Base Defense Debate
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20856
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Base Defense Debate
OK. Here's a philosophy check. When defending the passing game, do you prefer rushing the passer or covering the receivers? The first reaction is "Duh, you do BOTH." Yet all too often, we see teams pull out LBers and go to nickel and dime alignments. What about an extra DL? Many offensive lines already have issues handling three or four good DLs, so why not a fifth? It's often easier to find a decent DL than a decent LBer, anyway, given that a LBer is expected to cover the run AND cover a zone at the same time. A DL can usually just tee off on the QB on third down.
That's one reason I'd like to start experimenting with a revival of the 5-3 defense. Many teams already run various forms of Cover 3, either through rotation (the Cloud and Sky variants) or through invert (the Robber variant). Why not just formalize it with a three-man defensive backfield and use the line to get after the QB?
Sound like suicide? Or does it sound workable? Would your response depend on the level of the league?
Some interesting things to ponder....
That's one reason I'd like to start experimenting with a revival of the 5-3 defense. Many teams already run various forms of Cover 3, either through rotation (the Cloud and Sky variants) or through invert (the Robber variant). Why not just formalize it with a three-man defensive backfield and use the line to get after the QB?
Sound like suicide? Or does it sound workable? Would your response depend on the level of the league?
Some interesting things to ponder....

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
-
kalm
- Supporter

- Posts: 68927
- Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2009 3:36 pm
- I am a fan of: Eastern
- A.K.A.: Humus The Proud
- Location: Northern Palouse
Re: Base Defense Debate
If you're coverage is good you don't necessarily need 5.SuperHornet wrote:OK. Here's a philosophy check. When defending the passing game, do you prefer rushing the passer or covering the receivers? The first reaction is "Duh, you do BOTH." Yet all too often, we see teams pull out LBers and go to nickel and dime alignments. What about an extra DL? Many offensive lines already have issues handling three or four good DLs, so why not a fifth? It's often easier to find a decent DL than a decent LBer, anyway, given that a LBer is expected to cover the run AND cover a zone at the same time. A DL can usually just tee off on the QB on third down.
That's one reason I'd like to start experimenting with a revival of the 5-3 defense. Many teams already run various forms of Cover 3, either through rotation (the Cloud and Sky variants) or through invert (the Robber variant). Why not just formalize it with a three-man defensive backfield and use the line to get after the QB?
Sound like suicide? Or does it sound workable? Would your response depend on the level of the league?
Some interesting things to ponder....
EWU switched to a 52 two years ago using a rover and has seen some progress. It seems advantageous to have that extra defender be a Deone Buccanon type skill set that can come up into run support or cover rather than a 3rd LB that gets torched covering the slot.
-
Mvemjsunpx
- Level5

- Posts: 14865
- Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:44 pm
- I am a fan of: Montana
Re: Base Defense Debate
To me, whether you blitz or not depends on how good your front-4 is at rushing the passer. The holy grail of pass defense is getting pressure with just the D-Line (or with 1 blitzer if you're running a 3-4). If you can do that consistently, you don't have to be very creative as a defensive coordinator. That was the foundation of the Monte Kiffin, Cover-2-era Buccaneers.
I'm skeptical running a true 5-2 or 5-3 is a good idea with all the teams playing spread these days. It just makes the defense slow. 4-2-5 and 3-3-5 seem better against spread teams, though they are more vulnerable to power teams like NoDak State. Flexibility might really be the best approach.
I'm skeptical running a true 5-2 or 5-3 is a good idea with all the teams playing spread these days. It just makes the defense slow. 4-2-5 and 3-3-5 seem better against spread teams, though they are more vulnerable to power teams like NoDak State. Flexibility might really be the best approach.
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20856
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Re: Base Defense Debate
Nice discussion, guys. You both make good points. I like the Cards' idea of a safety-type playing the Mike Backer; that harkens back to the days when LBers were about the size of quarterbacks and they could ALL (not just a few superstars) go sideline to sideline. (Of course, they didn't have to deal with 400-lb linemen on running plays back then.)
I've always been skeptical of ANY form of Cover 2, even the Tampa 2 you mention, Venus, that Tony Dungy loved. While it might be a bit harder to split the safeties than in a traditional double zone, it's still easier to split two guys than it is to split three. You're probably right about using a base nickel to cover the modern spread, but one DOES have to be aware that there are teams out there that will spread the field and then run up the middle, which is USUALLY where the extra DB came from. Then, when you spread to defend THAT, they'll come out in a double-tight Ace look or a double-tight wing set (often with a DL playing that third TE as a wing back) and run wide. It seems to me that, as long as the flanker and split ends aren't speed demons, a 5-3 set would be a bit more flexible to handle that sort of multiple alignments. But if a team is so set on the spread that they don't do that, then six-man box alignments you mention would probably do fairly well.
Do we have any more responses out there? These two are VERY good. I'd like to hear some more.
I've always been skeptical of ANY form of Cover 2, even the Tampa 2 you mention, Venus, that Tony Dungy loved. While it might be a bit harder to split the safeties than in a traditional double zone, it's still easier to split two guys than it is to split three. You're probably right about using a base nickel to cover the modern spread, but one DOES have to be aware that there are teams out there that will spread the field and then run up the middle, which is USUALLY where the extra DB came from. Then, when you spread to defend THAT, they'll come out in a double-tight Ace look or a double-tight wing set (often with a DL playing that third TE as a wing back) and run wide. It seems to me that, as long as the flanker and split ends aren't speed demons, a 5-3 set would be a bit more flexible to handle that sort of multiple alignments. But if a team is so set on the spread that they don't do that, then six-man box alignments you mention would probably do fairly well.
Do we have any more responses out there? These two are VERY good. I'd like to hear some more.

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
-
dal4018
- Level5

- Posts: 10680
- Joined: Wed Jan 05, 2011 12:17 pm
- I am a fan of: South Carolina St
- A.K.A.: SC State
Re: Base Defense Debate
Super Hornet are you a fan of the famed 46 defense used by '85 Bears '99 Titans in both cases they were beaten by pass happy squads '85 Dolphins,'99 Rams with two HOF signal callers Kurt Warner&Dan Marino.
-
Mvemjsunpx
- Level5

- Posts: 14865
- Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:44 pm
- I am a fan of: Montana
Re: Base Defense Debate
The aggressive cover-0 man D that the Cards/Todd Bowles have made popular in recent years seems to be a current version of the 46, at least philosophically. You need a good secondary, though, or you'll eventually get torched.dal4018 wrote:Super Hornet are you a fan of the famed 46 defense used by '85 Bears '99 Titans in both cases they were beaten by pass happy squads '85 Dolphins,'99 Rams with two HOF signal callers Kurt Warner&Dan Marino.
- UNI88
- Supporter

- Posts: 30290
- Joined: Mon Aug 25, 2008 8:30 am
- I am a fan of: UNI
- Location: Sailing the Gulf of Mexico
Re: Base Defense Debate
I'm a fan of Gary Patterson's 4-2-5 Spoke defense. You have 3 safeties so it isn't a nickel and you can vary the coverage on the strong and weak side. Your strong and weak safeties can come up and essentially play like outside backers in a pseudo 4-4 against a power team. It worked well for TCU against Wisconsin in the 2011 Rose Bowl.Mvemjsunpx wrote:To me, whether you blitz or not depends on how good your front-4 is at rushing the passer. The holy grail of pass defense is getting pressure with just the D-Line (or with 1 blitzer if you're running a 3-4). If you can do that consistently, you don't have to be very creative as a defensive coordinator. That was the foundation of the Monte Kiffin, Cover-2-era Buccaneers.
I'm skeptical running a true 5-2 or 5-3 is a good idea with all the teams playing spread these days. It just makes the defense slow. 4-2-5 and 3-3-5 seem better against spread teams, though they are more vulnerable to power teams like NoDak State. Flexibility might really be the best approach.
http://www.afcaweekly.com/2015/01/multi ... 5-defense/
Being wrong about a topic is called post partisanism - kalm
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
-
dal4018
- Level5

- Posts: 10680
- Joined: Wed Jan 05, 2011 12:17 pm
- I am a fan of: South Carolina St
- A.K.A.: SC State
Re: Base Defense Debate
Well I guess the Jets will go shopping on the 28th for DBs since Revis island is closed up.Somebody had the Jets taking a DB in the 1st round of a mock draft.Mvemjsunpx wrote:The aggressive cover-0 man D that the Cards/Todd Bowles have made popular in recent years seems to be a current version of the 46, at least philosophically. You need a good secondary, though, or you'll eventually get torched.dal4018 wrote:Super Hornet are you a fan of the famed 46 defense used by '85 Bears '99 Titans in both cases they were beaten by pass happy squads '85 Dolphins,'99 Rams with two HOF signal callers Kurt Warner&Dan Marino.
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20856
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Re: Base Defense Debate
Not really. A few teams we faced while I was at UOP ran that. The Bear works well ONLY against stubborn pass-only-in-an-emergency teams. A Rice slant will beat it every time, and if you want to run, you can check-with-me to the bubble in the alignment.dal4018 wrote:Super Hornet are you a fan of the famed 46 defense used by '85 Bears '99 Titans in both cases they were beaten by pass happy squads '85 Dolphins,'99 Rams with two HOF signal callers Kurt Warner&Dan Marino.
It also requires a Cover Zero. If you keep the backs in to help with the rush, there's the possibility of getting a wide-out past the coverage, and THAT will torch the secondary. Mix that with the Rice slant and the check-with-me run to the bubble, and you have nothing to worry about from the Bear defense.

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
-
dal4018
- Level5

- Posts: 10680
- Joined: Wed Jan 05, 2011 12:17 pm
- I am a fan of: South Carolina St
- A.K.A.: SC State
Re: Base Defense Debate
I remember when Marino torched that famed '85 Bears defense for 400+ passing yds and Warner made history in '99 throwing for 414 yds against a Ryan deciple Jeff Fisher in SB 34 in Atl.SuperHornet wrote:Not really. A few teams we faced while I was at UOP ran that. The Bear works well ONLY against stubborn pass-only-in-an-emergency teams. A Rice slant will beat it every time, and if you want to run, you can check-with-me to the bubble in the alignment.dal4018 wrote:Super Hornet are you a fan of the famed 46 defense used by '85 Bears '99 Titans in both cases they were beaten by pass happy squads '85 Dolphins,'99 Rams with two HOF signal callers Kurt Warner&Dan Marino.
It also requires a Cover Zero. If you keep the backs in to help with the rush, there's the possibility of getting a wide-out past the coverage, and THAT will torch the secondary. Mix that with the Rice slant and the check-with-me run to the bubble, and you have nothing to worry about from the Bear defense.
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20856
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Re: Base Defense Debate
That article had the feel of a convention transcript, and it had no diagrams. I can imagine playing a base Cover 3 out of that with the two short safeties covering the outside short zones like outside backers or perhaps playing some form of bump man, or even bump on one side and zone on the other. Faking bump and blitzing would also be a great move as it would be much harder for the backs to pick that up if they're staying in to block. (Most backs are trained to look at the A gap on their side before moving out.)UNI88 wrote:I'm a fan of Gary Patterson's 4-2-5 Spoke defense. You have 3 safeties so it isn't a nickel and you can vary the coverage on the strong and weak side. Your strong and weak safeties can come up and essentially play like outside backers in a pseudo 4-4 against a power team. It worked well for TCU against Wisconsin in the 2011 Rose Bowl.Mvemjsunpx wrote:To me, whether you blitz or not depends on how good your front-4 is at rushing the passer. The holy grail of pass defense is getting pressure with just the D-Line (or with 1 blitzer if you're running a 3-4). If you can do that consistently, you don't have to be very creative as a defensive coordinator. That was the foundation of the Monte Kiffin, Cover-2-era Buccaneers.
I'm skeptical running a true 5-2 or 5-3 is a good idea with all the teams playing spread these days. It just makes the defense slow. 4-2-5 and 3-3-5 seem better against spread teams, though they are more vulnerable to power teams like NoDak State. Flexibility might really be the best approach.
http://www.afcaweekly.com/2015/01/multi ... 5-defense/
Given the clear descent from the old 4-4, with the eight-man front Patterson describes, one could easily shift from that to a 5-3 look by replacing one of the backers with a middle guard, resulting, in Patterson's terminology, a 5-1 front, 5-spoke alignment. You'd lose that second inside zone, giving the resultant Mike Backer a ton of responsibility, but it COULD work.
Nice work, 88....

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
- UNI88
- Supporter

- Posts: 30290
- Joined: Mon Aug 25, 2008 8:30 am
- I am a fan of: UNI
- Location: Sailing the Gulf of Mexico
Re: Base Defense Debate
I actually have a 57 page .pdf of an old TCU defensive playbook. The 5-spoke alignment is in the backfield with the 2 CBs and 3 Safeties.SuperHornet wrote:That article had the feel of a convention transcript, and it had no diagrams. I can imagine playing a base Cover 3 out of that with the two short safeties covering the outside short zones like outside backers or perhaps playing some form of bump man, or even bump on one side and zone on the other. Faking bump and blitzing would also be a great move as it would be much harder for the backs to pick that up if they're staying in to block. (Most backs are trained to look at the A gap on their side before moving out.)UNI88 wrote:
I'm a fan of Gary Patterson's 4-2-5 Spoke defense. You have 3 safeties so it isn't a nickel and you can vary the coverage on the strong and weak side. Your strong and weak safeties can come up and essentially play like outside backers in a pseudo 4-4 against a power team. It worked well for TCU against Wisconsin in the 2011 Rose Bowl.
http://www.afcaweekly.com/2015/01/multi ... 5-defense/
Given the clear descent from the old 4-4, with the eight-man front Patterson describes, one could easily shift from that to a 5-3 look by replacing one of the backers with a middle guard, resulting, in Patterson's terminology, a 5-1 front, 5-spoke alignment. You'd lose that second inside zone, giving the resultant Mike Backer a ton of responsibility, but it COULD work.
Nice work, 88....
Being wrong about a topic is called post partisanism - kalm
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
-
YoUDeeMan
- Level5

- Posts: 12088
- Joined: Mon Jul 16, 2007 8:48 am
- I am a fan of: Fleecing the Stupid
- A.K.A.: Delaware Homie
Re: Base Defense Debate
The best defense is a good offense. The Patriots proved that again and again.
These signatures have a 500 character limit?
What if I have more personalities than that?
What if I have more personalities than that?
-
YoUDeeMan
- Level5

- Posts: 12088
- Joined: Mon Jul 16, 2007 8:48 am
- I am a fan of: Fleecing the Stupid
- A.K.A.: Delaware Homie
Re: Base Defense Debate
When you talk about looking hard at the A gap...are you talking about watching women's flag football?SuperHornet wrote:That article had the feel of a convention transcript, and it had no diagrams. I can imagine playing a base Cover 3 out of that with the two short safeties covering the outside short zones like outside backers or perhaps playing some form of bump man, or even bump on one side and zone on the other. Faking bump and blitzing would also be a great move as it would be much harder for the backs to pick that up if they're staying in to block. (Most backs are trained to look at the A gap on their side before moving out.)UNI88 wrote:
I'm a fan of Gary Patterson's 4-2-5 Spoke defense. You have 3 safeties so it isn't a nickel and you can vary the coverage on the strong and weak side. Your strong and weak safeties can come up and essentially play like outside backers in a pseudo 4-4 against a power team. It worked well for TCU against Wisconsin in the 2011 Rose Bowl.
http://www.afcaweekly.com/2015/01/multi ... 5-defense/
Given the clear descent from the old 4-4, with the eight-man front Patterson describes, one could easily shift from that to a 5-3 look by replacing one of the backers with a middle guard, resulting, in Patterson's terminology, a 5-1 front, 5-spoke alignment. You'd lose that second inside zone, giving the resultant Mike Backer a ton of responsibility, but it COULD work.
Nice work, 88....
These signatures have a 500 character limit?
What if I have more personalities than that?
What if I have more personalities than that?
- SuperHornet
- SuperHornet

- Posts: 20856
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 7:24 pm
- I am a fan of: Sac State
- Location: Twentynine Palms, CA
Re: Base Defense Debate
Tell that to the '80s Huskers, who ran up huge scores with their vaunted Wishbone attack, only to get shut down in the bowls.Cluck U wrote:The best defense is a good offense. The Patriots proved that again and again.
I've never seen a women's FLAG game in my life, Cluck. Quit trying to crack weak jokes. The Sacramento Sirens play TACKLE football with a youth-sized football under a mix of NFL and NCAA rules.Cluck U wrote:When you talk about looking hard at the A gap...are you talking about watching women's flag football?

SuperHornet's Athletics Hall of Fame includes Jacksonville State kicker Ashley Martin, the first girl to score in a Division I football game. She kicked 3 PATs in a 2001 game for J-State.
- Grizalltheway
- Supporter

- Posts: 35688
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 10:01 pm
- A.K.A.: DJ Honey BBQ
- Location: BSC
Re: Base Defense Debate
And Eastern Washington. And Oregon. Shall I go on?Cluck U wrote:The best defense is a good offense. The Patriots proved that again and again.
-
Mvemjsunpx
- Level5

- Posts: 14865
- Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2007 2:44 pm
- I am a fan of: Montana
Re: Base Defense Debate
Not to mention the Patriots have had a good defense most every year under Belichick.Grizalltheway wrote:And Eastern Washington. And Oregon. Shall I go on?Cluck U wrote:The best defense is a good offense. The Patriots proved that again and again.


