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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.I do think Mayo could fit into that BUT you'll have to remove HT then and thats not what really wanna do.
I'm not sure why they'd have to remove Hightower, they didn't earlier in the season. Personally I think Hightower id our best front seven player right now - he does everything; can drop into coverage, can rush off the edge or A gap blitz and is outstanding against the run.
Well someone have to come out if Mayo is there and you run a 2-4. You can push HT to DE and then remove Ninkovish - Or Move Chandler Jones inside visa vasa. My point was more, that they would have to remove another playmaker to create a spot for Mayo.
That assumes they'll continue playing a 2-4. It will come down to situational football the end of the day. Personally I think BB will want to put his best players on the field and isn't wedded to a particular formation and Hightower and Mayo are two of his best players. It's a nice problem to have regardless.
Interesting read from Mike Reiss on the Pats' "interchangeable defense" against Manning and the Broncos:
http://espn.go.com/blog/boston/new-...71510/interchangeable-defense-sparks-patriots
Very interesting. I'll be curious to see if the All-22 film review bears this out. It sounds like a bit of a twist on what the Pats were doing earlier this year in base, with Chandler Jones and Rob Ninkovich alternating between 5-Tech and OLB in a hybrid 3-4.
Bud Dupree and Dante Fowler would be perfect fits for this kind of stuff.
Todd (PA): Hi Tedy,From what I saw last night the pats D did a nice job of lining up relatively the same, thus limiting Peyton's pre snap reads. What's your take on the pats D schemes last night? In your opinion was it more scheme or execution that led to the defensive success? How about the 0-4 on 4th down for Denver??
Tedy:There were some consistencies in the way they lined up -- LBs showed in the A gaps, LBs played off the ball, Arrington came off the edge once. But I think the main thing for Peyton was the challenge of determining where the rush was coming from. It was basically a four-man rush game. I didn't see a lot of blitzes -- it was four men on the line up to seven men on the line, and determining who drops out and who covers: Sending a LB up the middle or dropping Ninkovich or Ayers into coverage; it was line of scrimmage disguise. Normally you would use DBs or safeties for disguise but Matt Patricia wanted disguise at the line of scrimmage with his linebackers. I think that's best with some new players. It also played into the Patriots' defensive game plan that they got to play in sub packages all game -- with two off-the-line LBs in Collins and Hightower. Those are two good players and the problems might come when a team forces you into base. Playing sub when you just need two off-the-line LBs, it minimizes the loss of Mayo. I guess you could say the Broncos played right into the Patriots' hands last night.
Browner lined up at both cornerback, covering either Demaryius Thomas or Sanders, and in a hybrid safety/linebacker/slot role, where he took on Julius Thomas. Browner and safety Patrick Chung were key in holding the tight end to just two catches for 33 yards and one touchdown. Browner is being used more creatively in New England than he was in Seattle under Pete Carroll, who mostly stuck him on the outside in a Cover 3 defense. Browner’s size (6-foot-4, 225 pounds), physical play and smarts allows him to move around the defense with ease.
Had another thought about the 5-2 last night for a blitz:
Ends drop into zones
NT & DTs essentially turn into an interior OL and block the OGs/OC and create 2 running lanes up the A gaps for the 2 Linebackers charging right down the middle!
Another wrinkle was the Patriots going with a lot of “Double 'A' Gap” looks, with linebackers aligning on both sides of the center. The Patriots hadn’t used that look much before they played Chicago two weeks ago. What it did was force running back Ronnie Hillman to stay in and block. That eliminated an eligible receiver.
The Patriots’ first interception off Peyton Manning was due to a great disguise.
Before the snap, the Patriots showed man free blitz with the “Double ‘A’ Gap” alignment, with linebackers Dont’a Hightower and Jamie Collins in the “A” gaps. Both edge rushers, Akeem Ayers and Ninkovich, were on the line of scrimmage. It was clearly a blitz alert. The “A” gap blitz ate up Hillman and removed him as a receiver. Manning expected cornerback Darrelle Revis to run with Emmanuel Sanders, who was lined up wide to the right as the “x iso.” That’s part of the “man free” the Patriots showed. He expected Ninkovich to rush. But at the snap it became “Cover 3” zone behind a four-man rush. Revis dropped into the outside third and Ninkovich dropped into his zone.
Among the many startling revelations of Sunday's Broncos-Patriots game, where New England methodically dismantled the defending AFC Champions, was the simple observation that Darrelle Revis is not the most important person in Bill Belichick's defense. No, it's not an attempt to say that somehow Revis has "lost it," and that his offseason signing was a waste (far from it, in fact). Merely, the identification of Revis's proper place in the Patriots pecking order is chalked up to another player's rapid maturation as a world class professional. Jamie Collins, who spent most of Sunday's game buzzing in and around the view of your television screen, is officially the most valuable piece in the Patriots defense.
Double A gap blitzing is the best kind of blitz you can do against QBs who aren't a threat to run, especially when you have a NT as big as Vince is occupying the C and usually a Guard too.
A nice shout out to Jamie Collins' game against the Broncos:
http://bostinno.streetwise.co/2014/...not-the-most-important-defensive-player-gifs/
I doubt I'd go that far, and I'm a huge Collins fan. But he was certainly an impact player on Sunday. The article has some nice film of Collins in all 3 aspects of the game: rushing the pass, playing the run, and dropping into coverage.
Next up: the Colts, against whom Collins had probably his best game ever as pro.
What's our base at Indy? Assuming Chandler Jones is still out. Silega can't return until Detroit. Easley at RDE? Who would 3rd LB be? Ayers??
Will need to rotate DL more playing indoors
Hightower’s assignment was to get the defense in place, which in accordance with Bill Belichick and coordinator Matt Patricia’s game plan meant disguising their intentions every down.
He was the quarterback, creating all the deception at the line of scrimmage so Manning couldn’t tell where the third and fourth rushers were coming from, particularly on passing downs.
Given how well the defense played during the Pats’ 43-21 rout, and how much Manning struggled, it was a masterful job by the third-year player, who has taken over the role of play-caller with the season-ending injury to linebacker Jerod Mayo.
“I think he’s taken full responsibility for everything,” safety Devin McCourty said of Hightower yesterday. “It’s kind of his defense now just as far as being confident out there with everything he has in his back pocket as far as making calls, game plan stuff. . . . I think he’s got valuable experience when he’s not out there with Mayo.”
Hightower said it couldn’t have gone any better after a tough week trying to get everyone on the same page.
“To be able to do it as well as we did it . . . the first day of practice was a little shaky because it demanded so much more communication,” he said. “But we came out and did what we wanted to do. We gave him all those different looks. It definitely was a team effort all the way around from the D-line to the secondary. Everybody just played really well and understood the game plan to the best.”
Hightower acknowledged that if he was given the same assignment last year, he might not have been able to pull it off. He’s just so much more comfortable in the role. He said it’s the best he’s felt with the defense.
“Last year was a little overwhelming,” he admitted. “I wasn’t a young guy, but second year, with this complex and complicated defense, making the calls, trying to get everyone lined up, it was tough. But this year, since I’ve had that experience, it’s a lot easier.”
Given the extensive discussion of 5-2 fronts earlier in this thread, I thought Mike Manock's film review of Arizona's run defense against Dallas, including signficant use of the 5-2 "Bear" front, was interesting:
http://www.nfl.com/videos/mayocks-slant/0ap3000000423128/Mayock-s-Slant-Cardinals-run-defense
Having Patrick Peterson to put on Dez allows you to do that. I think we could against a run-heavy team that we'll meet in the playoffs. If there are any in the AFC except KC.
2015 New England Patriots Defense - noteworthy players under contract
Defensive Ends
Ninkovich, Rob
Jones, Chandler
Buchanan, Michael
Moore, Zach
Defensive Tackles
Wilfork, Vince
Siliga, Sealver (ERFA)
Jones, Chris
Easley, Dominique
Linebackers
Mayo, Jerod
Hightower, Dont'a
Collins, Jamie
Safeties
Wilson, Tavon
Ebner, Nate
Harmon, Duron
Jones, Don
Cornerbacks
Revis, Darrelle
Browner, Brandon
Arrington, Kyle
Dennard, Alfonzo
Ryan, Logan
Butler, Malcolm
http://www.patriots.com/team/roster.html
2015 New England Patriots Defense - key unrestricted free agents
McCourty, Devin
Chung, Patrick
Ayers, Akeem
White, Chris (special teams linebacker)
Casillas, Jonathan (special teams linebacker)
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