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Nickel Vs Spread

1) The document discusses using a nickel defense against spread offenses, noting that a nickel defense puts more speed on the field by replacing a linebacker with an extra defensive back. 2) A nickel defense allows the defense to play more cover 3 zone coverage, with the free safety playing a deeper role and the strong safeties playing closer to the line of scrimmage in a run-stopping role. 3) The document outlines several nickel defensive alignments and adjustments that can be made against common spread formations like twins and trips, including rolling safeties over and playing quarter coverage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
484 views5 pages

Nickel Vs Spread

1) The document discusses using a nickel defense against spread offenses, noting that a nickel defense puts more speed on the field by replacing a linebacker with an extra defensive back. 2) A nickel defense allows the defense to play more cover 3 zone coverage, with the free safety playing a deeper role and the strong safeties playing closer to the line of scrimmage in a run-stopping role. 3) The document outlines several nickel defensive alignments and adjustments that can be made against common spread formations like twins and trips, including rolling safeties over and playing quarter coverage.

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guelfi
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Inside the Steele Curtain: Defending the

spreadwith the Nickel defense


The first topic to address is the misconception that the spread offense is a system on
its own, it isnt. The spread is a set of formations with 3 or more wide receivers, thats
all. Steele comments in his press conference that he expects multiple formations from
Tony Franklin's offense: wishbone, zone read, and read options. The 4-3 front is
capable of defending the spread, and can handle anything another team throws at
you, but there are a few things to go through each week to decide whether to take out
that LB and put in another DB.

Vic Koenning ran a 4-2-5 here last year, as does TCU. But their schemes are very
different. VK's we've covered, and its a more spot drop read-and-react zone scheme
where the SAM LB was actually more like a SS. This week, you will see Clemson doing
things on defense that you will likely see from TCU's in a couple weeks.

Why go to a Nickel look?


1. You are putting more speed on the field. Usually you recruit another safety and bulk
him up to playing a hybrid SS/SLB role, like DeAndre McDaniel.

2. Its a one-gap defense. LBs only really watch one gap, and their alignment doesn't
hardly change from formation to formation. However, should they miss their gap on a
running play, you are toast. Depending on the reduction of the front, sometimes one
or two LBs may have two gaps to cover in a 4-3.

A 4-4 scheme like VT is not all that dissimilar to teach. Their LBs are more like SS's, its
just that they do different things with the front. It can be equally good against the
spread.

3. Speaking of which, you can do different things with your free safety. A true FS is a
deep player who is a sure tackler, but can cover alot of the field. Nickel is suited to
more Cover 3, and he's more of a safety valve. In a 4-3, he has to be more of an
attacking player, and a better tackler, and I would say more of a field general. In a
5DB look, you can take a smaller faster FS and put him deep, and recruit two SS's and
put them in the game. As a result, the SS position becomes easier to play because his
checks are simpler, and can be a real hitter or run-stopper (Hamlin) like a Linebacker.
This would also mean the FS gets less exposure in run-support, something which
makes them famous and gets headlines as a heavy hitter (Ronnie Lott).

4. Ask yourself 'Are they using the Spread formation to create problems in the running
game?' Rich Rodriguez does this, as does Urban Meyer. His spread is not about the
pass, its about spreading you out and creating running lanes. If you run a 4-3, it makes
sense to play the spread with your base, if that is the case.

5. Particular formations are easier to cover, as in Twins, or Doubles.


This week, going to the Nickel, Sadat Chambers will be in the game more as the FS,
with Gilchrist as the nickel corner. His position is not just like that of a true corner on
the edge, but teaching him the things he needs to use as the FS in the base 4-3 will
work at nickel.

The major problem to watch for is whether they decide to run 4 verticals, e.g. from
doubles above, and you're stuck in Cover 3. The underneath zone defender is playing
a matchup zone (tight man within his zone) and once two players release into the
deep 3rd, a CB or S has to play two guys by himself. How do we deal with that?

The first adjustment, particularly if they play Twins or Trips, is to bring your FS over to
the wide side (VK did this quite a bit) and play a 1/4, 1/4, half coverage. Its still cover 3
matchup, and the CB is playing one half the field with the boundary as his help. He
must force his reciever outside or he could be toast.

This corner is not quite playing a deep Cover 3, as he has no underneath help, and its
more of a matchup zone/man coverage now. The FS is rolled over onto a weaker
receiver in the slot (since he usually has not-as-good man coverage skills), likely
Gilchrist but perhaps McDaniel. A weak safety (probably Chambers this week for
MTSU) will be playing deep middle.
Against an empty backfield, you simply have to matchup one-on-one. You can still play
cover 3, and you can disguise who is actually going deep, but its likely to still be the
safeties as their alignment will already be deeper pre-snap. Its more likely that this is
when you'll see straight-man coverage and blitzing the LBs.

To take the problem of a CB/S having to play two guys in his deep 3rd, you can switch
to Quarters coverage. This brings us back to boundary/field adjustments, which we ran
last year under Koenning. The passing strength is set to the Field (wide) side, or the
side with the most WRs. Usually the left side, since a RH QB throws to his right, which
is the left from our perspective. I will mention more about Cover 4/Quarters and
"Bronco" against Trips at some later time.

Pressuring the QB.


There are many things you can do from the Nickel, but I don't believe its as versatile
as the 3-5-3 or even the 4-3 when it comes to crazy blitz angles. You will see some
CB/S blitzing, and DL pressure is created through the use of stunts. Here is one
particular blitz from Saban's playbook: a cover 1 CB blitz (star "*" is the nickel back,
"$" is either a Sam or Will (now called Money), but sometimes another big safety).
From Steele's comments this will be Scotty Cooper.

The dotted lines indicate who matches up on who in man coverage. If the TE blocks
down, or the Back stays in to block, one of the two LBs becomes a Robber. The term
"even" refers to the front reduction and the placement of the DL and LBs.
The DTs, in this front, each have 2-gap responsibilities. Everyone else has one. The
LBs, Mac and Money, key the OG and nearest RB. The Ends key the TE/NB/OT in that
order.

Finally, a Cover 3 zone blitz. First you declare your front, in this case "Okie"

Notice the Nickel and SS switch responsibilities again, with the SS picking up the slot
WR off the line and rolling down into his underneath zone opposite Money. There is a
gap in the middle of the field to the TE side that Mac may not be able to cover from his
hook zone. His responsibility will be more the RB than that TE.

In a Trey formation (3 WRs to one side, 1 RB, 1 TE) the adjustment is straightforward,
with the CB shifting over top of the TE bracketed with the FS. Nickelback gets matched
up on the inside slot man, with the SS rolling over the 2nd slot man. This generally can
be given a double call and they'd check into a 1/4, 1/4, 1/2 setup with that CB ruling
one whole side of the field. For Trips, shifted to the opposite side, the FS becomes the
blitzer, with the nickel taking the flat and the SS dropping back in the middle.

I will save more on Nickel pressures for TCU game-week.

Just as an aside, I noticed Chris at Smartfootball wrote a blog on the scrape and
defending the zone-read play using a 4-2-5, and since we'll see this play from our own
offense many times, I think you should check it out. It'll also give a hint about TCU's
philosophy.

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