One of the true enjoyments of the game of football is tracing the lineage of what you see on the field. If you're an avid reader of Chris Brown's addictive football blog, smartfootball, you'll note Brown's wonderfully analytical and respectful approach to the game. Throughout his coverage of NFL, NCAA, coaches, players, and concepts, he pays respect to current personalities as well as providing perspective of how it fits within the historical context of the game.
In that same spirit, we can appreciate the current trends of the game after first understanding how and why it came into being. After the in-depth look at pattern-matching from a MOFC coverage (last month's Saban-series as well as the observations of the Va Tech Robber), we can better gauge the pulse of bleeding-edge defenses of today. A classic case of this evolution can be witnessed in Charlie Strong's Florida Gator defenses.
This main exception of "natural selection" in football, this tweaking of existing schemes, is thriving in today's game. The one knock on MOFC (middle of the field closed) Cover 3 (zone) is that you typically waste some of your best athletes (corners) by just playing deep third. When you are Florida, recruiting the best talent in the nation (and probably dominating the best recruiting state for specialists), wasting a corner in zone, just doesn't sound like good economics. The one knock on true Cover 1 (man) defense, is that you can be out-leveraged in the run game when backs displace themselves from the formation. In Orange/Tan, Florida locks up the receiving threats with both corners and adapts the front underneath.
This accomplishes a few things;
- Matches up your best athletes (corners) against the offense's best athletes (receivers) and ensures that the defense is never caught in an unfavorable matchup with these playmakers.
- Ensures your run-support is sound and keeps your underneath defenders in a +1 advantage (loads the box to defend the middle of the field).
- Eliminates the middle-of-the-field (inside-out) from the offense with a deep robbing safety.
- Presents a diametrically different presnap look to the offense, disguising the defense's true intentions (going from MOFO - middle of the field open to MOFC - middle of the field closed)
- Strong Safety rolls down for sky support (force)
- Strong Safety matches #2 weak, WLB flows to second back out (#3) weak, and the MLB becomes the "rat"
- or MLB matches #2 (weak) Will matches #3 (weak), and the Strong Safety becomes the "rat"
- When the "rat" isn't threatened backside, he peels to robot the crosser.
With cross flow from the TE, the MLB jumps the #2 disbursement, the WLB robs the the #3, and the backside Strong Safety looks to cut the Y shallow as the "rat in the hole".
With this new adaptation of C1 & C3 pattern-match concepts, we'll further explore how Florida (and every other defense in America) utilizes these very same skill sets to evolve into fire-zone 5-man pressures to further stress offenses.
For more information on how these coverages adapt to non-pro formations, click here.
Stay tuned for the next three posts detailing their simple fire zone blitz packages;
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