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(LONG POST)
A lot has been made about Foster's gamplan in this matchup. Here's what I see:
It's a 4-3 front with 7 guys in the box. The defensive tackles aren't married to one set-up. but more often than not you're seeing an inside shade tackle (between the guard and center) on the short side of the field and a head-up tackle (over the guard) on the wide side of the field. The defensive ends are playing outside shade of our offensive tackles.
The most obvious thing about the Hokie D last year was #17's role as outside linebacker/blitzer. The vast majority of the time, he lined up on the wide side of the field and came through the offensive line's B-gap. When motion came his way, he blitzed every time. When motion went away from him, he didn't. This wasn't categorically true but it happened most of the time.
The middle backer was very deep, as we've come to expect.
The secondary played at about even depth across the top - corners and safeties were level at 8-9 yards. They were man-up most of the game, a true Cover 0 with no "free" safety to help out over the top. When A-Back motion went away from him, a cornerback would keep his eyes in the backfield and try to work across the field to help out.
This is the defense. It's not exotic, it's not reading Kant or designing a bridge.
What it came down to was this: they whooped our butts.
#17's riff of bumrushing through the B-Gap was disruptive but, in theory, it should have opened up the edge: now there's nobody home there! But the defensive ends played hard and smart and FAST - when they read an outside run, they'd get outside leverage on anyone trying to block them. Complementing this inside-out attack was the safeties coming down and outsisde-in; these guys, playing man-up on the A-Backs would stick their nose into the lanes when they saw a run coming their way. Cornerbacks played the same way.
The defensive tackles were hyperactive and smart but it appeared that our interior guys played as well as we could hope. The frustrating thing wasn't getting beat head up - that's expected sometimes with tackles this talented - but with totally missed assignments. Jay Finch played consistently well.
Our offensive tackles had a tougher time. They couldn't step down on the blitzing outside backer in time and, when asked to simply slow down a defensive end's pursuit to the outside, failed most of the time.
You've got to feel for Vad in this one. He played hard, got some nice reads on the triple and on midline, but struggled seeing guys downfield and was given no help in pass protection. Of course, it's hard to see anyone open up downfield when the wide receivers are having a hard time actually get open. The defensive backs are really solid.
So the question is this: is it that they're that much more "talented" than we are?
The defensive backs ARE very talented, without question, and those guys can run with just about anyone. Smelter actually got some separation, especially with some of his broken-off short routes off the vertical stem. But they're going to be a tough matchup for most teams.
However, they're also just exceptionally well coached and game into the 2013 game really well prepared. Shedding blocks, recognizing keys, staying on your assignment - doing this stuff right will make a 3 star into a 5 star. And VT did. They were focused for this game. We were not.
We can score points on this defense if we execute well, but that requires that our guys come into this game as well prepared as THEY did last year.
A lot has been made about Foster's gamplan in this matchup. Here's what I see:
It's a 4-3 front with 7 guys in the box. The defensive tackles aren't married to one set-up. but more often than not you're seeing an inside shade tackle (between the guard and center) on the short side of the field and a head-up tackle (over the guard) on the wide side of the field. The defensive ends are playing outside shade of our offensive tackles.
The most obvious thing about the Hokie D last year was #17's role as outside linebacker/blitzer. The vast majority of the time, he lined up on the wide side of the field and came through the offensive line's B-gap. When motion came his way, he blitzed every time. When motion went away from him, he didn't. This wasn't categorically true but it happened most of the time.
The middle backer was very deep, as we've come to expect.
The secondary played at about even depth across the top - corners and safeties were level at 8-9 yards. They were man-up most of the game, a true Cover 0 with no "free" safety to help out over the top. When A-Back motion went away from him, a cornerback would keep his eyes in the backfield and try to work across the field to help out.
This is the defense. It's not exotic, it's not reading Kant or designing a bridge.
What it came down to was this: they whooped our butts.
#17's riff of bumrushing through the B-Gap was disruptive but, in theory, it should have opened up the edge: now there's nobody home there! But the defensive ends played hard and smart and FAST - when they read an outside run, they'd get outside leverage on anyone trying to block them. Complementing this inside-out attack was the safeties coming down and outsisde-in; these guys, playing man-up on the A-Backs would stick their nose into the lanes when they saw a run coming their way. Cornerbacks played the same way.
The defensive tackles were hyperactive and smart but it appeared that our interior guys played as well as we could hope. The frustrating thing wasn't getting beat head up - that's expected sometimes with tackles this talented - but with totally missed assignments. Jay Finch played consistently well.
Our offensive tackles had a tougher time. They couldn't step down on the blitzing outside backer in time and, when asked to simply slow down a defensive end's pursuit to the outside, failed most of the time.
You've got to feel for Vad in this one. He played hard, got some nice reads on the triple and on midline, but struggled seeing guys downfield and was given no help in pass protection. Of course, it's hard to see anyone open up downfield when the wide receivers are having a hard time actually get open. The defensive backs are really solid.
So the question is this: is it that they're that much more "talented" than we are?
The defensive backs ARE very talented, without question, and those guys can run with just about anyone. Smelter actually got some separation, especially with some of his broken-off short routes off the vertical stem. But they're going to be a tough matchup for most teams.
However, they're also just exceptionally well coached and game into the 2013 game really well prepared. Shedding blocks, recognizing keys, staying on your assignment - doing this stuff right will make a 3 star into a 5 star. And VT did. They were focused for this game. We were not.
We can score points on this defense if we execute well, but that requires that our guys come into this game as well prepared as THEY did last year.