|
VIDEO: Chad Morris, Ben Hicks after TCUModerators: PonyPride, SmooPower
2 posts
• Page 1 of 1
VIDEO: Chad Morris, Ben Hicks after TCUPonyFans.com ... is really the premier place for Mustang talk on the Web.
— New York Times https://www.facebook.com/PonyFanscom/ twitter.com/PonyFans https://www.instagram.com/ponyfans_staff/ threads.com/ponyfans_staff
Re: VIDEO: Chad Morris, Ben Hicks after TCUThe TCU 4-2-5 Defense is pretty much always going to have two deep safeties over the top. Its designed to simplifying coverage on the backend by having two deep safeties that split the field in half with each having deep responsibility for his half of the field
"Patterson’s 4-2-5, however, was designed with those challenges in mind. By playing five defensive backs, Patterson almost never needs to substitute to match up with the offense. But the system’s genius runs even deeper: Patterson has cleaved the very structure of his defense into pieces, simultaneously making everything simpler for his players and more complicated for opponents. “We divide our defense into attack groups,” Patterson explained at a coaching clinic in 2011. Those attack groups are: (1) the four defensive linemen and two linebackers, referred to as the front, (2) one cornerback, the free safety, and the strong safety, and (3) the weak safety and other corner. For most teams, the calls for the front and secondary only work if appropriately paired, but that’s not the case for TCU. “Our fronts and coverages have nothing to do with each other,” Patterson said at the clinic. “The coverage part is separate from the front.” ----------------- In addition to divorcing the fronts from the coverages, Patterson goes even further by splitting his secondary down the middle. “The coverage is what we call a double-quarterback system,” said Patterson at the 2011 clinic. “We play with three safeties on the field. We have a strong, weak, and a free safety. The free and weak safeties are going to control the halves of the field. They are the quarterbacks and they make all the calls.” In short, TCU typically calls three different defenses on every play: a front call for the linebackers and defensive linemen and different coverages for each side of the backfield. http://grantland.com/features/hard-knoc ... patterson/ "With a quarter of a tank of gas, we can get everything we need right here in DFW." -SMU Head Coach Chad Morris
When momentum starts rolling downhill in recruiting-WATCH OUT.
2 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Who is onlineUsers browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 2 guests |
|