Q. I’d like to
start off talking a little bit about pass defense. When a defense decides
between man-to-man coverage and zone coverage, is the decision based more on
the opponent and what it wants to do or the secondary and its strengths?
A. I think the
No. 1 priority is the present state of your group, and what its strong suits
are. Who is available to you and what their strengths are probably is the first
element of the equation, not only for pass defense but with anything you’re
talking about when you take a fundamentalist approach to football. And then
secondarily, the matchups from a personnel standpoint. Who can cover who and
what are you comfortable with there. And then lastly, the schematic element of
it. What does the opponent do schematically offensively, whether it’s pre-snap
in terms of pre-snap shifts and motions, or post-snap that either make it
inviting to play man-to-man or zone, or difficult to play man-to-man or zone.
Those are the elements of the equation when you’re trying to decide between man
or zone. What do your people do and what’s in their comfort zone; what are the
matchups like from a personnel standpoint; and then lastly, what is the
opponent doing schematically that either invites you to do one or the other, or
make it difficult for you to execute one or the other.
Q. What are the
advantages for a secondary that plays man-to-man?
A. It disrupts
rhythm passing. You’re closer to receivers and so in terms of the quarterback
hitting his back foot and getting the ball out in rhythm, there’s less
likelihood of that because the receivers by the nature of the coverage are
being disrupted from a timing standpoint.
Q. What are the
advantages for a secondary that plays zone?
A. Quite
simply, it’s eyes on the quarterback. In man-to-man, each individual guy has to
have his eyes on his man, so there is less peripheral vision, there is less
help if people get beat, and there is less help if the quarterback escapes.
Zone coverages provide seven sets of eyes on the guy with the ball, and you
feel receivers. If you have a mobile quarterback, you close escape lanes
quicker; you get multiple people to the party if you don’t like the personnel
matchups so there are fewer one-on-ones; and if they throw a check-down to a
dangerous back, it’s not just one person tackling him it’s multiple people
tackling. The line of vision, the number of people with eyes on the person with
the ball is the primary advantage of zone coverage.
Q. The concept for
playing man-to-man is simple – one guy on defense covers one guy on offense.
How would you explain the concept for playing zone?
A. Everyone
has designated spots on the field, and you designate those spots based on
minimizing where the ball goes. And players move within their areas based on
where the quarterback takes them. Sometimes it’s specifically route-related.
Sometimes you have some pre-snap physical clues – such as, if you get this
personnel group and you get them in this formation. But most of the time it’s
area-located, moving within that area based on what the opposing quarterback
tells you to do based on his actions.
Q. What does a
defender do if there’s no receiver in his zone?
A. They either
work the inner-most part of their zone or the outer-most part of their zone
based on where the quarterback is taking them. If the quarterback is reading
the other side of the field, for example, that would take them to the
inner-most part of their zone, whatever that may be. If the quarterback is
looking outside of them, to the sideline, that would take them to the
outer-most part of their zone. Almost in every scenario, if you work the
inner-most or outer-most area of your zone based on where the quarterback’s
looking, you’re going to run into an eligible receiver. Just from an offensive
structure standpoint, a spacing standpoint, you’re going to run into an
eligible receiver.
Q. How does a
defender execute the concept of passing off a receiver from one zone to
another?
A. It seems
coordinated, but it’s not. As I move within my zone and I’m following the
quarterback and that takes me to follow a receiver through the outer-most part
of my zone, then he’s simply going to be picked up by the next defender in the
inner-most part of his zone. It appears to be complex, but it’s simply guys
playing within their space and doing what the quarterback tells them to do.
Q. Sometimes pass
defense involves jamming a receiver coming off the line, and sometimes it
doesn’t. What’s the purpose of each respective tactic?
A. Every zone
has strengths and weaknesses – zones within that overall zone structure that
people are trying to protect. If receivers are capable of getting into that
area quickly, often times defenses re-route receivers or disrupt them. Often
it’s used as a disguise to make it appear to be man coverage when it’s not. So
the disruption is done for two reasons: to protect weak areas within zone, or
to lead the offense to believe that maybe it’s man. Those are the primary
reasons why you disrupt people at the line of scrimmage in zone coverage.
Q. Why would you
allow a receiver to have a free release?
A. Because his
position from an alignment standpoint doesn’t threaten the structure of the
zone, or you’re not worried about him as a vertical threat.
Q. Now, let’s
switch it over to pass offense. When a pass play is called, is the primary
receiver pre-determined by the play call, or is it the quarterback’s choice
based on the defense?
A. It’s the
quarterback’s choice based on the defense he sees when the ball is snapped, but
make no mistake, when you call a play there is a certain level of anticipation
in terms of what it is you’re getting. So there’s a certain level of
anticipation of who the primary receiver might be.
Q. For a typical
pass play, are there deep, intermediate, and check-down options all available?
A. No. Some
passes are vertical in nature, vertical in structure. Some are quick-game,
where they’re horizontal in structure. Some passes have an element of both,
where they’re three-level flooding a zone – high, medium, and low. It just
depends on the nature of the structure, and not only the nature of the
structure, but the nature of the action associated with it. Play-action passes
are generally more vertical in orientation. When people spread you out, it’s
most often rhythm passing, more horizontal in nature.
Q. Ben
Roethlisberger is tied for second in the NFL in pass attempts after four weeks.
What does that stat tell you about your offense, about your team, about how the
first four games of this season have unfolded?
A. It tells
you we’re 1-2-1 and we’ve been behind in some games. We’re completely
comfortable with Ben throwing the ball, and throwing it a bunch if the
circumstances are advantageous to do so. But the reality is we’ve been behind
in some games, and we haven’t won enough games. And so that stat is not being
reflected as a choice, that stat is being reflected as a circumstance. I’m not
against it, but I’m for it when we do it by choice.
Q. You said the
outcome of the Ravens game boiled down to a possession down game, where they
converted their third down situations and the Steelers did not. Are the plays
called on first and second downs ever called specifically to create manageable
third down situations?
A. Certainly
they are. Not always, but certainly they’re capable of being called that way.
In essence, when you call plays on first and second downs, if you’re not
getting 10 yards, you anticipate moving fluidly toward manageable third downs.
So just in essence, I think every play you call on first and second downs has
those intentions, but make no mistake, you can manage the game in a lot of ways
to minimize negativity to make sure you’re moving toward manageable third downs
in some instances. Some plays are more susceptible to penalties. Some plays are
more susceptible to negativity. Usually high-reward plays come with a certain
level of risk, and so that’s what you’re probably speaking to when you’re
talking about whether your first and second down plays set up manageable third
downs.
Q. Because if you
call a pass play on first down and it’s incomplete, and if you call another
pass play on second down, aren’t you looking at a situation where it could be
third-and-long?
A. It depends
on the nature of the pass play. In today’s NFL, some of the quick rhythm passing
is completed at such a rate that it’s as good as a run. Some of these perimeter
plays where you’re throwing them and catching them at a rate of 85 percent and
so forth, in today’s spread football that’s an extended handoff. A lot of
people don’t talk enough about that. That’s run-game alternative. That is the
run game in a lot of football today. You see it in high school games. You see
it in college games. They spread the field out, they have that short rhythm
passing, they complete the ball at a high percentage, and that is run-game
alternative. You’re going to end up with a third-and-5 if you spread people out
and run two very short passes on first-and-10, and then if that’s incomplete,
another on second-and-10. There’s a high likelihood you’re going to complete
one of them. There’s a high likelihood you’re going to get a minimum of five
yards, for example.
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