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No down linemen? Linebackers on the nose? - 09.05.11 - SI Vault
Lots of interesting insight into the emerging attacking defenses that are giving even elite QB's fits...Sean Payton, Tubby Wrecks, BB comments on how futile it is becoming to label defenses by formerly assigned base concepts. The key (something BB has long sought) is not so much talent as intelligence driven, having heady players who can play a variety of positions and techniques in a variety of fronts allowing for maximum disguise.
No down linemen? Linebackers on the nose? Cornerbacks in a three-point stance? Today's attacking defenses throw a baffling array of looks at quarterbacks to sow mayhem and gain a winning edge
Lots of interesting insight into the emerging attacking defenses that are giving even elite QB's fits...Sean Payton, Tubby Wrecks, BB comments on how futile it is becoming to label defenses by formerly assigned base concepts. The key (something BB has long sought) is not so much talent as intelligence driven, having heady players who can play a variety of positions and techniques in a variety of fronts allowing for maximum disguise.
The biggest myth in football is that your base defense is what you are. The Patriots are known as a 3--4, so they should want a big nose guy and 290-pound defensive ends who play the run first. Right? When New England signed troubled defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth, the outcry wasn't so much about Haynesworth's work ethic but about how he'd fit in. Haynesworth hates the 3--4, and Bill Belichick's a 3--4 guy. But is he really? "That's a media fabrication," the Patriots coach says. "There are a lot of different alignments out there. It's the techniques, the fundamentals that you teach your players, more than the 3--4, 4--3 that people say you use."
In fact the Patriots played a 3--4 on just 39.7% of their snaps in 2010, according to game-tape analysis by ProFootballFocus.com. The site counted 29 plays on which New England cornerback Kyle Arrington lined up at defensive end, with his hand on the ground.
The Patriots weren't alone in this public deception. Super Bowl champ Green Bay, another so-called 3--4 team, had just two defensive linemen on the field on 68.6% of its plays, according to Pro Football Focus. "Our guys are used to dropping in coverage," says Packers coordinator Dom Capers. "It's all about picking your spots—when to rush, when to drop. Sometimes it's a little bit faddish, just to show a different front."
"Confusion," said Payton. "That's the word. Football has become the battle of confusion."












