decoys that are at least as dangerous as the real thing.

Water from a Stone: Cordarrelle Patterson and the Minnesota Vikings

In their two games without running back Adrian Peterson, the Vikings have depressingly scored just 16 total points. At a time when nothing in their offense is working, the Vikings still managed a TD thanks to the electric Cordarrelle Patterson and the decoys they have called for him.

This is nothing new for the Vikings, who established their jet sweep game early — on their second play from scrimmage on the year, actually, in Week 1 against the St. Louis Rams. (Brooks also found this play noteworthy in his analysis.)

We start with Patterson lined up wide on the left side of the formation: