It's great for passing downs. Reminds me of the old Marvin Lewis/Rex Ryan defenses in Baltimore. Mass confusion for protection which leads to guys coming in unblocked for easy hits on the quarterback.Obviously not something to bust out when the run is a high possibility, but on obvious pass downs it is a truly great personnel package.
If they want to use it quite a bit throughout the year they might want to mix up who rushes and who drops into coverage. From what I can tell so far it’s always been the outside 2 on each side that has rushed.It's great for passing downs. Reminds me of the old Marvin Lewis/Rex Ryan defenses in Baltimore. Mass confusion for protection which leads to guys coming in unblocked for easy hits on the quarterback.
If they want to use it quite a bit throughout the year they might want to mix up who rushes and who drops into coverage. From what I can tell so far it’s always been the outside 2 on each side that has rushed.
I think they did a good job of switching up the blitzer, especially in 4th and OT. You had Budda once on a sack...then later in the same formation Budda dropped and Murphy came free for the sack.
And having LB's that are really multi dementional. Yeah it could catch on quickly if you have the personell that can drop and cover EFFECTIVELY.wow! This almost seems like it’s against the rules but obviously it’s not. In obvious passing situations, we should definitely use this a LOT! The big guys upfront try their best, but I’ve had enough of seeing people stonewalled at the line and giving the quarterback so much time to dissect the defense.
this actually seems like it could be a huge change in the way NFL defenses operate from now on.
Baker actually went in too but the RB picked him up so Murphy was free. The obvious thing there is screen to the RB but he's got to block somebody and the way the Cards are doing it, if the RB did go out, you would hope Baker would see he it and try and pick him up.
Eventually we're going to send Simmons up the middle like we used to with D Wash and he's going to wreak havoc. So far he always drops into coverage, eventually he won't
I saw another video breakdown of Arizona's 0-6-5 (can't find it at the moment, grr! Or maybe it was Collinsworth during the game?) showing that they do mix up how they play it. In fact, they specifically set Seattle up to expect the guys in the middle to drop into coverage and the guys on the edges to rush... then when Seattle's O-line shifted to try to block the outside pressure, they instead brought pressure right up the middle and hit Wilson.If they want to use it quite a bit throughout the year they might want to mix up who rushes and who drops into coverage. From what I can tell so far it’s always been the outside 2 on each side that has rushed.
It usually has a deep safety and the outside corners are playing off the line. It is designed to take away deep passes, but make intermediate passes dangerous to make like the Simmons pick.It works great right up until the 4.2 guy slips his jam at the line and the qb lobs it up
We've run it on 3rd and 6 as well as 3rd and 5. Checking into a run probably beats it there, but I'm not sure. We're lucky to have so many linebackers that we trust being on the field.
This will be a great package to play against Tua. He won’t be ready for this being a rookie in his 2nd game. Plus this is a great package to Run against the Rams where Goff wants to roll out. He won’t have to time to take the hand off and roll out for 3 seconds.