If there is one thing that the rest of the NFL learned from the Seattle Seahawks last year, it is the value of having a plan and sticking with it.

In rolling to a 13-3 record and a Super Bowl rout, the Seahawks perfected the art of stifling the pass. And even though the other 31 teams don't have as dominant a specialty (and in some cases, their specialty isn't all that special), they all thrive at something.

With that in mind, and with the season set to start on Thursday, here is a look inside all 32 NFL playbooks.

Arizona Cardinals

Few teams have more pass-rush threats. Their specialty relies on defensive lineman Calais Campbell lining up in front of a guard, typically on the right side. The rest of the defense will overload the side opposite Campbell—which ensures that the center will abandon Campbell, who is now one-on-one with a guard. That is a big mistake.

Atlanta Falcons

In Atlanta, Jacquizz Rodgers plays the most snaps at running back, barely touches the ball yet is productive while on the field. He is the starting decoy. Rodgers basically has one mission: Pretend he is going to pass-protect, "release" into the middle of the field, pretend to be a receiving threat and draw linebackers while the real receiver has free rein behind the whole ruse.