So about that transfer portal activity...
That joefrog guy is one of the few people I have on ignore. Strong recommend. That guy's a moron.Yep time to blow it all up. Top half of the conference in total yds allowed and top 25% in pts? Fire them all
Did you watch the game? We tried to dedicate more guys to the run, had guys screaming down to try to stop the run and ended up being out of position. When we played our base defense, guys were in position but couldn't tackle. This wasn't an X's and O's problem, it was a Jimmy and Joes problem.ASU is a running team.
We appeared to run our exact same defense, which made it quite easy for them.
Why is this talk in the transfer portal thread?Did you watch the game? We tried to dedicate more guys to the run, had guys screaming down to try to stop the run and ended up being out of position. When we played our base defense, guys were in position but couldn't tackle. This wasn't an X's and O's problem, it was a Jimmy and Joes problem.
Dude... please. I'm not Mike Dikta. But I have spent time in and around football. And you couldn't possibly be more wrong. That is not something you simply do. Like, I don't want to make a 25 page post about how wrong you are, but you are so incredibly wrong but I'll try to keep it short, or relatively with the key points.It is not that hard to adjust from a 3-3 to a 3-4 or 4-2.
How dare anyone criticize Saint Matt, even when he gets blown out by a 2nd year coach.That joefrog guy is one of the few people I have on ignore. Strong recommend. That guy's a moron.
So please explain what, exactly, our D-Line coach, and players, do.Dude... please. I'm not Mike Dikta. But I have spent time in and around football. And you couldn't possibly be more wrong. That is not something you simply do. Like, I don't want to make a 25 page post about how wrong you are, but you are so incredibly wrong but I'll try to keep it short, or relatively with the key points.
1. If it was easy to switch, everyone would who has ever struggled defensively. Both during game and at the end of every season. No one would ever be known for having a defense. Its not.
2. Coached DL at the small college level, HS, etc... I can't begin to explain in short sentences how wrong that statement is. You go from having a 2 game at nose guard, and even at 4i, to now you have a single gap, go from 4i to 5 technique, which seems similar, but no, not its not. Not at freaking all. You almost need different players to play those techniques. So now you have to re-recruit your entire room. Not that many DT's are good at both two-gapping and one gapping. Very few DE's are good at 4i, spilling, and tacking on doubles as well as setting the edge. And for the most part, the ones that are? They aren't coming to Iowa State.
I could go on.
3. You have to redo your whole line backer room. Instead of them being responsible for scraping and flats to maybe curl or just drops, now you have to teach them how to take on people in the hole, get down field, and they are covering the under neath hole to hook to curl.
You... just no. Just... no. Its incredibly hard. Which is exactly why no one really does it.
I'm sorry, but this is just as wrong as people thinking going from a 3-3 to 4-2 is simple. Giving up rushing yards like crazy f*ing matters, whether or not you score or not.People acting like the ranking of the rush defense is somehow more important than the ranking in points allowed. Who the **** cares if teams run up and down the field on us if they aren't scoring very much?
Wow, how many schools will that be for him? Like 4 so far?Chubba Purdy is in the portal... again.
So please explain what, exactly, our D-Line coach, and players, do.
Absent the one with amazing size and athleticism, the others appear to simply play pinch and tickle with the offensive linemen.
Do they stunt? Twist? Drop back?
I only saw the KU game live this year, and I couldn't understand not only what were they doing, but what did they think they were doing.
So, that's had to do on a keyboard but I'll try.So please explain what, exactly, our D-Line coach, and players, do.
Absent the one with amazing size and athleticism, the others appear to simply play pinch and tickle with the offensive linemen.
Do they stunt? Twist? Drop back?
I only saw the KU game live this year, and I couldn't understand not only what were they doing, but what did they think they were doing.
Please make a video.So, that's had to do on a keyboard but I'll try.
1) So at the NG , unless in a slant or a blitz call, you beat the crap out of the center and have both A gaps. Most defenses prefer to have the Mike / MLB just fit off the NG and flow box to box (tackle to tackle), Offensive tackle, that is.
2) Your "4i's" will line up with in the B gap or outside eye to inside eye of the offensive tackle (hence the term 4i". Which is slightly wider, by a step or two, than a defensive tackle's typical 3 technique (think Waren Sapp, etc) and again, barring a blitz or stunt call, you have the B gap. Most of the time as a 4 technique when taking on a pulling OL your job is to collide him like a vehicle going to the wrong way, and try to make the ball bounce outside rathe than getting vertical because you have a safety or LB to fill on the outside of you.
3) If you take your 4i on an inside slant, his job would be smash into the offensive guard and wash him down into the center, trying to essentially create an open gap behind him for a blitzing backer or safety.
4) as a 4i, like a true zero technique (head up on the center) , you are going to face a lot of double teams. Similar, actually, potentially more a s 1 technique because you've aligned yourself right between two offensive linemen and your main job is to take on the double team and not get your a** kicked.
5) Typically, in a 3-4 or any 3-3 defense, again, unless you have a fan type package, you are going to not have your defensive linemen responsible for anything in the C gap to E gap and you're primary job is being able to take on blockers. Of course, in a perfect world, you are then going to be able to split the double team, get skinny and flip the hip (generally turning towards the center / inside but again that can change based on the call)
So, for example, say you want to become a 5 technique. Its completely opposite of a 4i. Whereas your kid at 4i is taught, spill the ball, force it outside, that's where my help is...
a 5 technique is taught, "force the ball inside, that's where my help is" they are completely opposite techniques and mindsets. Also, a 5 technique or 6 technique if you want to widen them even further which is what smart teams do to us offensively at times, you have contain. Wheras its harder to have contain from a 4i, especially if the tackle pins you inside so most of the time they aren't going to be asked to do so if they are aligned inside.
Same thing on the interior. If you are a zero technique the staff wants you to be a bad a** MOFO you can eat up two blocks, maybe 3, and not get moved down field and collapse the pocket and keep your shoulders square as long as you can. Again, trying to prevent the ball from getting vertical since you have two gaps.
As a 3 technique especially, most defenses in an even front are going to want a Warren Sapp type, who is going to press vertical on the snap, getting into the backfield, flipping the hip and only being responsible for the "B" gap cause he knows he has the DE outside of him and the Mike or Sam linebacker fitting into the A gap inside of him. So he can dip, rip and go right away.
Again, its a completely different concept.
I know that got really long and it'd be easy to explain on a white board like in a ted talk but this idea it's easy change is just plum wrong
Hey, I'd love to if he wanted or anyone else wanted to. 100%, it'd be a dream come true to do something like thatPlease make a video.
You can team up with Woody
ISU Defense:
Yards allowed: 333.0 (48th FBS, 7th BIG 12)
Rushing: 179.2 (102nd FBS, 15th BIG 12)
Passing 153.8 (6th FBS, 1st BIG 12)
Pts: 21.5 (33rd FBS, 4th BIG 12)
Sounds like the Hoks are bringing in Auburn transfer Hank Brown. Another QB that can’t play.
Well, clearlySo please explain what, exactly, our D-Line coach, and players, do.
Absent the one with amazing size and athleticism, the others appear to simply play pinch and tickle with the offensive linemen.
Do they stunt? Twist? Drop back?
I only saw the KU game live this year, and I couldn't understand not only what were they doing, but what did they think they were doing.
Perfect for Iowa's offense, also from the 1950s.That is a great QB name that I would expect to find in stat books from the 1950s.